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| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 01:53:23 -0700 |
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| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 01:53:23 -0700 |
| commit | 84a9b85fe4e684bedbe2b3d28005bee851e9eaaa (patch) | |
| tree | 538d6050047a48eea34e83f0034d1840485b7bbf | |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/22646-8.txt b/22646-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..de141e1 --- /dev/null +++ b/22646-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,8653 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hunters of the Ozark, by Edward S. Ellis + +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: The Hunters of the Ozark + +Author: Edward S. Ellis + +Release Date: September 17, 2007 [EBook #22646] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HUNTERS OF THE OZARK *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + +[Illustration: "Terry heard distinctly the footsteps of the warrior."] + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +THE +HUNTERS OF THE OZARK. + +BY +EDWARD S. ELLIS + +Author Of "Young Pioneer Series," "Log Cabin Series," +"Great River Series," Etc., Etc. + +Philadelphia: +Henry T. Coates & Co. + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Copyright, 1887, +by +PORTER & COATES. + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +CONTENTS. + +CHAPTER. PAGE. + + I.--AN ESTRAY, 5 + II.--THE TINKLE OF A BELL, 15 + III.--AN ABORIGINAL PLOT, 25 + IV.--A PARTY OF THE THIRD PART, 34 + V.--A FRIEND IN NEED, 44 + VI.--FRED LINDEN RECEIVES A MESSAGE FROM THE OZARK CAMP, 54 + VII.--THE HUNTERS OF OZARK, 64 + VIII.--A WELCOME ACQUAINTANCE, 74 + IX.--A MISHAP, 84 + X.--A STRUGGLE FOR LIFE, 94 + XI.--TRAMPING SOUTHWARD, 104 + XII.--A STRANGE ANIMAL, 114 + XIII.--A TROUBLESOME VISITOR, 124 + XIV.--A WELCOME ALLY, 134 + XV.--"DEERFOOT WILL BE SENTINEL TO-NIGHT," 144 + XVI.--AROUND THE CAMP-FIRE, 154 + XVII.--A SUSPICIOUS SOUND, 164 + XVIII.--LIKE A THIEF IN THE NIGHT, 174 + XIX.--SHAWANOE AND WINNEBAGO, 185 + XX.--ANOTHER NIGHT VISITOR, 195 + XXI.--THE CAMP OF THE WINNEBAGOS, 205 + XXII.--"KEEP TO THE TRAIL," 215 + XXIII.--AN INFURIATE SHAWANOE, 225 + XXIV.--THE DEFIANCE, 236 + XXV.--THE SIGNAL FIRE, 245 + XXVI.--ON THE EDGE OF THE PRAIRIE, 257 + XXVII.--A MORNING MEAL, 269 + XXVIII.--A STRANGE RIDE, 281 + XXIX.--A YOUNG HUNTER'S STRATEGY, 293 + XXX.--TERRY FINISHES HIS RIDE, 305 + XXXI.--THE DEVIL'S PUNCH BOWL, 316 + XXXII.--THE TERROR IN THE AIR, 328 + XXXIII.--FRED LINDEN AWAKENS TO AN ALARMING FACT, 340 + XXXIV.--THE CANOE, 352 + XXXV.--AMERICA VERSUS IRELAND, 364 + XXXVI.--AMERICA VERSUS AMERICA, 376 + XXXVII.--THE LAST CAMP-FIRE, 388 + XXXVIII.--CONCLUSION, 400 + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + + + + +THE HUNTERS OF THE OZARK. + +CHAPTER I. + +AN ESTRAY. + + +One day in the autumn Terence Clark came to the house of Frederick +Linden and urged him to join in a hunt for a cow that had been missing +since the night before. The latter got the consent of his mother and the +two lads started on a search that proved to be the most eventful one +they had ever known. + +A few words in the way of explanation must be given at this point. The +date of the events I have set out to tell was toward the close of the +last century, and the scene the south-western part of the present State +of Missouri, but which was then a part of the vast territory known as +Louisiana. Though the town of St. Louis had been settled a good many +years before, there were only a few pioneers scattered through the +almost limitless region that stretched in every direction from the +Mississippi. Here and there the hunters and trappers were often absent +from their homes for months at a time, during which they suffered much +exposure and hardship. They slept for weeks in the open woods, or when +the severity of the weather would not allow this, they found refuge in +caves or hollow trees. Then, when enough skins had been gathered to load +their pack-horses they started on the long tramps to the French trading +post on the Mississippi. They followed faintly marked paths or trails +that converged from a score or hundred different points until they +reached the Father of Waters, where the peltries were soon sold and the +proceeds, too often, squandered within the succeeding few hours. + +At the date of which I am speaking, a small settlement known as Greville +stood in the south-western section of the large State of Missouri, as it +is now known. The first cabins were put up only a few years before, and +the settlers, including men, women and children, numbered about two +hundred. Near the center of the straggling settlement stood a rude but +strong blockhouse to be used for refuge in the event of an attack by +Indians. As yet this emergency had not arisen, for the red men in that +section were far less warlike and hostile than those in Ohio and +Kentucky. + +The father of Fred Linden was one of the hunters and trappers who made +regular visits to the wild section near the Ozark Mountains for the +purpose of gathering furs. He never had less than two companions, and +sometimes the number was half a dozen. As you are well aware, the furs +of all animals are in the finest condition in wintry weather, since +nature does her best to guard their bodies from the effects of cold. +Thus it came about that the party of hunters, of whom I shall have more +to say further on, left Greville in the autumn of the year, and as a +rule were not seen again until spring. Since they entered a fine, +fur-bearing country, these trips generally paid well. One convenience +was that the hunters were not obliged to go to St. Louis to sell them. +An agent of the great fur company that made its headquarters at that +post, came regularly to Greville with his pack-horses and gave the same +price for the peltries that he would have given had they been brought to +the factory, hundreds of miles away. He was glad to do this, for the +furs that George Linden and his brother hunters brought in were not +surpassed in glossiness and fineness by any of the thousands gathered +from the four points of the compass. + +Among the daring little band that made these regular visits to the Ozark +region was an Irishman named Michael Clark, who had had considerable +experience in gathering furs along the Mississippi. It was at his +suggestion that Greville was founded, and one-half of their periodical +journeys thus cut off. On the year following, Clark was shot and killed +by a prowling Indian. Since his wife had been dead a long time, the only +child, Terence, was thus left an orphan. The lad was a bright, +good-natured fellow, liked by every one, and he made his home with the +family of one of the other hunters named Rufus MacClaskey. The boy was +fifteen years old on the very day that he walked over to the cabin of +Fred Linden and asked him to help him hunt for the missing cow. + +The family of George Linden, while he was away, consisted of his wife, +his daughter Edith, fourteen, and his son Fred, sixteen years old. All +were ruddy cheeked, strong and vigorous, and among the best to do of the +thirty-odd families that made up the population of Greville. + +"Has the cow ever been lost before?" asked Fred, as he and the Irish lad +swung along beside each other, neither thinking it worth while to burden +himself with a rifle. + +"Niver that I knows of, and I would know the same if she had been lost; +we're onaisy about the cow, for you see that if this kaaps on and she +doesn't come back I'll have to live on something else than bread and +milk and praties." + +"Our cow came back just at sunset last night." + +"And so did them all, exciptin' our own, which makes me more onwillin' +to accipt any excuse she may have to give." + +"Let me see, Terry; Brindle wore a bell round her neck, didn't she?" + +"That she did, and she seemed quite proud of the same." + +"Did you make hunt for her last night?" + +"I hunted as long as I could see to hunt; she wasn't missed, that is +till after they got home. Whin I found that I didn't find her I started +to find her; but I hadn't time to hunt very long whin it got dark and I +had to give it up." + +"And didn't you hear any thing of the bell?" + +"Do ye think that if I heard the bell I wouldn't have found the cow? Why +was the bell put round her neck if it wasn't to guide friends? I +listened many a time after it got dark, but niver a tinkle did I hear." + +"That is queer," said Fred half to himself; "for, when no wind is +blowing and it is calm, you can hear that bell a long ways; father has +caught the sound in the woods, when the Brindle was all of a mile off. I +wonder whether she could have lost the bell." + +"I've thought of that, and said to meself that it might be also that she +had become lost herself in trying to find it." + +Fred laughed. + +"She hardly knows enough for _that_; and, if she found the bell she +wouldn't know what to do with it; but if that leathern string around her +neck had broken, it may be that she is close by. A cow after losing one +milking is apt to feel so uncomfortable that she hurries home to be +relieved; but what's the use of talking?" added Fred, throwing up his +head and stepping off at a more lively pace; "we've started out to find +her and that's all we have to do." + +Perhaps a dozen acres had been cleared around the little town of +Greville. This had been planted with corn, potatoes and grain, though +scores of unsightly stumps were left and interfered with the cultivation +of the soil. Beyond this clearing or open space extended the immense +forests which at one time covered almost the entire face of our country. +On the south side of the town and distant a furlong wound a creek, which +after many shiftings and turnings found its way into the Mississippi and +so at last into the Gulf of Mexico. The course of this stream was so +winding that it extended on two sides of the town and ran in a westerly +direction, exactly the opposite of that it finally had to take in order +to reach its outlet. + +As a rule, it was about twenty feet wide with a depth of from one or two +to six feet. It was subject to tremendous overflows which sometimes +tripled its volume and increased its width to that of a river. At such +times a series of enormous rocks through which the creek at "low tide" +lazily wound its way, lashed the turbid current into a fury somewhat +like that seen in the "whirlpool" below Niagara. Could you have stood on +the shore and looked at the furiously struggling waters, you would have +been sure that even if a man were headed up in a barrel, he could not +have lived to pass through the hundred yards of rapids, though there was +reason to believe that more than one Indian had shot them in his canoe. + +Terry Clark told his friend that his search of the night before and of +the morning following had been to the north and west of the settlement, +so that it was hardly worth while to continue the hunt in that +direction. The cows sometimes stood in the water, where so much +switching of their tails was not needed to keep away the flies, and, +though there was quite a growth of succulent grass on the clearing, the +animals often crossed the creek and browsed through the woods and +undergrowth on the other side. + +The boys were inclined to think that the brindle had taken that course +during the afternoon and had actually gone astray,--something which a +quadruped is less likely to do than a biped, though the former will +sometimes make the blunder. There was nothing unreasonable in the theory +that the bell had fallen from her neck and that the owner therefore +might be not far away. + +At intervals, Terry shouted "_Bos! bos! bos!_" the Latin call which the +cow sometimes recognized, though she generally paid no attention to it. +It was the same now, possibly due to the fact that she did not hear the +call. + +Reaching the edge of the stream, the boys began walking along the bank +toward the left and scrutinizing the spongy earth close to the water. +If the missing animal had crossed the creek she could not have failed to +leave distinct footprints. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +THE TINKLE OF A BELL. + + +The examination of the shore of the creek had lasted but a few minutes, +when Terry Clark, pointing to the moist earth at their feet, called out +in some excitement: + +"Do ye mind that now?" + +There, sure enough, were the footprints of a cow that had entered the +stream from the same side on which the boys stood. The impressions could +be seen for some distance in the clear water, which in the middle of the +stream was no more than a yard deep, and they were plainly observed +where the animal had emerged on the other side. + +"I don't suppose there is any difference in the tracks of cows, but I +guess, Terry, that we are safe in making up our minds we are on the +trail of Brindle." + +"I'm thinking the same," replied the other, who was not only looking +across the creek, but into the woods beyond, as though he expected to +catch sight of the cow herself; "though it may be the one that crossed +there isn't the one that we're after." + +Fred Linden was asking himself whether there was not some way in which +they could reach the other side without going to the trouble of removing +their shoes and leggins, and hunting a shallow portion, or allowing +their garments to become saturated. He exclaimed: "Why didn't I think of +it? There's our canoe!" + +A number of these frail craft were owned in Greville, and Fred had a +fine one himself, which was only a short distance off. Three minutes +later the two reached it. + +The barken structure was moored by means of a long rope to a tree a +considerable distance from the water, so that in case of one of those +sudden rises that sometimes took place, it would not be carried away by +the freshet. The boat was quickly launched, and a few strokes of the +paddle carried the two to the opposite bank of the stream. + +"I wonder whether there is any danger of a rise," remarked Fred, as he +carried the rope to a tree twenty feet distant and made it fast to a +limb; "there was a good deal of thunder and lightning last night off to +the east." + +"But the creek doesn't come from that way," said the surprised Terry; +"so what is the odds, as me father said he used to ask when the Injins +was on all sides of him, and a panther in the tree he wanted to climb, +and he found himself standing on the head of a rattlesnake." + +"The creek winds through every point of the compass, so it doesn't make +much difference, as you say, where it rains, since it is sure to make a +rise; the only question is whether the rain was enough to affect the +creek so that it will trouble us." + +"If it was goin' to do that, wouldn't it have done so before this?" was +the natural question of his companion. + +"That depends on how far away the rain was." + +The boys were not idle while talking. The canoe was soon made fast, and +then they resumed their hunt for the estray. They were not skillful +enough in woodcraft to trace the animal through the forest by the means +that an Indian would have used, but they were hopeful that by taking a +general direction they would soon find her. If she still had the bell +tied around her neck, there was no reason why they should not be +successful. + +But while walking forward, Fred Linden asked a question of himself that +he did not repeat aloud. + +"Has she been stolen?" + +This query was naturally followed by others. It certainly was +unreasonable to think that a cow would leave her companions and +deliberately wander off, at the time she was milked twice daily. She +would speedily suffer such distress that she would come bellowing +homeward for relief. If she really was an estray, she had missed two +milkings--that of the previous night and the morning that succeeded. + +It was certain, therefore, that if she was stolen, the thief had +attended to her milking. But who could the thief be? That was the +important question that Fred confessed himself unable to answer. + +There had been occasional instances of white men who had stolen horses +from the frontier settlements, but the lad could recall nothing of the +kind that had taken place in that neighborhood; all of which might be +the case without affecting the present loss, since it was evident that +there must be a first theft of that nature. + +But, somehow or other, Fred could not help suspecting that the red men +had to do with the disappearance of the animal. I have intimated in +another place that Greville had never been harmed by the Indians, who +were scattered here and there through the country, for there was no +comparison between them and the fierce Shawanoes, Wyandottes, +Pottawatomies and other tribes, whose deeds gave to Kentucky its +impressive title of the Dark and Bloody Ground; but among the different +bands of red men who roamed through the great wilderness west of the +Mississippi, were those who were capable of as atrocious cruelties as +were ever committed by the fierce warriors further east. + +What more likely, therefore, than that a party of these had stolen the +cow and driven her away? + +There were many facts that were in favor of and against the theory; the +chief one against it was that if a party of Indians had driven off one +cow, they would have taken more. Then, too, the soft earth that had +revealed the hoof tracks ought to have shown the imprint of moccasins. + +You will see, therefore, that Fred could speculate for hours on the +question without satisfying himself. He was sorry that he and Terry had +not brought their guns with them, and was half inclined to go back. It +was not yet noon, and they had plenty of time in which to do so. + +"Terry," said Fred, turning suddenly about and addressing his friend, +who was walking behind him, "we made a mistake in not bringing our +guns." + +The Irish lad was about to answer when he raised his hand in a warning +way and said: + +"Hist!" + +Both stood as motionless as the tree trunks about them, all their +faculties centered in the one of hearing. + +There was the low, deep roar which is always heard in a vast wood, made +by the soft wind stealing among the multitudinous branches, and which is +like the voice of silence itself. They were so far from the creek that +its soft ripple failed to reach them. + +"I don't hear any thing," said Fred at the end of a full minute. + +"Nor do I," said Terry. + +"Why then did you ask me to listen?" + +"I was thinkin' be that token that we might hear something." + +"What made you think so?" + +"The tinkle of a bell." + +"What!" exclaimed the amazed Fred, "are you sure?" + +"That I am; just as I was about to speak, I caught the faint sound--just +as we've both heard hundreds of times." + +"From what point did it seem to come?" + +His friend pointed due south. + +"Strange it is that ye didn't catch the same." + +"So I think; it may be, Terry, that you are mistaken, and you wanted to +hear the bell so much that the sound was in your fancy." + +The lad, however, would not admit this. He was sure there had been no +mistake. Fred was about to argue further when all doubt was set at rest +by the sound of a cow-bell that came faintly but clearly through the +forest. + +"You are right," said Fred, his face brightening up; "we are on the +track of old Brindle sure enough. It's mighty strange though how she +came to wander so far from home." + +"She got lost I s'pose," replied Terry, repeating the theory that had +been hit upon some time before. + +"It may be, but it is the first instance I ever heard of, where an +animal lost its way so easily." + +The boys were in too high spirits, however, to try to explain that which +puzzled them. The cow was a valuable creature, being the only one that +belonged to the family with whom Terence lived, and who therefore could +ill afford her loss. + +The friends had pushed perhaps a couple hundred yards further when +Terry called to Fred that he was not following the right course. + +"Ye're bearing too much to the lift; so much so indaad that if ye kaap +on ye'll find yersilf lift." + +"Why, I was about to turn a little more in that direction," replied the +astonished Fred; "you are altogether wrong." + +But the other sturdily insisted that he was right, and he was so +positive that he stopped short, and refused to go another step in the +direction that his friend was following. The latter was just as certain +that Terry was amiss, and it looked as if they had come to a deadlock. + +"There's only one way to settle it," said Fred, "and that is for each of +us to follow the route he thinks right. The cow can't be far off and we +shall soon find out who is wrong. The first one that finds Brindle shall +call to the other, and he'll own up what a stupid blunder he has made." + +"Ye are speakin' me own sentiments," replied Terry, who kept looking +about him and listening as if he expected every moment that the cow +herself would solve the question. Fred Linden read the meaning of his +action, and he, too, wondered why it was that when both had plainly +caught the tinkle of the telltale bell, they should hear it no more. +Strange that when it had spoken so clearly it should become silent, but +such was the fact. + +Little did either suspect the cause. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +AN ABORIGINAL PLOT. + + +The boys tried the plan of Fred Linden; he swerved slightly to the left, +while Terry Clark made a sharp angle to the right. They never thought of +getting beyond hearing of each other, and, but for the plentiful +undergrowth they would have kept in sight. They had taken but a few +steps when Fred looked around and found that he was alone. He could hear +his young friend pushing his way among the trees, and once or twice he +caught snatches of a tune that he was whistling--that being a favorite +pastime of the lad when by himself. + +"It's curious how he could make such a blunder," thought Fred, with a +smile to himself; "he will go tramping around the woods only to find +that he was nowhere in the neighborhood of the cow. Ah, the storm is not +yet over." + +He was looking to the eastward, where the sky, as he caught a glimpse of +it among the treetops and branches, was as black as if overcast with one +huge thunder cloud. + +"It was there it raged so violently last night, and the rain is falling +in torrents again. We shall find the creek a river when we go back." + +The sturdy youth pressed on fully two hundred yards more, when the old +suspicion came back to him. There was something wrong. When he could not +explain some things he was satisfied that it was because there was an +element of evil in those things--something that boded ill to both him +and his friend. + +"I have traveled far enough since hearing that bell to pass a long ways +beyond it," he said, compressing his lips and shaking his head; "and if +that was Brindle that rang it the first time, she would have done it the +second time." + +Twice before Fred fancied he heard something moving among the +undergrowth a short distance in advance, and a little to one side. The +noise was now so distinct that he could no longer deceive himself; +there was some specific cause for it. + +"I guess Terry has worked over this way, finding what a mistake he has +made--no! by gracious! it isn't Terry!" + +Fred started in alarm, confident that it was an Indian that was moving +through the wood. It will be admitted that there was cause for his fear, +if such should prove to be the case, for he was without any firearms +with which to defend himself; but while he stood meditating whether he +should turn and take to his heels, he caught enough of a glimpse of the +object to make out that it was a quadruped instead of a biped. + +This was a great relief, though it did not remove all fear, for he was +not in form to meet any of the wild beasts that one was liable to run +against at any time. The next minute, he broke into a hearty laugh, for +that which he saw was the lost cow, quietly browsing on the tender +herbs, as though just turned loose by her owner. + +"Well, that is funny," said the youth, walking hastily toward her; "this +proves that I was right. You are a pretty one, old Brindle, to lead us +on such a chase!" + +The cow, hearing the voice and footsteps, stopped cropping, and with her +motionless jaws dripping with leaves and buds, started at Fred as if she +wasn't sure of his identity. She knew enough, however, to see that he +was a friend, and so resumed her feeding. + +Assuring himself that she was the estray, Fred looked at her bag to see +the condition of that. It was only moderately full, proving that she had +been milked later even than the preceding night. + +Fred Linden had approached close enough to place his hand on the +handsome creature, when he noticed--what indeed he knew before--the bell +was not fastened to her neck; that explained why, after hearing the +sound, it was heard no more. + +"The cord has broken just after the tinkle, and let the bell fall to the +ground; no wonder that it was not heard again. Some one has been kind +enough to give Brindle a milking." + +The words were yet in the mouth of Fred when he received a shock that +for a moment held him speechless; a long distance to the right he +caught the sound of the cow-bell! + +It was precisely the same that he and his friend had noticed, and since +the bell of Brindle was gone, there could be but one meaning to the +signal; it was made by some one for the purpose of drawing the boys into +a trap. + +Without pausing to think over the dozen questions that came with this +conclusion, Fred set off at the most hurried pace possible to warn his +friend of his peril. + +"He has no suspicion of any thing wrong, and is sure to do the very +thing that he ought not to do." + +Fred Linden was right in this conclusion. It can be readily understood, +why no thought of peril should enter the brain of the Irish lad, who was +never so sure that he was right and Fred wrong when the two parted to +take different routes in search of the cow. + +"It's a bright lad--is Fred," said Terry, "but there isn't any law that +I knows of by which he is to be right ivery time and Mr. Terence Clark +wrong. I'm going straight for the point where the tinkle of the bell +came from." + +The same thought puzzled him that puzzled Fred Linden; after walking +more than the whole distance that first intervened, the cow was still +invisible. There was nothing in the fact that when she had strayed so +far from home, she should keep on in the same direction. + +"It may be that she has heard something about the Pacific Ocean, and has +set out to see for herself whither the reports are correct," was the +quaint thought of the Irish lad, as he pushed vigorously through the +undergrowth, which was dense enough to turn him aside more than once and +compel him to keep his wits about him to prevent going astray +altogether. + +Now and then he paused, naturally expecting (as did Fred), that he would +hear more of the bell; but it is not necessary to say that, like his +companion, he was disappointed. He had fixed the point whence came the +noise so firmly in his mind, that he could not go wrong, though a boy of +less experience in the woods would have been sure to do so. + +Now, if any of you lads have ever driven cows or sheep, around whose +necks bells were hung, you have noticed the natural fact that they have +a sound peculiar to themselves. Referring particularly to cows, you may +have observed the _jangle_, _jangle_, made by the motion of the head in +cropping the grass, varied now and then by the confused jumble caused by +the animal flinging her head over the back of her neck or fore part of +the body to drive away the insects plaguing her. There is a certain +regularity in all this which will continue for hours, and that may be +said to be produced by the natural action of the animal, and which is +altogether different from that made by the swaying motion of the hand. + +But Terry Clark inherited a sharpness of wits from his parents, and, +while pushing forward among the trees and undergrowth, it struck him +that there were several curious features about the matter. + +"It was a mistake, as Fred said," he thought more than once, "that we +did not bring our guns with us." + +Then the second sound of the cow-bell fell upon the ear of Fred Linden; +Terry was within a hundred feet of the point whence it came, and he +could not have heard it more distinctly had he been standing on the spot +himself. The noise was so peculiar that a flood of misgiving overwhelmed +him. The _tinkle_, _tinkle_, _tinkle_, was so regular that nothing was +plainer than that no living quadruped could have made the sound. + +"That was not the cow," whispered the startled Terry; "she has more +sinse than to do any thing of the kind, as me uncle used to obsarve whin +he was accused of kaapin' sober; but I'll find out by the same token +what it all means." + +Since he had no firearms with which to defend himself, and since he was +sure he was threatened by danger, he ought to have hastened homeward; +but his curiosity would not permit him to do so. + +He advanced with all the caution possible, parting the obstructing +bushes in front and stepping as lightly on the carpet of leaves as +though he were a scout entering the camp of an enemy. He often stopped, +listened and peered, not only in front and the sides, but to the rear. +Whatever might take place, he did not intend to be surprised. + +He had advanced a couple of rods in this manner, when a faint sound from +the bell caught his ear, but was instantly suppressed, as though some +one had stopped at the instant he started to sway it. Faint as was the +tinkle, however, he was able to locate the precise point whence it came, +and after a little hesitation he moved toward it. + +All at once he caught sight of a figure in a crouching position, +stepping softly among the trees and undergrowth. He stood still, and a +moment later was able to distinguish the figure of an Indian warrior, +bending slightly forward, advancing inch by inch and holding the cow-bell +in his hand. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +A PARTY OF THE THIRD PART. + + +The Indian warrior whom Terry Clark saw advancing stealthily through the +undergrowth, cow-bell in hand, was a frightful object. His head and +shoulders were bent forward, and he was stepping slowly and silently, +while he glanced from right to left, as if searching for some object, or +awaiting the occurrence of an expected event. His face was daubed with +black and red paint, his long hair, as coarse as that of a horse's tail, +dangled about his shoulders and alongside his neck, so that his eyes, +when staring through it, seemed to be blazing among so much tangled +brush. The ordinary hunting shirt, fringed in front, inclosed his chest, +and was gathered at the waist by a sash or belt into which were thrust +his hunting knife and tomahawk. The usual breechcloth, leggins and +moccasins completed his dress. + +He carried a fine rifle in his left hand, in a trailing position, while +a powder horn and bullet pouch were supported by a string passing over +his shoulder. He was what may be called a thoroughly equipped warrior, +without taking into account the cow-bell, which was suspended by the +thumb and fingers of the right hand. It was thus he must have grasped +the implement when he caused it to give out the sound that caught the +ear of Fred Linden and Terry Clark. But at the moment the Irish lad saw +him, and for some minutes after, he held the bell in such careful poise +that it gave no sound at all. + +The Indian probably suspected his imitation of the action of the animal +was so poor that it was likely to cause distrust, and therefore he was +sparing in resorting to the stratagem. + +Now, nothing can be clearer than that if the warrior was in such a plain +view of Terry Clark, the latter was equally exposed to his eye. The +Indian was moving in his guarded fashion over a course at right angles +to that followed by the lad, who was quick to realize his peril. He knew +that every second he remained thus exposed he was likely to be seen. He +had hardly taken a glance of his enemy, when he stooped so that his +knees almost touched the ground, and moved as noiselessly and quickly as +he could to the nearest tree, behind which he took shelter. + +This tree was an oak, large enough to hide two such boys, standing side +by side, so that the youth felt secure for the time. + +"Ah, if I only had me gun," was the regret that naturally came to him; +"I would quickly settle with the spalpeen that stole old Brindle, and +now wants to run away wid me." + +It will be admitted that the situation of Terry was peculiar, for he was +quite close to the warrior, who, there was every reason to believe, was +hunting for him, and who was so nigh that there was imminent danger of +discovery. It might be asked why the redskin should have taken this +course, for in some respects it had more than one absurd feature. If he +wanted to kill a white person, all this maneuvering with a cow-bell was +ridiculous, while his conduct from first to last was in some respects +unreasonable. The best explanation was that which was made sometime +afterward by a person, who as yet has not been introduced to the reader, +but who, when he does appear, will be admitted to be the best judge. I +allude to Deerfoot the Shawanoe. + +The Indian with the cow-bell was a Winnebago warrior, whose home was a +long ways to the northward, but who had gone thither in company with +several others on what may be called a tour of investigation. The +driving off of the cow was probably an inspiration of the moment. The +Indians kept her until they had got all the milk they wanted, first +removing the bell so that her friends could not recover her until they +were through. The stratagem which I have been describing was an +afterthought. None of the Winnebagos except the one who tried the plan +would have any thing to do with it, though they were willing enough that +every white person in the settlement of Greville should perish, if the +same could be brought about without risk to them. + +Left to himself, the Winnebago decided to make a prisoner of whomsoever +should be sent to find the cow. He had reason to believe that this +person would be a youth, and since every thing was so quiet in that +section, he was not likely to be armed. Hence, it would be an easy +matter to decoy him a goodly distance from the settlement, when the +warrior could pounce upon, make him a prisoner and compel him to go with +him. After the couple were far enough from the settlement the lad could +be put to death, if his captor or the party to which the captor +belonged, should so elect. + +Terry Clark had stood behind the sheltering tree for perhaps five +minutes, when he became aware of an alarming fact: the warrior with the +bell was slowly approaching him. The faint tinkle that it gave out once +or twice told this, and when finally the lad ventured to peep around the +side of the tree, the sight was a startling one. The Indian had risen +almost to the upright posture, and holding the gun and bell as +described, was moving directly toward the oak behind which the boy +stood. Moreover at the moment the latter took the cautious look, the +visage of the Indian showed that he was looking straight at the tree. + +"By the powers!" gasped Terry, "but the spalpeen observed me, and I'm +thinkin' that he saw me before I did him." + +It was not at all unlikely that such was the case. The Indian may have +felt sure of his victim, and so he indulged in a little by-play, as a +cat often does with a mouse. Such a cruel proceeding was characteristic +of his race. + +The belief that this was the case placed Terry Clark in a most trying +position. He was without the means with which to defend himself, and in +fact was hopeless. It was useless to try to run away, for if the warrior +could not overtake him at once, he could bring him down with his rifle. + +You know how rare a thing it is for an Irishman to submit meekly, even +when there is no hope in resistance. Terry muttered: + +"If he lays hands on me, there's going to be a fight; I wish Fred was +near, that he could see that I git fair play." + +No person could have been more in earnest than was the Irish lad. + +"I'll wait till his head comes round the corner of that tree and then +I'll give him a whack that'll tumble him over on his back, afore he +knows what's the matter wid him; then I'll amuse myself wid hammerin' +him after he is down till I git tired and then I'll take his gun and +knife and tomahawk and the bell and make him walk before me to the +sittlement." + +The lad had just gone over in his mind this roseate programme, when a +soft tinkle told him that the Winnebago was within a few steps of the +tree; and at the same moment that the youth made this interesting +discovery, another still more astonishing one broke upon him. + +Just fifty feet away and behind a trunk very similar to the one that +sheltered the lad, stood a second Indian warrior. His position was such +that he was in plain view of Terry, though the Winnebago could not see +him except when the latter should approach quite close to the shelter of +the boy. The strange Indian was closely watching the hostile one, and, +with that remarkable intuition that sometimes comes to a person in grave +crises, Terry was convinced that he was an enemy of the Winnebago, +though whether a friend of the youth was not so certain. + +In his amazement, the lad for the moment forgot his own danger and gave +his attention to the stranger, who was the most striking looking warrior +he had ever seen. He seemed to be about eighteen or twenty years of age, +and was the picture of manly grace and beauty. + +He had long, luxuriant black hair which hung about his shoulders, being +gathered by a loose band at the neck, so as to keep it from getting in +front of his eyes. In the crown of this natural covering were thrust +three stained eagle feathers, while there were two rows of colored beads +around the neck. The fringed hunting shirt which reached almost to his +knees was of a dull, yellow color and the sash or belt around the waist +was of a dark red. A small but handsome bracelet encircled his left +wrist, and the fringes of his leggins were of varied and brilliant hues, +as were the beaded moccasins that incased his shapely feet. A tomahawk +and knife were in his girdle, while he held a finely ornamented rifle in +his right hand, the manner in which he manipulated the weapon showing +that he was left-handed. + +The face was strikingly fine, the nose being slightly aquiline, the +cheek bones less prominent, and the whole contour more symmetrical than +is generally the case with his race. There was something in the +situation that evidently amused him, for Terry saw him smile so +unmistakably that he noticed his small and regular white teeth. + +It was plain that he was watching the movements of the Winnebago, though +he said nothing, and made no gesture to the lad, whose wondering look he +must have understood. Be that as it may, the sight of the strange +Indian, and the belief that he was an enemy of the other with the +cow-bell, inspired the Irish lad with a courage that he would not have +known had the other warrior been absent. + +"He's waiting to see how I condooct mesilf when the spalpeen lays hands +on me," thought Terence; "he won't have to wait long." + +The youth was right. The crouching Winnebago, doubtless feeling that he +had no immediate use for the bell that had served him so well, dropped +it to the ground beside him, and holding only his rifle in hand, stepped +forward with the same cat-like tread that had marked his advance from +the first. He knew that his victim was shrinking behind the trunk of the +oak, and he was having his own peculiar sport with him. + +So intense was the attention of Terry that he heard distinctly the +footsteps of the warrior, who a moment later was close enough to touch +the tree with his hand, had he been so minded. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +A FRIEND IN NEED. + + +Terry Clark, the Irish lad, placed his right foot behind the left, his +weight equally supported on both, and stood as rigid as iron, with both +fists clinched and half raised, in the attitude of one holding himself +ready to use nature's weapons to his utmost ability. + +He heard the soft moccasin press the layer of brown autumn leaves, and +the next moment the point of a knobby, painted nose came slowly in sight +around the side of the trunk, followed by the sloping forehead, the +hideous face and the shoulders of the warrior, whose right hand was held +so far to the rear with the gun that it was the last to come into view. + +As the Winnebago caught sight of the white-faced boy, his countenance +was disfigured by a grin that made it more repulsive than before. + +"Oogh! brudder!--oogh!--Yenghese--" + +Just then Terry Clark let fly. He was a lusty lad, and he landed both +fists, one after another, squarely in the painted face, with such force +that the warrior was knocked completely off his feet. He went over +backward as though from the kick of a horse; but, contrary to the hopes +of his assailant, he did not let go of his gun. Had he done so, the +youth would have caught it up and shot him before he could regain his +feet. + +The blow was most presumptuous, and would have insured the death of the +one who gave it but for the intervention of the second Indian, who +seemed to take but a couple of bounds from the tree near which he was +standing when he landed on the spot. The infuriated Winnebago was in the +act of clambering to his feet, when he caught sight of the lithe, +graceful warrior, standing only a couple of steps away, with loaded +rifle pointed at him. + +"Dog of a Winnebago," he said in a voice slightly above an ordinary +tone; "if he harms the pale face, he shall die!" + +There are some expressions so forcible that they can not be made more +so. The young Indian spoke in the lingo of the Winnebago, whose totem he +had recognized, but his posture, erect on his feet, with his cocked +rifle in such a position that he had only to pull the trigger to send +the bullet through the bronzed skull before him;--all this required no +words of explanation. The Winnebago grasped the situation, and, to use +the homely expression common at this day, he saw that the other "had the +drop" on him. + +The Indian, though larger, older, heavier and stronger, was taken at +such disadvantage that he ceased his effort to rise, and looked up at +his conqueror with a helplessness so grotesque that under other +circumstances it would have caused a smile. Indeed, Terry Clark did +indulge in a slight laugh, for he saw that it was safe to do so; the +Winnebago was on the ground before his master. + +"If ye want me to ring the old coow-bell, I'll be glad to obleege, for +the performance looks as if a little moosic would give tone to the same. +Howsumever, I'll step back and let this good looking young gintleman run +the show." + +Thereupon Terry withdrew several paces and watched the proceedings with +a depth of interest that can be fully understood. + +The look of the Winnebago, who was half reclining on his side, +supporting his body with the hand that grasped his gun, plainly +indicated the question that came from his lips. + +"Why does my brother look with evil eyes on the Wolf, who has come from +the lodges of the Winnebagos? Are not all red men brothers?" + +"Deerfoot is a Shawanoe, whose warriors have consorted with those of the +Winnebagos; but Deerfoot has left his lodge beyond the Mississippi and +lives alone in the woods. He will not hurt the brave Winnebago who +fights men, but he slays the Wolf that bites the children of the pale +faces, that have never harmed him." + +Possibly the Wolf was inclined to argue the matter with the Shawanoe, +who had caught him at such disadvantage; but the manner and words of +Deerfoot showed that he was in no mood for discussion. + +"What does my brother want?" asked the Winnebago, in a voice that +proved all fight had left him. The most, indeed, that he ventured to do +was gently to rub his forehead and nose, where the fists of the sturdy +Terry Clark had landed. + +"Let the Wolf rise to his feet, but when he does so, his gun must lie on +the ground." + +This was a harsh order, but there was no help for it; the Indian +hesitated a moment, and then, black and scowling, he slowly assumed the +upright posture, and, folding his arms across his chest, looked in the +face of the bright-eyed Deerfoot, to signify that he was awaiting his +next command. + +"The Wolf shall now turn his face away from Deerfoot." + +The Winnebago obeyed the order as promptly as if he were a soldier +undergoing drill. + +"Let my brother now raise his eyes, until he sees the beech with the +white trunk," said Deerfoot, using the word "brother" for the first +time. + +The object to which he alluded was perhaps fifty yards distant, the +light color of the bark showing only here and there among the branches +and undergrowth that happened to be less frequent than in other +directions. The Wolf signified that he recognized the tree to which his +conqueror referred. + +"Now let my brother run; when he reaches the beech he can leap behind +it, and it will shield his body; if my brother is slow Deerfoot may fire +his gun and Wolf will never bite again." + +The Winnebago wanted no explanation of this threat. It was hard for him +to depart, leaving his rifle, but it was harder for him to lose his +life, and he did not hesitate as to the choice. He made one tremendous +bound that carried him a dozen feet, and then sped through the wood like +a frightened deer. When he had passed half of the intervening distance, +he seemed to fancy that he was not making satisfactory time for the +Shawanoe, who, he doubtless imagined, was standing with leveled gun, +finger on the trigger. He therefore began leaping from side to side, so +as to disconcert the aim of the dreaded Deerfoot. In the hope also of +further confusing him, he emitted several frenzied whoops, which added +such grotesqueness to the scene that Terry Clark threw back his head +and made the woods ring with laughter. + +"I never saw a frog hop about like that, which beats any show." + +Deerfoot did not have his rifle cocked or in position. The moment the +Wolf started, he saw how great his fright was, and, lowering the flint +of the weapon, he rested the stock on the ground and watched the antics +of the fugitive. The Shawanoe, unlike most of his race, had a vein of +humor in his composition. When Terry broke into mirth, he too laughed, +but it was simply a smile, accompanied by a sparkle of his bright eyes +which showed how much he enjoyed the scene. + +The moment the Wolf arrived at the beech, he darted behind it, and for +the first time looked over his shoulder. The sight could not have been +reassuring, for he continued his frenzied flight until the keen ear of +the Shawanoe could no longer hear him threshing through the wood. + +By this time Terry Clark had made up his mind that whoever the new +arrival might be, he was a friend. The Irish lad had not been able to +understand any of the words that passed between the two, though their +actions were eloquent enough to render much explanation unnecessary. But +a person who treated the Winnebago in such style could not feel +otherwise than friendly toward the one in whose behalf the interference +was made. Terry blushed a little as he walked forward and reached out +his honest hand. + +"If it's all the same to ye, I'll be glad to give that purty hand of +yours an owld-fashioned shake, such as a fellow sometimes gits when he +catches the chills an' faver." + +Deerfoot looked at the jolly lad with an odd expression, as he gave him +his hand, which, I need not say, was shaken with enthusiasm. The young +Shawanoe smiled in his own shadowy way and returned the pressure warmly. + +"My brother is happy," said he when the salute was finished; "it makes +the heart of Deerfoot glad that he could be his friend." + +"Ye were a friend indade, though ye'll admit, Deerfut, that I toppled +over the spalpeen in foine style, now didn't I?" + +"The Wolf who is a Winnebago, fell as though the lightning struck him." + +"How is it," asked Terry with no little curiosity, "that ye, who are as +full-blooded an Injin as the Winnebago, can talk the English with almost +as foine an accint as meself?" + +"Deerfoot has lived among the pale faces; when he was a small child he +went with the Shawanoes to harm the white men, but they took him +prisoner; they treated him kindly, and told him about God, who loves all +His children, whether they be white or red, or the color of the night; +they showed him how to read books, and to make his name and words on +paper, so that others might read." + +"Can ye read and write?" asked the astonished Terry. + +Deerfoot smiled and nodded his head. + +"Well, well, that bates ivery thing!" said Terry, who instantly repeated +the absurd belief of many of his race, by adding, "I didn't s'pose that +an Injin could learn." + +Without replying to the last remark, the Shawanoe, looking the lad +steadily in the eye, said, "Deerfoot has a message for Fred Linden; does +my brother know him?" + +"Do I know him?" repeated Terry; "I know the same better than I know +mesilf; he started wid me to hunt the coow, and I rickons that he can't +be very fur away." + +"He's coming," quietly said Deerfoot, looking off to the left of Terry, +as if about to salute a new arrival. The Irish lad wheeled in his quick +way, but his sharp eyes caught no glimpse of his approaching friend. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +FRED LINDEN RECEIVES A MESSAGE FROM THE OZARK CAMP. + + +As soon as Fred Linden discovered the deception respecting the cow-bell, +he made all haste toward the point whence came the sound, in the hope of +warning Terry in time to save him from treachery. You will understand +how quickly events passed when told that, although he came almost +directly to the spot, he did not reach it until Deerfoot the Shawanoe +asked for him. This wonderful Indian, of whom I shall have considerably +more to tell, heard the coming of the lad whom he had never seen, before +either the eye or ear of Terry Clark could detect his approach. + +As may well be supposed, Fred Linden was amazed at what met his eyes. +The sight of Terry in friendly converse with a strange Indian was the +opposite of what he expected to see. He slackened his hurried walk and +looked inquiringly at Terry. The latter could talk fast when he chose, +and the few sentences he rattled off as his companion came up made the +matter tolerably clear. + +While the questioning and talk were going on, Deerfoot stood leaning on +his long gun and gazing with a certain natural dignity at the two +friends. He said nothing nor did he appear to show any special +curiosity, though had any one studied his countenance, he would have +seen that he was watching Fred Linden. He had said that he carried a +message to him, and it was no more than natural that he should wish to +know something about him. + +As for Fred himself he did not try to hide his profound interest in the +remarkable warrior who had appeared at such an opportune time, but of +whom he had never before heard a word. He knew that the settlers along +the frontier often found valuable allies in the friendly Indians, and he +concluded that this red man was one of those who, having been maltreated +by his own people or kindly used by the whites, had given his loyalty to +the latter; for in the brief narrative of Terry Clark, he had time only +to tell the leading facts about the rescue of himself. Just then, +therefore, the Irish lad knew more about Deerfoot than did the American. + +But it takes only a little time for such a group to become acquainted +with each other. A general handshaking followed, and it happened more +than once that all three were talking at the same moment. Had any one +been able to translate the expression of Deerfoot's countenance, he +would have seen that he was pleased with both the lads whom he now met +for the first time. There was a rollicking good nature, a cheery courage +and ever bubbling hopefulness about Terry that were contagious, and like +so much sunshine that went with him wherever he went. + +Fred Linden was of that manly mold and rugged appearance that he would +have drawn favorable attention wherever he might be. + +Such a lad in these days would have been picked out as a born athlete, +one who was capable, with proper training, to become a first-class ball +player, oarsman or boxer. He was a swift runner, a strong leaper, an +expert rifle shot, and his rugged frame and rough, outdoor life gave +him an endurance that few men could surpass. He was as tall as Deerfoot, +with broad shoulders, muscular arms and legs, clear, keen eyes, a fine +chest and a symmetrical frame. + +The clothes of the two boys, it is hardly necessary to say, were of +homespun, for a hundred years ago it would have been hard for them to +procure any other kind of goods. The short coat was somewhat like those +used to-day by bicyclists, reaching only a short distance below the +waist, where the girdle was fastened in front. The trowsers, of the same +material, reached to the knees, below which were the hunting leggins, +common along the border. Then came the warm, woolen stockings and thick, +heavy shoes, while the head was surmounted by a woolen cap, made by the +deft fingers at home, and without any pattern. It was soft, and having +no forepiece, sat on the head in whichever position it happened to be +first placed. In this respect it resembled the valuable sealskins of the +present day. The coats of the lads were open in front, and within were +the pockets, which they used as required, the trowsers also being +provided with a couple of these prime necessities. + +When the rattling conversation had gone on for several minutes, Terry +ran a few steps and picked up the bell that the Indian had placed on the +ground. The string which had held it about the neck of the animal was +missing, having probably been cut by the knife of the impatient Wolf. + +"I'll take the same back home wid me and put it on Brindle if I iver +maat her; I shouldn't be so 'stonished that I couldn't spake if I should +find that the spalpeen had killed her." + +"No," said Fred, "she isn't harmed; I found her off yonder, cropping the +buds and leaves, as innocently as though she hadn't done any thing wrong +in leading us on this long chase. I started her toward home, and if she +keeps up the gait she must be pretty near there by this time." + +This was good news to Terry, for the loss of the animal would have been +serious to the family of Mr. MacClaskey, her owner. The Irish lad had +hardly picked up the bell when Deerfoot pointed to the gun lying on the +ground, where it had been left by the Wolf. + +"That belongs to my brother." + +The delighted Terry could hardly believe what was told him, and he stood +looking doubtfully at Deerfoot, as if suspecting he had heard him amiss. + +"It was you who captured the gun, Deerfoot, and so, if it belongs to any +one, ye are the spalpeen." + +The Shawanoe looked down at his own handsome weapon and shook his head. +He had no need of any other weapon. Besides, this singular youth could +not have conscientiously taken it. He did not feel justified in keeping +it for his own use, no matter if in sore need of such a weapon; but, +since the Winnebago had made his demonstration against Terry Clark, and +was compelled to leave the gun behind, when he was permitted to go, it +seemed proper that the prize should fall into the hands of the Irish +lad. + +What gave special propriety to the act was the fact that, although Fred +Linden was the owner of a fine gun, Terry had none. When his father +lost his life, his rifle was never recovered, and though there was one +in the family of MacClaskey, the youth had no claim upon it. He longed +for such a weapon, with a longing that it would be hard to understand. +The prize, therefore, was appreciated to its full value. He picked it up +with an embarrassed grin, which quickly became natural when he turned it +over in his hands and saw what an excellent piece it was. + +"More than likely it belonged to a white man in the first place," said +Fred; "so it is right enough that it should come back to one of his own +race." + +"It's loaded," said Terry, slightly raising the hammer and noticing the +powder in the pan. Then he brought the gun to his shoulder and pointing +it at the white trunk of the beech, which partly showed through the +intervening branches and undergrowth, he said: + +"If the spalpeen should peep out from behind that tree, I'm thinkin' I +could hit him a harder blow than when I landed me two fists on his +mug." + +"The Winnebago is a long ways off," said Deerfoot, with a shake of his +head; "he may meet my brother some day, but it will not be in this +place." + +The young Shawanoe having learned all that was to be learned about his +young friends, now reached his hand in the breast of his hunting shirt +and drew out a small, closely-printed Bible, from between the leaves of +which he took a piece of paper that had been folded several times. He +glanced at the superscription, as if to make sure it was right, and then +handed it to Fred, who, as may be supposed, took it with astonishment. +He recognized the penciled writing as that of his father. + +Parting the folds, he read the following: + + MY DEAR FRED: + + You know that when we left home there were three of us, Hardin, + Bowlby and myself. There are three of us still, but Bowlby + considers himself of no account for some weeks to come, because of + a hurt to his foot which will prevent his getting around for a long + time. Such being the case, I have concluded, now that I have the + chance, to send for you to join us. You are old enough and strong + enough to make a full hand, and you can give us good help. Since we + have all the animals, you will come afoot, but you will find no + trouble in keeping to the trail, which has been traveled often + enough to make it plain. It is no more than a hundred miles from + Greville to our camp at the foot of the Ozark Mountains, so you + ought to have no difficulty in reaching here in the course of three + or four days. Love to your mother and Edith. + + I send this by a young Shawanoe warrior, called Deerfoot. He is the + most remarkable Indian I ever knew. I shall have a good deal to + tell you about him when you reach here. + + YOUR FATHER. + +"Deerfoot bids his brothers good-by," said the young Indian, offering +his hand, when he saw Fred had finished reading his letter; "he hopes +that he shall see them again." + +"It won't be our fault if he doesn't," was the cordial response of Fred +Linden, in which Terry heartily joined him. After a few more pleasant +words they parted, Deerfoot following in the footsteps of the fleeing +Winnebago, while the others moved to the northward in the direction of +the creek. They turned aside a little from the direct course so as to +hunt for Brindle, that Fred had seen, but she was not found. To their +delight, however, they saw her footprints on the edge of the creek, +proving that she had gone home with the directness of one who felt +remorse for wandering from the straight path. She had swum the stream, +and was doubtless before the MacClaskey cabin at that moment. + +But standing close to the edge of the creek, the boys became aware of a +hard fact: it had not only risen with great rapidity during the last +half hour, so as to become a rushing torrent, but it was still rising so +fast that it was extremely dangerous for the boys to try to cross it in +the canoe. Indeed, they hesitated to make the attempt, but finally +concluded to do so. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +THE HUNTERS OF OZARK. + + +I must tell you how it was that Deerfoot the Shawanoe came to bring the +important letter of George Linden to his son Frederick. + +It has already been stated that it was the custom of a party of hunters +and trappers to leave the settlement of Greville in the autumn of each +year and spend most of the cold weather among the streams at the foot of +a certain part of the Ozark Mountains. At that period, the fur bearing +animals abounded in the section, as they were found in hundreds of other +portions of the vast area known under the general name of the Louisiana +Territory. You must bear in mind that there were thousands of square +miles that had not been trodden by a white man, and so sparse were the +Indian villages that large portions of the country remained to be +visited even by them. + +Beaver, otter, foxes, bears, and buffaloes were the chief animals that +were afterward driven west by the advancing tide of civilization, until +the agents of the Missouri and Western Fur Companies were forced to do +most of their work in the far west and north-west, where they came in +collision with that vast monopoly known as the Hudson Bay Company, +which, until recent years, not only trapped and hunted throughout +Oregon, but along the Pacific coast as far south as California. + +George Linden, Rufus Hardin and James Bowlby composed the party who, in +the autumn of the year of which I am writing, rode each a horse a +hundred miles to the south of the frontier settlement of Greville, and +pitched their tent at the foot of the Ozark range. Beside the animals +ridden, each hunter took a pack-horse to help bring back the peltries +that were to be gathered during the cold weather. As a matter of course, +they were provided with guns and plenty of munitions, and indeed with +every necessity for their limited wants. They had spent several winters +there and knew what was before them. They had hunted and trapped for +years in other parts of the great west, and more than once had made the +long journey to the post of St. Louis to dispose of their furs, a +necessity that, as I have explained, was removed by the annual visit of +the agents with their long train of pack-horses to gather up the +peltries. + +And so, without giving any of the interesting particulars of the ride +southward from Greville, let us take a look at the little party gathered +at their primitive camp in the wild Ozark region. + +The six horses had been relieved of their burdens on reaching the place, +and were turned loose to crop the grass that was plentiful in many +places. Although there was snow now and then through the winter, there +was hardly enough to cause any suffering on the part of the animals. +When the storms, however, were violent or prolonged, the hardy beasts +were provided with some of the stores of dried grass that was kept in +stock, as may be said. In case that gave out they could make shift with +the cottonwood and other trees, whose bark was not lacking in succulent +qualities. + +Although a tolerable shelter could have been found in any one of the +numerous caves within reach, the hunters preferred to erect a rough +cabin, that was almost strong enough to withstand a cyclone. The keen +axes enabled them to trim off the interfering limbs, and they were +joined at the corners so well that very little, if any, rain or snow +could force its way through. Other logs and branches were laid across +the top and ends fastened to the logs beneath by means of withes, so +that the roof was not likely to be carried away unless the cabin itself +went with it. + +On the top of the roof was a thick layer of branches and leaves, packed +so closely that little moisture could find its way through. There were +no windows, for none was needed. The single door in front was large +enough to allow free egress and ingress. At night, when there was a +possibility that some curious wild animal might come snuffing around, +the door was closed by means of a framework of thick limbs, also +fastened together with withes, swinging on leathern hinges, and made +secure by a brace leaning against it from the inside. + +Within this structure were stored their supplies, and the blankets on +which they slept were spread upon the bare ground. Their slumber was +sweeter, too, than it would have been had they stretched themselves on +"downy beds of ease," for health and weariness are two soporifics which +art can never supplant. + +The traps and appurtenances used in their toil were never taken away +from the place, for there was no call to do so. Such repairs as were +needed from time to time were made in the cabin or on the spot, as the +necessity arose. The rifles, of course, furnished the food needed, while +an abundance of fish could be taken at any time from the streams in the +neighborhood. + +A diet solely of flesh and fish is not acceptable to any one. Therefore, +among the supplies annually brought to the cabin, were a quantity of +coarse flour, meal, sugar, coffee, salt and tea. It may be said, that in +one respect they were like modern campers out, except that they took the +wrong season of the year for what so many boys consider the acme of +enjoyment. + +There was little in the appearance of the three men to call for special +description. All were in middle life, strong, rugged, and inured to +hardship. Linden was rather tall, his face covered by a heavy beard in +which not a gray hair had yet appeared. Hardin was fully as tall, with +shoulders somewhat bent, and his scant, dark beard was plentifully +sprinkled with gray. Bowlby was short and stocky in appearance. When in +the woods he allowed his black beard to grow all over his face, but at +home he was always smooth-shaven. He was of a swarthy complexion, +inclined to be silent, and often moody, but like his companions he was +brave, industrious and patient, holding a strong dislike of all Indians, +though not inclined to go to any unjustifiable length in his feelings. + +The dress of the three men was similar to that of Fred and Terry, which +has already been described. No one of them knew any thing about the +modern overcoat or cloak. If there should come a spell of unusually +severe weather, they had only to wrap a blanket or buffalo robe about +the shoulders when compelled to visit the traps or remain long +outdoors. Should it become necessary to kindle a fire within the cabin +for the sake of warmth, a broad, flat stone was removed from an opening +in the roof directly over the blaze, and the smoke, if so inclined, +found its way to the clear air outside. The cooking was done under the +adjoining trees. Of course it was of the most primitive character, but +it suited, and that is all that is necessary. + +The hunters reached their cabin about the middle of the forenoon of an +autumn day. They had eaten their regular morning meal, and they got to +work without delay. The horses were unloaded and turned adrift, the +stores safely housed, the blankets spread on the floor of simple earth +in the cabin, and then the men scattered to look after their traps. This +was a large job, for the implements had to be examined and many of them +slightly repaired, after which they must be carried long distances and +set. + +These traps were of the ordinary pattern, such as have been in general +use for hundreds of years. The iron jaws was forced wide apart and kept +in place by a catch, which was sprung by a slight pressure on the broad, +flat portion in the middle. The trap being carefully hidden from sight, +the unsuspecting animal had hardly time to rest one paw on this plate, +when the fierce jaws, impelled by steel springs of prodigious strength, +came together with the suddenness of lightning, and the animal, whatever +he be, was in a grip from which there was no escape. + +You can understand the care required to set these traps so that they +would do their work. The beaver is highly intelligent, and quick to +detect the signs of man's presence. Nothing can tempt him to venture +where he sees that his worst enemy has been before him. The fox is the +synonym of cunning, and will often outwit the shrewdest trapper. He will +walk around the trap and stealthily secure the bait without harm to +himself. One of those animals has been known to reach forward and spring +the implement, jerking back his paw quickly enough to escape the sharp +teeth. A fox, too, when caught in a steel trap will sometimes gnaw off +the leg just above where it is imprisoned, and afterward go through +life with little inconvenience on three legs. You may be sure that he is +never caught again in that fashion. + +It was easy to see where the sagacious beavers were in the habit of +leaving the water and climbing the bank. The trap was carefully placed +below the surface out of sight, and often it had no bait at all, for it +would seem that the bait itself was liable to awaken the suspicion of +the beavers. Occasionally, however, when it was desirable to attract +them to the spot, an oily odoriferous substance obtained from the animal +itself was smeared over the ground near the bank. + +The otters were scarcer than the beavers, but were hunted much in the +same manner. For foxes and fur-bearing animals that roamed the the +woods, the steel trap was baited with such food as they were fond of +(which was about every thing), and they were so numerous through that +part of the territory that the hunters had little difficulty in securing +what was wanted. + +At the end of the second day all the traps were in position, and the +three friends were grouped on the outside of the cabin smoking their +pipes and talking over the outlook for the winter, which all agreed was +favorable. + +The bison or buffaloes, of which mention has been made, were found in +the open spaces or prairies where there was plenty of grass. No such +multitudinous herds were seen as have been gathered in later years on +the western prairies, but there were enough to make very lively hunting +for the trio, who had shot and skinned several while on their way to the +beaver runs. + +Within a half hour's walk of the camp was a beaver dam fully half a mile +wide, built with astonishing skill and strength. The backwater flooded +the country for many square miles, and gave the remarkable animals just +the place they wanted for their curious huts, of which I shall have +something to tell you further on. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +A WELCOME ACQUAINTANCE. + + +On the fourth day after the arrival of the hunters at their cabin, the +accident of which Mr. Linden made mention befell Bowlby. It was early in +the morning, when the three were making their round of visits to the +traps. Since no two inspected the same ones, they were quite widely +separated from each other. Bowlby was walking over a rocky stretch of +land alongside the creek when a loose stone turned under his foot, +giving his ankle such a wrench that when he tried to stand he found he +could not bear the least weight on it. It was one of those hurts that +are more painful and troublesome than a fractured limb. + +"Here's a pretty go," he growled, as he sat down on the ground, his face +contorted with pain; "it'll be a long time before I'll be able to stand, +and the boys will have to bring one of the hosses here or else carry me +home. _Hello!_" + +He shouted at the top of his voice, feeling no alarm, for he knew that +his friends would come to his relief before long, even if they did not +hear his voice; but then he reflected, as he sat on the ground beside +the two beavers that he had killed and was carrying to his home, that he +was in bad form if a wild animal should assail him, or there should +happen to be a hostile Indian prowling in the vicinity. He had left his +gun at the cabin, as was his practice, since he needed all his strength +to bring in the products of the traps. + +He was startled, therefore, after his third shout; an Indian warrior, +fully armed, walked out of the wood and came toward him; but his signs +of peace, and more than all, the words he uttered, removed his fears. + +"My brother suffers; Deerfoot will help him to his cabin." + +"If that's so," said the greatly relieved Bowlby, "you're just the chap +I'm waiting for. We'll leave these beavers here for the others to come +after, and if you'll let me lean on your shoulder I guess I can hobble +back; but I'll have to lean heavy," he added, looking doubtfully at the +Indian, "and you ain't much more than a likely lad." + +"Let my brother try me," said Deerfoot, with a smile. + +The disabled hunter did try him, often compelled, as he was, to bear to +such an extent upon his new friend that it may be said the latter +sustained half his weight. The progress was slow, and when they reached +a small stream of water, Bowlby sat down and allowed the young Shawanoe +to bathe the inflamed limb. Great relief was felt. + +During this labored walk homeward, the two naturally talked a good deal +together and learned much about each other. Deerfoot said that he had +often hunted through the surrounding country, and he told why it was he +had found it necessary to leave his tribe on the other side of the +Mississippi. He said that he had spent more than one night in the +deserted cabin of Bowlby and his friends during the summer months, when +he found himself belated in the vicinity, and he once shot a wolf that +was resolved on entering against his protest. It was his intention to +make a call upon the hunters, and if they needed his aid, he was glad to +give it in the way of helping trap or shoot game. You need not be told +that though James Bowlby felt an innate dislike of the American race, +there was now one exception: henceforth he was the sworn friend of +Deerfoot the Shawanoe. + +Linden and Hardin had got back from making their rounds, and were +wondering what could have delayed their friend, when they saw him +limping painfully on one foot, and supported by a fine looking young +Indian warrior. Their astonishment was great, for they could not +understand what it meant. Linden hastened to the help of Bowlby, but he +waved him aside and said no one could do as well as Deerfoot. + +While Hardin went out to bring in the two beavers that had been taken +from the traps by Bowlby, the latter was assisted to a seat on the log +in front of the cabin. Then Deerfoot insisted on giving attention to the +injured limb. It had swollen a great deal since he bathed it. There was +nothing in the cabin in the way of ointment or liniment, but Deerfoot +hastened into the wood and soon came back with the leaves of some plant +whose virtues seemed to be well known to him. These were wrapped in a +piece of linen, which the establishment managed to afford, and pounded +to a pulp, and then the poultice was gently applied to the inflamed +ankle. Bowlby declared that it felt better at once, but his face +lengthened when Deerfoot told him that it would be a moon, or several +weeks, before he would fully recover the use of his limb. + +"That will make us short-handed, and we need every one," said Mr. +Linden; "I wish Fred was here to give us help." + +"I think I can ride my hoss to Greville," said Bowlby, "and bring him +back with me." + +"That is hardly worth while." + +"Where is the home of my brother?" gently asked Deerfoot. + +"At the settlement of Greville, about a hundred miles to the north." + +"Deerfoot knows where it is," he replied; "he will take a message for +his brother, for his footsteps lead him that way." + +"You're a mighty clever Indian; I will be ever so much obliged to you," +said Linden; "I will write a few lines to my boy, which will explain our +trouble, though I have no doubt you could take the message just as well; +but it is such an unexpected one that the boy might doubt it unless it +was in my own writing. See?" + +The Shawanoe nodded his head to signify that it was all clear to him. +Linden passed within the cabin, where he hurriedly wrote the few lines +that are already known to the reader, folded the paper, and wrote on the +outside: + + "FREDERICK LINDEN, + Grevil." + +He then handed it to Deerfoot, saying: + +"There is no special hurry, and if you are in the neighborhood of +Greville, and can make it convenient to leave that at my house, it will +be a great kindness to me." + +"If the Great Spirit does not will different it shall be in his hands +before the setting of three more suns, but," added Deerfoot, looking at +the superscription on the back of the paper, "has not my brother made a +mistake?" + +"What do you mean?" + +"When Deerfoot writes the word 'Greville,' he adds two letters more than +does my brother; perhaps, though, Deerfoot is wrong." + +No pen can describe the amazement that appeared on the faces of Linden +and Bowlby. Here was a young Indian teaching a white man old enough to +be his father how to spell in the English language! Was the like ever +known? + +For a full minute neither of the hunters spoke. They were sitting on the +log, while Deerfoot was standing in front of them. He held his rifle in +his right hand and the folded piece of paper in his left, while he +looked inquiringly down in the faces of the two men, whose mouths and +eyes were open, as though they could not believe the evidence of their +own senses. Finally, with a deep sigh, Linden slowly rose to his feet-- + +"Well, by gracious! if that don't beat every thing! Do you mean to say +that you can read _writing_? Impossible!" + +[Illustration: "For a full minute neither of the hunters spoke."] + +Then, as if still in doubt, he reached out and took the paper. Drawing a +stump of a lead pencil from his pocket he completed the word properly, +opened the paper, and handing it back to the Indian, said: + +"Let's hear you read _that_." + +"My brother writes so that any one can read his words," observed the +young Shawanoe by way of introduction, and then in a low, soft voice he +read the brief note from beginning to end. + +Bowlby, who had not yet spoken, seemed unable to express his emotions. +Unable himself to read, the attainment of the Indian was almost past +belief. As the best thing, therefore, that he could do, he solemnly +reached out his hand to Linden and shook it with great earnestness. +Settling painfully back on the log, he nodded his head several times as +if he was almost overcome, as indeed was the case. + +I should state at this point that although Linden had not seen fit to +make it known, he had heard of Deerfoot the Shawanoe long before. He +knew of some of his exploits in Kentucky, as well as those of later +years on the western bank of the Mississippi (which are told in the +"Young Pioneer" and the "Log Cabin Series"), but he had never met the +youth, nor had he ever heard or suspected that he knew how to read and +write. Taking hold of his arm, he asked: + +"Where in the name of all that is wonderful did you learn that? When I +wrote to Fred that I would tell him some things about you I did not know +of the most extraordinary of all--that which I have just seen. Sit right +down here, between me and Jim, and let us know all about it." + +Deerfoot held back, but yielded, and finally answered in his modest way +the numerous questions with which he was plied. Bowlby had managed to +find his tongue, and his queries were about twice as numerous as those +of his companion. By the time that Deerfoot had time to rest, Hardin +came back, and there was little left to tell. + +The Shawanoe had captured the Hunters of the Ozark. They insisted that +he should stay to dinner with them, and he did so. Then he was badgered +to enter into a shooting match. All were fine marksmen, and Linden was +the best shot in Greville. Using his own rifle, Deerfoot beat every one +of them. Then he exchanged weapons and allowed the crippled Bowlby to +rest his piece, and the Shawanoe beat all three just as badly as before. +They were delighted, and slapping him on the back, asked him to spend a +week with them, but he shook his head. + +The sun was already beyond the meridian, and there were reasons for his +departure which he could not explain. They liked him too well to insist, +though they made him promise that on the first chance he would make them +a visit. Then Deerfoot gravely pressed hands with all and quickly +disappeared in the woods, taking the trail that led toward Greville. You +have already learned about his meeting with Terry Clark and Fred +Linden. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +A MISHAP. + + +Fred Linden and Terry Clark were alarmed when, on their way home, they +came to the creek across which they had paddled only a short time +before. It was then the comparatively shallow stream that was scarcely +an obstacle in their path; now it was a rushing torrent, whose volume +was increasing with great rapidity. The sinuosities of the creek had +caused it to gather in a large part of the rain that had fallen some +miles away, and its usual boundaries were overflowed. + +It was well that Fred had tied his canoe to the tree that was quite a +distance from the stream, for had he not done so it would have been +swept away like an egg shell. As it was, the water had reached the base +of the tree, while the boat was bobbing up and down almost in a straight +line with the course of the creek, as though it was tugging to get +loose. + +"My gracious, Terry!" said Fred, "this is a little worse than I +expected; it is going to be hard work to get across." + +"Ye are right for once," added the other, gravely shaking his head; +"them rapids are a little closer than I loike." + +"It seems to me," added Fred, who was unwilling to admit that he was +afraid to try the task, "that I have gone over the creek when it was +just as high and rapid, and have crossed at this place, too." + +"Who swung the paddle?" + +"Father did once and Mr. Bowlby at another time." + +"Did ye iver manage the paddle yersilf when the creek got onto one of +its tears?" + +"I don't remember that I have, but that has been only because the need +did not arise; I am not afraid to try it, even if you are." + +"Who said I was afraid?" demanded Terry; "I'm riddy to hop into the boat +and sway the paddle mesilf, and I'll do it, too." + +He stepped into the water, which was up to his shoe tops, and began +drawing in the rawhide rope which held the frail boat from breaking +away. His companion laughed and said nothing until the canoe was at +their feet and drawn up on the land away from the rushing current. + +"Don't be quite so touchy, Terry; that boat belongs to me and I can +handle the paddle better than you; anyway I shall try to take us to the +other side, and all that you have to do is to keep those limbs and trees +from capsizing us." + +The time occupied in pulling the boat to the spot had given the Irish +lad a chance to regain his usual good nature, and he made no protest +against the decision of his companion, though Terry was no unskillful +handler of the paddle himself. + +The creek was probably over a hundred feet wide, and the roiled current +abounded with limbs and trees that swung up and down, sometimes out of +sight and then popping up again, as though they were frolicking in the +swift waters. It would require a strong arm and a cool head to force the +birchen craft through these obstacles to the shore on the other side. +It must be admitted, too, that it was a piece of imprudence on the part +of the lads, who would have been wiser had they quietly waited where +they were until the overflow exhausted itself. A stream that rises so +fast subsides with the same quickness, and long before nightfall the +creek would shrink to proportions that would take away all peril to any +one in paddling across. + +They would have been compelled to go a long distance up stream before +finding a place where the crossing was easier, and it would have been +almost impossible to drag the canoe thither. They would have held fast +to one end of the rope and allowed it to dance through the rapids, so as +to allow them to make the passage below, where the great peril was +removed, had they not known that the chances were ten to one that it +would be snatched from their grasp, thus shutting them out altogether. + +Looking up and across the sloping clearing, the cabins forming the +settlement of Greville could be seen at no great distance. From several +of the stone chimneys the smoke was curling lazily upward, and now and +then glimpses could be caught of persons moving hither and thither, but +no one appeared to be looking in the direction of the creek, or if any +one was doing so, he saw nothing of the two boys standing on the further +shore and debating with themselves the best course to follow. At any +rate no one would think they were unable to take care of themselves. + +Both Fred and Terry knew that there was but one prudent plan to follow; +that was quietly to wait where they were until near night, by which time +all danger would be gone. But neither proposed the course nor made +mention of it. It is natural for youth to be rash, and there was a +semblance of timidity in such a shrinking back that was repellent to +American and Irish lad alike. And so you will understand how it was that +each showed an eagerness to enter into the contest with the angry +current. + +You will see, too, how foolish they were, when I tell you that during +the few minutes they stood by the tree to which the rope had been tied +discussing the situation, they saw the proof that the creek was +subsiding. There was a perceptible lowering of the surface, as was shown +by the soiled line against the trunk of the tree. Even Terry, when he +looked down, observed that he was not standing in quite as deep water as +he was a few minutes before. No danger, however, of his making mention +of it. + +It took but a minute or so to untie the long thong that was wrapped +about the limb, and then, as Fred was on the point of flinging the coil +into the bottom of the boat, the end of which was drawn up on the bank, +and to take up the paddle and push off, Terry, with some excitement, +caught his arm and said: + +"Plase wait a minute, will ye?" + +"What for?" + +"I'll not be gone long; howld the boat only for a twinkling." + +He ran a dozen steps or so from shore to where was the stump of a tree +that had probably been splintered by a thunder-bolt, and around which +sprouted a number of bushes that were dense enough to hide a large +object within. Carefully parting these, Terry laid down his rifle and +the bell, and then as carefully smoothed the undergrowth in place. Then +he hurried back. + +"There are plinty of lads about me own size," said he, "but there's only +one gun that belongs to me, and if the canoe should upsit and both of us +get drowned I want to be sure and save me gun." + +Fred smiled at this Irish-like explanation, but he was glad that Terry +had left the gun on shore. It was safely hidden until he should wish to +get it again, while its presence in the canoe would be the worst kind of +encumbrance. The new owner was so charmed with his prize that he would +think more of saving that than of saving the boat. It was clear that the +task of Terry in fighting off the rushing timber would be almost as +difficult as that of guiding it across the swift stream. + +"In with you!" said Fred to Terry, who carefully seated himself near the +bow of the canoe and took up the long pole that lay in the bottom and +projected some distance over the end of the boat. Fred Linden gave it a +vigorous shove, landed in the stern, caught up the paddle, and +instantly began his struggle. + +You will see the difficulty and danger of his task, and must therefore +join with me in condemning the lack of judgment showed by both. They had +to paddle more than a hundred feet across a furious torrent in which +were scores of uprooted trees, wrenched-off limbs, and craggy stumps, +all speeding downward with great swiftness and force. The course of the +boat being at right angles to these objects, must bring it in collision +with some of them, at the great risk of overturning or shattering the +canoe, that was not calculated to withstand any such blows. + +And yet, though the task was a hard one, there was little doubt that the +two lads could make their way across, provided they were given enough +time in which to do so; but there were the rapids, so near that their +roar was plainly heard. In case of an overturn or accident, the two +would be swept among them. It was the same, on a smaller scale, as if a +person should start to row across Niagara River, just above the falls, +where by vigorous work he could make the passage, provided he did not +drop a stroke on the way. You will say that any one making such an +attempt placed little value on his own life. + +Fred Linden used his paddle after the manner of an Indian--that is, he +dipped the broad end first on one side of the boat and then on the +other. The paddle was not widened at each end, as is sometimes the case, +the one who wields it using the sides alternately and with great +rapidity. In calm water such a light structure as an Indian canoe can be +driven with great speed, and I have no doubt that the youths would have +made a speedy passage had it not been for the interference of the +floating objects to which I have referred. + +Ten feet from land Fred was forced to back water suddenly to avoid a +jagged stump that danced in front like a bull getting ready to charge, +and finally did strike the bow with a thump that startled both the +occupants. + +"Me pole slipped off the side of that," Terry explained, as he +brandished the stick in front on the lookout for the threatening +waste-wood; "have a care that ye don't drive the boat agin something +that is stronger than the boat itsilf." + +By coolness, alertness and strength, Fred fought his way in safety until +probably one-third of the distance was passed. Then he saw the great +blunder he had made in trying to cross while the current was so high. +The constant fighting with the floating stumps and trees caused them to +lose so much ground--or rather water--that they were drifting +frightfully close to the rapids, whose roar grew plainer every moment. +But he had gone so far that it was as safe to keep on as to turn back, +and so he dipped the paddle and swung it with renewed vigor. + +"Look out!" he called to Terry, who in parrying the rush of a stump a +couple of yards in advance, did not notice one that was coming broadside +on, its presence betrayed by a tiny branch that protruded a few inches +above the surface like the fin of a shark. Fred did his utmost to avoid +it, but he was too slow, and a second later the pointed log not only +struck the side of the canoe, but capsized it. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +A STRUGGLE FOR LIFE. + + +The partly sunken log crashed into the side of the canoe with such +suddenness that the craft was overturned and ruined, and the occupants +struggling in the water, before either had time to utter more than a +single exclamation. + +But they were powerful swimmers, and, but for the nearness of the +rapids, they could have afforded to laugh at their mishap. As it was, +Terry Clark shouted, as he blew the muddy water from his mouth: + +"What a sinsible young gintleman I was to lave me gun on the other +side." + +"We both would have been much more sensible had we left ourselves +there," rejoined Fred, who was struggling with might and main for the +land in front; "there's no time, Terry, to waste in talk; we've got to +swim as never before, for nothing else will save us." + +The other seemed to rouse to his peril, for he made the only wise +response he could--which was putting forth every atom of strength and +skill that he possessed in the effort to breast the furious torrent. + +It is singular how often the slightest advantage turns the scale for +life or death. At the moment the canoe was smashed and capsized Terry +Clark was seated some six or eight feet nearer the shore toward which +they were paddling than was Fred Linden, and this difference remained +when the two went into the water and began swimming. The Irish lad was +fully as skillful as the other, and he did not lose an inch of the gain +thus given him. + +They were near the middle of the stream when the catastrophe took place. +Of course they would have done better had they been without any +clothing, but there was no time to remove any of that, and beyond +question the two made the most gallant kind of a fight for life. + +Fully aroused to his peril, Terry swam with amazing power, his lips +compressed and his eyes fixed on the land in front, which seemed quite +near, and yet was never so hard to reach. The lad had proven by repeated +tests that he could swim faster on his left side then in any other +position. He quickly flung himself over and used his arms and legs like +one who knew fully the stake for which he was contending. + +By this recourse he actually gained on Fred, who continued to breast the +water with all the strength at his command. Terry was hopeful, and now +that he was fully roused, he did not waste his strength in shouting to +his companion. As he advanced in his crab-like fashion, he frequently +flirted his face around so as to look in front, and thus to keep aware +of his progress. + +"I'm doing well, and will make it," was his thought; "I hope Fred will +be as fortynate as mesilf." + +An important point was gained by swimming on his left side; his face was +turned up stream, and he caught sight of the floating timber quicker +than when advancing with his face toward the land. Thus it came about +that he saw a plunging tree, or log, similar to that which had +destroyed the canoe, and when it was fully as close to him. + +Like a flash, Terry dove, intending to pass clean under it. He could not +know any thing about the portion beneath the surface, and was a little +startled when he found himself among leaves and a lot of small branches; +but he swam with the same vigor and skill when below as when above the +surface, and quickly fought his way through, rising on the other side a +considerable distance nearer land. + +But he gasped with terror, for during the brief period he lost a great +deal more than he gained. A furtive glance to the left showed him the +mist and spray flying high in air, as the muddy waters were tossed to +and fro by the rocks below: he was fearfully close to them. + +But he was also close to land, and he saw his chance; indeed, his only +one. A tree growing out toward the creek curved downward so that the +lower part of the trunk was within a few inches of the water. A short +time before the current had washed against it, but was now falling away +from it. + +The portion which inclined downward like a bow was several feet from +shore, and some distance below him. It will be seen, therefore, that the +thing for him to do was to bend all his efforts toward reaching that. If +he could advance far enough to allow the current to sweep him beneath, +or quite close to the tree, he could grasp it and save himself. + +"That's what's got to be done," was his conclusion the instant he saw +the crooked tree; "or it's good-by to Terry Clark and his rifle." + +He would succeed; he saw it the next moment. The curving tree seemed to +be sweeping up stream with frightful swiftness, but at the right second +Terry, by a supreme effort, threw himself partly out of the water, and +flinging both arms around the trunk, which was no more than six inches +in diameter, he held fast. + +The strain was great, and he felt his fingers slipping over the shaggy +bark, but he held on like grim death, and by a skillful upward hitch of +his body, locked his fingers above the trunk, and was safe; he was then +able to hold double his own weight. + +His next move was to throw his feet around the trunk, when it was an +easy matter for him to twist himself over on top, where he was as secure +as lying on his own trundle bed in the cabin at home. + +The instant his own safety was secured his whole soul was stirred by +anxiety for Fred Linden, who, he knew, was placed at more disadvantage +than he. Since he was further from shore than was he, and since the +latter had been able to save himself only by a hair's breadth, it was +clearly beyond the power of Fred to escape in the same manner--though it +might be that there was some other remote chance for him. + +The first glance that Terry cast over the muddy waters showed him his +friend, swimming manfully for shore, but so far out in the stream that +it was impossible for him to reach it before passing into the grip of +the rapids. + +"It's no use," called out Fred, in a voice in which there was no tremor +or shrinking; "I'm bound for the rapids, and here goes." + +And deliberately facing about, he swam coolly in the direction of the +boiling waters as though he were bathing in a still lake. + +"Be the powers, but he is plucky," muttered Terence, thrilled by the +sight; "if he can get through there alive, I'll be proud of him!" + +The rapids, of which I have made mention several times, were caused by a +series of irregular rocks, extending a hundred yards, in the space of +which the stream made a descent of a dozen or twenty feet. At ordinary +times the creek wound languidly around these obstructions, forming many +deep, clear pools of water, that afforded the best kind of fishing. +There was so much room for the current that there was no call for it to +make haste. + +But you can understand how different it was when the creek was swollen +by violent rains. It then dashed against the rocks, was thrown back, +plunged against others, whirled about and charged upon still others, by +which time it was a mass of seething foam, with the spray flying high in +air, and a faint rainbow showing through the mist when the sun was +shining. After fighting its way between and around and over these +obstructions, the current emerged at the bottom one mass of boiling foam +and dancing bubbles, which continued for several hundred feet before +the effects of the savage churning that the water had received could be +shaken off. + +Now, it would be idle to say that these rapids were as dangerous as the +famous whirlpool below Niagara Falls; for it would not only be untrue, +but it would shut me out from taking Fred Linden safely through them: +for I am bound to do that, since he is too good a fellow to sacrifice at +this early stage of my story, and you would not forgive me for doing so. + +But all the same the danger was great, and was enough to cause the +bravest man to shrink from attempting the passage. Fred would have been +glad to shrink from going through, but since that was beyond his power +he did the wisest course--faced about and kept his wits with him. + +There was one consolation--the suspense could last but a few moments; he +was sure to emerge from the lower falls within the space of a minute, +whether alive or dead. + +The first object that caught his eye was his broken canoe. Naturally it +was but a short distance below him, though it had gained a little while +he was struggling so hard to make land. It was turned on its side, +spinning sometimes one way and then whirling the other, according to the +whim of the current; then sea-sawing up and down, until all at once it +shot upward like a huge sturgeon, which sometimes flings its whole +length out of the water. + +Another point must be named that was gained by this facing about of Fred +Linden. Since he was going with the current he kept pace with every +thing else that was afloat, and he was therefore in no danger from the +trees and branches that had caused him so much, and, in fact, nearly all +his trouble. + +At the moment he was about to enter the boiling rapids he found himself +partly entangled in the branches of a large uprooted tree that was +dancing about in a crazy fashion. + +"This may help to shield me from being dashed against the rocks," was +his thought, as he seized hold of a thick limb close to the point where +it put out from the trunk; "at any rate I don't see that it can make +matters any worse." + +The act of Fred Linden in grasping the limb saved his life. The next +moment he was whirled hither and thither, half strangled with foam, head +now in air, now beneath the surface, his body grazing the jagged rocks +by the closest possible shave, and all the time shooting forward with +dizzying rapidity, until at last he emerged into the calmer water below +as well and hearty as he ever was in all his life. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +TRAMPING SOUTHWARD. + + +An ejaculation of thankfulness escaped Fred Linden when he found himself +floating in the comparatively still water below the rapids, and he knew +that although he was pretty well bruised, none of his bones was broken. +He let go of the limb of the tree that had served him so well, and +flirting the water from his eyes, struck out with his old time vigor for +the shore, toward which he had started in the canoe. + +When Terry Clark saw his friend go spinning into the whirlpool, he +scrambled back from the trunk of the tree, on which he had found refuge, +and ran at full speed down the bank. Fast as he went, he was just in +time to see Fred swimming through the foaming waters toward the land. + +"Give me yer hand!" called out the delighted youngster; "there isn't +any body in the wide wurruld that could bate that onless it is mesilf, +and I couldn't do it." + +"Whew!" exclaimed Fred, as he laboriously clambered up the steep bank; +"that was the biggest lot of swimming and diving crowded into the space +of a minute or two that I ever knew; I wouldn't like to take such a trip +each day." + +"And I'm thinkin' that it'll be a few days after this whin we try it +agin," added Terry, delighted to see his loved comrade before him +unharmed; "I jist give up when I seen you plunge in among the rocks, and +was wonderin' how your father and mother and sister Edith would faal +when I should be luggin' your dead body home." + +"I'm thankful that you haven't _that_ to do," said Fred with an +earnestness that could not be mistaken; "but come, the clothes of us +both are dripping, and we can't get away any too soon." + +It was not far to walk, and a few minutes later they reached the other +side of the clearing, where the cluster of cabins stood. The first +living object on which their eyes rested was Brindle, lying on the +ground and chewing her cud with an air of contentment which belongs +exclusively to her kind, or rather kine. + +The boys laughed and Terry said: + +"If she had such a thing as conscience she wouldn't be takin' things in +that aisy style, after givin' us a duckin' that come nigh bein' our last +one." + +"You are right, Terry, but what did you do with that bell that Deerfoot +took away from the Winnebago?" + +"I lift it wid my gun on the other side of the creek; I didn't want it +tollin' our funeral knell all the time we was goin' through the rapids +and splittin' the rocks to pieces by bangin' our heads agin them." + +"It is just as well, for the creek will be so low that there will be no +danger in crossing it to-morrow, and you can get the bell again; well, +here we are at home." + +The boys separated, and at the same moment, each entered the cabin where +he lived. They were only a short distance apart. Several men and a +number of the lads, some older and some younger than the two in whom we +are interested, were moving about, and looked curiously at the dripping +figures. A couple asked an explanation of Fred, but he laughingly +answered that he would tell them after he had got dry, and immediately +disappeared in his own house. + +Mrs. Linden and Edith, her daughter, who was two years younger than +Fred, looked up in surprise when they saw the state of the lad. + +"Terry and I started to paddle across the creek, that is higher than +usual, and were overturned by a tree that stove in the side of the boat +and gave us a ducking." + +Having heard this explanation his folks seemed to feel no more curiosity +about it. The lad passed into his room, he being one of those fortunate +ones who had two complete suits of clothing, with the exception of cap +and shoes. It took him but a short time to effect the change, when he +reappeared, placing his foot and head gear near the fire, where they +would soon dry. + +The home of Fred Linden may be taken as a type of the best that were +found on the frontier. As a matter of course, it was made of logs, with +a stone chimney so huge that it projected like an irregular bay window +from the rear. The fire-place took up the greater part of one side of +the house, where the immense blocks of oak and hickory not only diffused +a cheery warmth through the lower portion, but sent fully one-half the +heat up the enormous throat of the chimney. + +The large room, which served for parlor, sitting and dining room, was +furnished simply, but comfortably, with plain chairs, a bench, +spinning-wheel, a rocking-chair, table, a few cheap pictures and the +indispensable cooking utensils. There was no stove, every thing being +prepared in the fire-place. At that day, as you well know, no one had +ever dreamed of using coal as an article of fuel, and the old-fashioned +stoves were exceedingly few in number. Carpets, of course, were not +thought of, though the rough floor was kept clean enough to serve as a +table for food. + +A rifle rested on two deer prongs over the mantel-piece, and there +seemed to be any number of knick-knacks about the room, though it would +have been found that nearly every one had a distinct use in the +household. + +Two rooms were connected on the same floor with the larger apartment. +One of these served as the sleeping quarters for the parents when Mr. +Linden was at home, and the other for Edith, while Fred occupied the +loft, which had the rafters for a ceiling, and extended over half the +lower floor. During the absence of the father, Edith and her mother used +one room, while Fred had the other. + +Noon had passed when the son came home, and his substantial dinner of +venison--procured some days before by Fred himself--brown bread, +potatoes, butter and milk, were awaiting him. Taking his place at the +table, he ate as only a rugged, growing boy of sixteen can eat. + +He made no further mention of the dangerous adventure that had just +befallen him, but gave the full particulars of Terry Clark's encounter +with the Winnebago Indian, who stole the bell from the cow, and tried to +have a little sport at the expense of the boy. It was an interesting +story, and mother and daughter listened with rapt attention. Edith, who +was a bright girl, and very fond of her brother, asked many questions +as to how the Winnebago looked, what he said, and whether he really +meant to kill poor Terry. Then her interest suddenly transferred itself +to Deerfoot, and she plied Fred with all sorts of queries, until he +laughingly told her that she was asking them two and three times over, +and really he had nothing more to tell. + +Then Fred drew out the moist and soiled bit of paper that he had taken +from his other clothes, and which contained the message of his father. +This, of course, caused a sensation, for it made known the fact that the +son was to join his parent for several months. It would be supposed that +this would cause some inconvenience, but in such a primitive community +all were neighbors, and the chores and work that would have been done by +Fred Linden would be cheerfully attended to by others. It was not until +many years afterward, when the settlements became towns, that the social +distinctions between families were formed. + +During all the conversation, after it had been agreed that Fred should +start alone on a hundred mile journey through the wild forest, nothing +was said about such a thing as the personal danger attending it. And +that, too, directly on the heels of the Winnebago's attempt on Terry +Clark. The habit of self-reliance was taught to the children of the +pioneers at such an early age, that their parents felt no solicitude, +where in these times they would have been tortured by anxiety, and, no +doubt, with abundant reason. + +Mrs. Bowlby was told of the mishap that had befallen her absent lord, +when she was asked by Edith to come over in the evening, but she was +assured that there was no cause for alarm, and so she felt none. She +wrote a letter to her husband, as did the wife of Hardin, and Fred's own +mother. These constituted all the extra luggage that he was to take, for +it would have been oppressive to load him with any thing in the nature +of a burden when the hunters had been absent only a few days. + +The decision was that Fred should make his start at early dawn the next +day. It was his purpose to reach camp on the fourth day; that would be +only an ordinary tramp for a rugged youngster like him, and he was +confident that he would have no trouble in keeping to the trail that had +been ridden over so recently by his friends. + +The little personal articles, as they may be called, which the lad would +require, were mostly the same as those of his father, and could be +utilized by the son. Such, as from the nature of things, could not +answer for both were tied into a compact package with his linen and +strapped over his shoulders with a thick blanket. His powder horn and +bullet pouch were not forgotten. An extra flint for his rifle was placed +in his pocket, and the weapon, which belonged to the lad himself, was +slung over his shoulder after the manner of a professional hunter. Then +making sure that nothing had been left behind, Fred gave his sister and +mother a warm hug and kiss apiece, called to them a jaunty good-by, and +set his face toward the Ozark mountains. + +It had become known that he was to start on quite a lengthy journey, and +those who were astir at that early hour called their hearty good wishes +to the lad, who was popular with all. Fred looked for Terry, and seeing +nothing of him, shouted his name as he passed by his door, but receiving +no response, concluded that he was still asleep. + +The heart of the boy was light as he strode at a rapid pace across the +clearing. He felt no inconvenience from the bruises received the day +before, during the passage of the rapids, and his natural buoyancy +caused him to look upon the tramp through the woods as a school boy +views his long expected vacation. There was no fear of any peril in the +stretch of unbroken forest that opened before him. It was fortunate +indeed for his peace of mind that he did not know what was awaiting him +in the dark arches and labyrinths of the almost interminable +wilderness. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +A STRANGE ANIMAL. + + +When Fred Linden reached the creek where he had met with his stirring +adventure the day before, he could not help smiling. It had shrunk to +its usual volume, and was winding along as lazily as usual, the only +sign of the violent freshet being the _débris_ left along the bank and +the slightly roiled appearance of the current. + +The pioneers had so many occasions to cross this stream of water that +they had made several attempts to put up a rude but strong bridge; but +no matter what pains they took, they could never erect a structure +strong enough to withstand the furious freshets which, as you can well +understand, were often resistless. + +The result, therefore, was a reliance upon the canoes, some of which lay +on one side of the stream and some on the other; but a surprise awaited +young Linden. Seeing no boat in sight, he walked along the shore in +quest of one, for he was resolved to keep out of the water as long as he +could, though a lad on the frontier makes far less ado about dripping +garments than you or I. + +That which surprised him was the sight of a long, uprooted tree which, +coming down the creek, when the water was rapidly falling, had swung +around in such position that the roots caught fast in the clayey soil on +the bank, and the limbs were imbedded in the sand and mud on the other +shore. The result was as good a bridge as a foot traveler could want. + +"That will do until there comes another rise," he said, as he carefully +stepped upon the limbs, using them to reach the trunk, along which he +walked across the water, leaping to the ground on the other side. + +He stepped off with his elastic gait, keeping so close to the path that +he and Terry had taken the day before that he caught sight of the bushes +around the splintered trunk of the tree where the rifle captured from +the Winnebago had been hidden. + +"He'll be over early to get his prize," thought Fred; "for it is beyond +all worth to him. If it wouldn't make him feel so bad I would plague him +a little by hiding it." + +He parted the bushes and peered within. The first object on which his +eye fell was the battered old cow-bell that had played such a curious +part the day before, but he saw nothing of the gun itself; a brief but +hurried search convinced him that it was gone. + +"That will break Terry's heart," said he to himself; "he never owned a +gun, and now, to lose such a handsome one when it has been in his +possession only a brief while, will grieve him as much as the loss of a +dear friend." + +Just then young Linden caught the faint but clear notes of some one +whistling. He had but to listen a second or two, when he recognized it, +as he did the hearty laugh that followed. Looking to his right, he saw +Terry himself standing but a few paces away, and, so to speak, in his +"war paint." Bullet pouch, powder-horn, bundle on his back, and, more +than all, the splendid rifle was there. The round, chubby face, clear +eyes, and pug nose of the Irish lad seemed to radiate delight as he +made an elaborate salute to his friend, and, with mock gravity, doffed +his hat and scraped his foot along the ground. "Why, Terry," said the +delighted Fred, asking the useless question, "what is the meaning of +this?" + +"I'm going wid ye to the camp in the Ozark Mountains; do ye think I +could rist aisy, knowin' that ye had to travel such a long distance wid +no one to take care of ye?" + +"Well, now, that just pleases me more than I can tell you," said the +overjoyed Fred, slapping him on the shoulder; "there isn't any one in +the wide world whose company I want as bad as yours; I lay awake half of +last night trying to get up some plan by which I could have you with me, +but I couldn't think of any, and had to give it up. Father sent only for +me, and I didn't suppose that Mr. MacClaskey would spare you. Tell me +how you managed it." + +A quizzical expression came upon the face of the Irish lad, who, leaning +on his rifle, took off his hat and scratched his head for a few seconds +before answering. + +"Wal, bein' it's yersilf, Fred, I don't mind sayin' that it took some +strategy, as I suppose Deerfut would call it. Last night, after we had +eat our supper, and the chores were done wid, and Mr. MacClaskey had +took his seat by the fire and lit his pipe, and Mrs. MacClaskey had +started her spinning-wheel a-hummin', and the children had been packed +off to bed, I told the folks the whole story. I managed it in such a +style that the owld gentleman, who, you know, has spint two winters in +the mountains, said it would make the folks out there desprit short of +hands. I observed, in me careless way, that such was the case, and that +Mr. Linden had sent word to ye that he wanted ye to come, and, from +things that I knew, me own prisence would give great satisfaction to +sartin parties. Ye understand that I had yersilf in me eye, though I +didn't think there was nade of making it all plain how it was. + +"Wai, the owld gintleman wouldn't listen to me goin' away, but I managed +it so well that after awhile he kind of remarked that if the folks +wanted me, he'd no objection to me goin', as he belaved that I would +make more there than I would at home. + +"_That_ was the p'int," added Terry, with a wink, as he replaced his +cap; "and there was where me genius showed itself; I spoke about the big +lot of furs that had to be gathered, and how much money the hunters +would make, and what a chance there was for a risin' young man of +industrious habits. The owld gintleman took it in, and at last said, +bein' as I had the new gun, why he didn't know but what I might give it +a trial. + +"Wal, that was all I wanted. I started to run over last night to tell +ye, but afore I got to yer house I thought of this 'cute plan of +s'prisin' ye. I got all ready last night, ate breakfast airly, and was +down here and had me gun just as I observed ye makin' yer way across the +clearin' toward this spot." + +And so it came about that on this beautiful sunshiny day in autumn, Fred +Linden and Terry Clark set out, each with ammunition and loaded rifle, +for a hundred mile tramp toward the wild region of the Ozark Mountains. +The air was crisp and cool, and every thing joined to give them a +buoyancy of spirits such as falls to the lot only of rugged, growing +boys in bounding health. + +The two, however, had seen enough of life in the woods to know that the +sunshine and clear air would not last. They might continue until they +reached camp, but more than likely clouds, rain, chilly weather and +possibly a flurry of snow would overtake them. Winter was at hand, and +though, as I have shown, they were in quite a temperate clime, it was +subject to violent changes, as trying as those in a much more northern +latitude. + +Besides, the trail, although distinctly marked, did not lead over any +thing like even ground all the way. Long before they could reach the +vicinity of the camp the character of the country told of the wild, +rocky region, covering thousands of square miles, and known as the Ozark +Mountains. No route could lead to such a distance through an unsettled +country without crossing a number of streams, and passing through +regions that were any thing but attractive to the traveler. + +All this, however, gave just the element of danger and difficulty to the +enterprise that was one of the most delightful features to the young +lads, who stepped off with swinging gait to the southward. Had the +journey been smooth and even, it would have lost the major part of its +charms. + +The boys carried enough with them to give them all they were likely to +need in the way of food for twenty-four hours. It would have been little +trouble to take enough to last through the four days; but there was +something unprofessional in such a course which caused their souls to +rebel. The magnificent forest contained plenty of game, and they would +have been poor sportsmen, indeed, had they confessed by their action +that they distrusted their ability to procure it. + +The trail over which the two walked, Fred slightly in advance, was +marked with such distinctness by the hoofs of the six horses that had +passed along it in Indian file but a short time before that it was no +trouble for the boys to recognize it, nor were they likely to have any +difficulty in keeping to it throughout the whole distance. + +It was a little past noon, when they reached a small brook whose +current was so cold and clear that they took a long draught from it, and +then sat down and ate their simple lunch. They felt little fatigue, and +as a goodly number of miles remained to be traveled, according to the +schedule of Fred Linden, they leaped lightly across the waste and were +soon under way again. + +"Do you know," said Fred, later in the afternoon, "that I've been +thinking we have not paid enough attention to one or two important +matters." + +"What are they?" + +"I don't know what has become of Deerfoot, and we may not see him again; +but we know enough of him to understand that whatever he says is worth +remembering. Now, he told us yesterday that that Winnebago, from whom he +took that rifle, belonged to a party of those warriors, and it seems to +me that if they are anywhere, it is between us and the camp, and we are +likely to see more of them." + +"I'm of the same opinion with yersilf, but jest now there is somethin' +else that gives me concern." + +"What is that?" asked the surprised Fred, stopping and turning around. + +"Some person or animal has been followin' us for the last half hour. +I've heard it more than once, and it ain't fur off this very minute." + +The two boys stood still and looked over the trail along which they had +been traveling. Fred Linden's fear was that Terry had discovered the +presence of some of the very Winnebagos whom he dreaded, but he was +mistaken. That which they saw was not a person, but a strange animal of +such fierce mien and hostile intent that they instantly looked to their +rifles, knowing that a savage fight was inevitable. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +A TROUBLESOME VISITOR. + + +There is no reason to discredit the truth of the accounts given by +hunters in the west of wild beasts of prodigious activity, strength and +ferocity, and that, belonging to no distinct class of animals, are a +mixture of the fiercest. Trappers and explorers in the wild regions of +the Rocky Mountains, sometimes meet a beast to which they have given the +expressive name of "Indian devil," whose power and daring are such that +a party of veteran hunters have been known to withdraw from a section +frequented by him, simply to avoid a fight. While the stories about them +may be exaggerated at times, there is no doubt that such animals exist, +and there is good reason to hold them in dread. + +The beast that Fred Linden and Terry Clark saw in the path before them +resembled a panther more than any animal they could call to mind. It +might have been described as a cross between a tiger and panther, had +that been possible. Fred had heard his father speak of those creatures +that were detested and feared, and he was sure that they were going to +have trouble with this one. How fortunate that each boy held a loaded +gun in his grasp! + +The action of the hybrid was as peculiar as his appearance. He seemed to +have been trotting quietly along the trail with his nose down, as though +following the scent, when he became aware that his game had stopped, and +were surveying him with some interest. The beast also came to an abrupt +halt and threw up his head, as though he was equally curious to learn +something about the party of the first part. + +Standing thus, with his nose quite high in the air, it struck both boys +that he showed a resemblance to a wolf as well as a panther. He was +larger than either, and there could be no doubt that he was amazingly +muscular, active and courageous. + +Thus stood the opposing parties, as they may be called, for a full +minute. Each looked steadily at the other, the space between them being +no more than fifty yards. Had it been less, both boys would have fired +at him, but they were afraid that such wounds as they could inflict +would only rouse his fury. One of the most marked peculiarities of the +"Indian devil" is his toughness, some of the stories in this respect +being almost incredible. + +All at once the beast seemed to be overcome with disgust for the two +youngsters. He whisked squarely about and trotted away, showing a bushy +fox-like tail that almost swept the ground. + +"I call that an insoolt!" exclaimed Terence Clark, bringing his gun to +his shoulder, taking quick aim and letting fly, before his companion +could object. He insisted that he had hit the animal, but it is likely +he was mistaken, for it gave no sign of being touched, trotting with the +same even step until it passed from sight around a bend in the path. + +"I hit him hard," insisted Terry, who proceeded to reload his piece; +"there's no doubt of the same." + +"If you had done so, he would have given some evidence of it, but there +was not the slightest." + +"Ye know that such creatures are tough," coolly remarked Terry; "and the +bullet has glanced off his side as from a rock." + +"If I could believe that," said the other, "I would hide somewhere until +he went away, for it would be only a waste of powder and ball to shoot +at him." + +"Hasn't he gone off? What are ye talking about?" + +"Gone away? Yes; for awhile, but we are not done with that beast yet; we +shall have trouble with him." + +"If we keep our guns loaded and our powder dry, we'll open on him, and +if we can't kill him we'll fill him with so much lead that he won't be +able to travel fast, and we'll bid him good-by and walk from him." + +The boys waited a few minutes, thinking possibly that the strange +creature would show himself again, but he did not appear, and they +turned about and resumed their journey. + +They were now on one of the best stretches of the trail. The ground was +even, there were no bowlders or rocks in the path to make walking +difficult, and the undergrowth, which in some places was quite an +obstruction, did not interfere. By the middle of the afternoon, Fred was +confident they were twenty miles at least on the road, and he said that +if they came upon an inviting place, they would go into camp for the +night. The package which each carried on his back was wrapped in a +blanket that could be used to lie upon by the fire, or in severe +weather, though they would have cared little had they owned nothing of +the kind. + +Their good spirits continued, and they were walking at a leisurely pace, +when a rustling in the bushes on the left caused them to look in that +direction. There stood the strange beast, not fifty feet away, head +erect, and staring at them with the same inquiring look that he showed +some time before. + +"I wonder how he likes a side view of us," said Terry, partly amused, +but somewhat frightened; "I think he is close enough for us to fetch him +this time." + +Fred was inclined to give him a shot, but he felt some doubt, and while +he was considering the question, the beast whisked about and vanished +like a flash. + +"He is a strange animal," said Fred, lowering his gun, which he was in +the act of raising; "and I am more satisfied now than ever that we shall +have trouble with him. The first time that we gain a fair shot, that is, +like we had just now, let's tumble him over. He may be as daring and +tough as the hunters say, but there isn't any animal tough enough to +withstand a couple of well-aimed bullets." + +"I agree wid ye--that is, after one was fired. That shot of mine was +well aimed and struck, but it takes somethin' more to bring him down, as +a colored friend of mine once said when a house tumbled over on his +head." + +"You saw how spry a creature he is, and if he should happen to drop down +upon us from the branch of a tree, those sharp claws of his would play +the mischief with us." + +Since there was no place in sight that suited for camping, Terry +reloaded, and they kept on. After the fright they had received, you may +be sure they maintained a close watch of the wood in every direction. As +yet they had seen no game from which to procure food, but they wanted +to go into camp near a spring or stream of water. The latter is +generally looked upon as one of the indispensables by a party of +campers, and it was not likely that the youths would have to travel far +before finding what they wanted. + +The sun had not yet dropped below the horizon when they struck the very +spot. There were the bubbling brook, lined by mossy banks, the small +open space, the tall column-like trunks; and the heavy overhanging +boughs, which, late though it was in the season, would allow but few +drops of a shower to find their way through. The air was cool, but there +were no signs of a storm. + +"There couldn't be a better place," said Fred, when he had noted all the +points; "here is every thing that a party can want, except it be supper, +which they ought to bring with them." + +"And somebody has been here ahead of us," added Terry, kicking apart the +ashes at the base of a large tree; "there's where the fire was +kindled." + +"No doubt it is where father and the rest of them spent the first night +after leaving home: that shows that we have made good progress, and, if +no accident happens, we shall arrive on time." + +"There is no need of our hurryin', as I understood that a gintleman once +obsarved whin they were goin' to hang him; if we are two or three days +late in gettin' there, what's the odds?" + +"None--though this fine weather can not last long, and when it is over, +I should like to be at the end of our journey, where we shall have good +shelter. I wonder what has become of the wild beast?" + +"Be the powers! but there he comes!" + +The words had hardly passed the lips of the startled Terry Clark, when +the strange animal was seen in the path in front of them, in precisely +the same position as when first noticed. He had evidently passed around +to the front, as though determined to study the boys from every point of +view. He seemed to have been standing for some minutes before discovered +by the boys, and was now observed approaching, as the Irish lad had +announced. + +He did not gallop or trot, but walked slowly, just as though having made +up his mind to take a select meal off the youngsters, he was going to do +so with the deliberation of an epicure that extracts the fullest +enjoyment from his delicacies. + +There was something unnerving in the sight of the frightful animal +approaching in this noiseless fashion, his jaws parted just enough to +show his long, white teeth, but giving utterance to no growl, or +threatening act, beyond the mere advance itself. His large, round eyes +had a phosphorescent glow, and the long, sinewy body and limbs were the +repository of a strength and activity that might well make a veteran +hunter timid about encountering him. + +"By gracious!" said Fred Linden; "we're in for it now; he doesn't mean +to wait for us to attack him, but is coming for us." + +"If I was called on to make a wager," said Terry, as cool as ever, "that +would be the view that I would take of the same." + +"You fire first and I will follow; take good aim, and send your bullet +right between the eyes." + +There was no time to spare, for the beast at that instant was within a +dozen yards. Terry Clark brought his rifle to his shoulder, sighted +quickly, and pulled the trigger. + +That he struck the creature was proven by his snarling growl and slight +upward leap; but instead of stopping, he broke into a gallop and came +straight on. + +Then Fred Linden aimed and fired, but he also failed to check the +advance of the animal. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +A WELCOME ALLY. + + +Fred Linden, like his companion, aimed directly between the eyes of the +strange beast, and, like him, he struck the mark; but both shots only +served to awake the irrestrainable ferocity of the animal, which, with +another rasping howl and parted jaws, bounded toward them. Since both +weapons were discharged, and they had no other firearms, the boys were +almost helpless, and it may be said their enemy was upon them. + +"Run!" called out Fred, wheeling about and leaping toward a tree, behind +which he took refuge; but sturdy Terry had no thought of turning away +from such a foe. Throwing one foot back so as to steady himself, he +seized his fine rifle with both hands, near to the muzzle, and held it +so as to use it as a club or shillaleh. + +The brute was so close that he had no more than time to gather his +strength, and swing the heavy stock with might and main, when the animal +bounded at him straight from the ground. + +There was a "dull thud," as it may be called, and the stock crashed +against the side of the beast's head, knocking him a couple of yards to +the left, and almost at the feet of Fred Linden; but in point of fact +the blow did no harm except to thwart the creature for a second or two. + +He was now snarling, and gave utterance to one or two peculiar barking +sounds like a dog or wolf. His eyes were ablaze, and there could be no +doubt that his fury was at white heat. Crouching for an instant, he made +a bound for Terry, before he had time to balance himself to deliver his +second blow with the same power as the first. + +Fred Linden could not stand still and see his companion torn to shreds +in that fashion. He leaped from behind the tree, with his gun also +clubbed, and hastened to strike with all his might; but he was too +late. + +It was a curious fact, not understood at the moment, that the savage +creature, although he leaped straight at Terry, passed fully two feet +over his head, and that, too, when the lad was standing erect, and +braced to deliver his second blow. + +Striking on his belly, several paces beyond, the beast rolled over and +over, clawing, snapping, snarling, and beating the air, with +lightning-like blows. The leaves and dust flew in all directions, and +the foam which he spat from his jaws was flecked with blood. + +He continued rolling and struggling until he was a rod distant, and then +suddenly stopped, stone dead. + +In the excitement and swirl of the moment both Fred and Terry were +conscious that their guns were not the only ones that were fired. At the +instant the brute was in the act of rising from the ground a second time +for his leap, the sharp report of another rifle was heard. The peril was +so imminent that the lads could give no attention just then to any thing +but the immediate business in hand; but now, seeing their fearful foe +was dead, they knew that it was the third bullet that had done it, and +they glanced around to see who their friend was. + +No one was in sight, and they advanced to the carcass, which they were +somewhat timid about touching, even though convinced that it was beyond +the power of doing any more harm. They saw that both of their bullets +had struck the skull, though not at the precise points at which they +aimed. One had passed near the right eye of the nondescript, and must +have inflicted serious injury, but its toughness would have enabled it +to keep up the fight, and to have slain both of the boys before they +could have reloaded and fired a second time. + +A little search showed where the fatal wound had been given. Just in +front of the fore leg the lead had entered and gone through the heart. +No animal, so far as known, amounts to any thing after his heart has +been torn in twain, though he may live and move for a time. + +"I tell you, Terry, that I don't believe there is another beast in the +country that, after receiving two bullets in the head, like that, could +make such a fight." + +"I begs to corrict ye," said the other; "it was three shots, for do ye +not mind that I bored a hole through him when we first made his +acquaintance?" + +"So you claimed, but you haven't explained how it was that such a shot +could be made without leaving any wound?" + +"It may have healed up since then," suggested the Irish lad, who knew as +well as his companion that the first bullet did not touch the beast. + +"I hadn't thought of that," meekly observed Fred; "but there is one +thing certain, that if that last shot hadn't been fired, it would have +been the last of us: where could it have come from?" he asked, looking +around and finding the answer to his question in the sight of Deerfoot +the Shawanoe, who came from behind a clump of bushes on the other side +of the small stream. + +Fred uttered an exclamation of delight when he recognized the graceful +young warrior, who was holding the stock of his gun in his left hand, +with the barrel resting idly in the hollow of his right arm. Fred +jumped across the brook, with hand extended to greet him. + +"I'd rather see you than any person in the world," was the truthful +exclamation of the youth: "when you gave me the letter yesterday I +thought what a splendid trip this would be if Terry would go with me, +and behold, he has come! I would have liked to have you too but I didn't +dare say so, for I didn't think it was possible: but ever since we +started I have felt that we only lacked _you_ to make the party +complete. Now, ain't I glad to see you, and how are you, old fellow?" + +The lad in his boisterous way wrung the hand of Deerfoot and slapped him +on the shoulder; then laughed, and shook hands again with an enthusiasm +that left no doubt of the cordiality of his welcome. + +As for Deerfoot, he showed a gentle dignity that was never absent. His +faint smile lit up his handsome face, and he was pleased with the +pleasure of the others. + +"Deerfoot has seen the faces of his brothers not many times, but it +brings sunshine to his heart to meet them again." + +Then his countenance was crossed by an expression of gravity like an +eclipse passing over the face of the sun. + +"Is my brother ill, that he suffers so much?" + +This question referred to Terry Clark, Deerfoot looking over the +shoulder of Fred at the Irish lad behind him. Fred heard a curious +noise, and turned to learn what it meant. His friend had leaned his gun +against the nearest tree, so as to give his limbs free play, and was +flinging his arms aloft, and dancing a jig with a vigor that made it +look as if his legs were shot out, and back and forth, by some high +pressure engine. Now and then he flung his cap aloft, and, as it came +down, ducked his head under and dexterously caught it. His mouth was +puckered up most of the time, while he whistled with might and main, +though the energy of his general movements shut out all resemblance to a +tune. Occasionally he stopped whistling and broke into snatches of song +which, from the same cause, could not be identified. + +Fred Linden laughed. He was demonstrative, but not so much so as Terry. +Looking sideways at Deerfoot, he saw his eyes sparkling and the corners +of his mouth twitching. Rarely had he been amused as much as he now was +by the extravagant manifestations of the Irish lad, for whom he had +formed a strong regard. + +Deerfoot and Fred having turned their glances toward Terry, the latter +appeared to catch sight of them for the first time. With a whoop he +flung his hat higher than ever in the air, caught it with right side up +on his crown as it came down, and then shouted: + +"How are yees, me friends?" and made a dash for them. + +In his enthusiasm he forgot the brook running through a small hollow +between them. His feet went down in the depression without any knowledge +on his part, and he sprawled headlong, his cap rolling at the feet of +Deerfoot, who pushed the toe of his moccasin under the edge, and flung +it to him as he rose to his feet. + +"It's all the same, and a part of the show," laughed Terry, "as the wife +of the bear-keeper obsarved when the bear ate him up, and it's how are +ye, and how do ye ixpect to be, and what have ye to say for yersilf, and +why are ye so long answerin' me quistion?" + +Deerfoot simply smiled, and made no reply until Terry had replaced his +cap, and was done with his noisy greeting. Then he pointed to his gun +leaning against the tree, and said: + +"When my brother is in the woods, he should keep his gun within reach of +his arm." + +"Yer moral sentiments are corrict," remarked Terry, hurrying back--this +time without falling--to regain his piece. When he once more stood +beside the laughing Fred, the Shawanoe addressed both: + +"Are the guns of my brothers loaded?" + +Both felt the rebuke; they had violated one of the elementary rules of +the hunter's life, which is that the first thing to be done after +discharging a weapon is to reload it. Fred flushed, for he did not +remember that he had ever forgotten it before. + +"It was a piece of forgetfulness of which Terry and I ought to be +ashamed, but it was the first time we had ever had a fight with such a +beast as that: what do you call it, Deerfoot?" + +The Shawanoe shook his head to signify that he knew of no distinct name +for the animal, but he explained to the boys, what they already knew, +that it was a cross of some kind, concentrating in itself, as it seemed, +all the power, activity, daring and ferocity of the most dreaded animals +of the woods. Deerfoot could not deny that his shot had saved the boys +from being torn to shreds by the brute. Had it been a few seconds later, +or differently aimed, nothing could have saved them from its fury. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +"DEERFOOT WILL BE SENTINEL TO-NIGHT." + + +"We are on our way to the camp in the Ozarks," said Fred Linden; "and am +I mistaken in believing that you will go with us all the way?" + +"Such is the wish of Deerfoot," replied the Shawanoe, whereat Terry +Clark gave signs of breaking out again; but at a warning look from Fred +he restrained himself. + +"Deerfoot loves the Hunters of the Ozark; he has promised to make them a +visit; he will do so with his friends that he has found in the woods, +and who forget to keep their guns loaded." + +"No use!" exclaimed Terry, bounding in the air, striking his heels +together, and flinging his hat aloft with a loud whoop; "I must give +gintle exprission to me emotions, even though it makes a war with +England." + +The others showed no objection to this harmless ebullition, and he +speedily became quiet again. + +Had Fred Linden been intimately acquainted with Deerfoot, he would have +noticed that he was not entirely at ease. Now and then he darted glances +about him, as though he half expected the appearance of some unwelcome +person. The glances were so quick and furtive that neither Fred nor +Terry noticed them. + +"Deerfoot," said Fred, the three still standing; "we have concluded that +there isn't a better place along the trail for a camp." + +To the surprise of the boys, he shook his head in dissent. + +"Why, this is where father and the rest spent the night when they last +went this way." + +He nodded to signify that he agreed with them. + +"There were three of them, and they had their horses, that could not be +well hid; when my brothers go into camp for the night, they should take +a place where all who went by would not see them." + +It struck the others as curious that the Shawanoe should talk in that +fashion, when they could not see any cause for alarm; but they had +enough faith in him to accept his judgment on such an important matter. +He added: + +"Come with Deerfoot and he will show his brothers where they may slumber +in peace." + +Without any more explanation the Shawanoe moved down the bank of the +brook, following a course parallel to the flow of the water, the other +two keeping at his heels. He did not look around until he had gone more +than a hundred yards. Then it was that the little party found itself in +a rocky section, with a rough cavern on their right--that is, the +bowlders and rocks were jumbled together in such a fashion that there +was some resemblance to a cave. The chief merit of the place, however, +was the privacy that it afforded, rather than the strength as a means of +defense against an enemy. + +"This suits very well," said Fred, taking in all the points at a glance; +"here is a rocky bed on which we can start a fire, and the other rocks +and bowlders will keep off the wind, if there happens to be any; the +water is handy, if we should need it, and it is certain that we are not +as likely to be seen here as where we first selected." + +"Deerfut," said Terry, who was nosing about, "I obsarve ashes here, as +though somebody had been ahead of us." + +"Deerfoot built a fire but a few moons ago, and staid over night." + +"If it was good enough for ye, I can stand it," said Terry, "which is +the remark me uncle made when the Duke of Argyle asked him to stay to +dinner." + +The boys unfastened the bundles from their backs and prepared to spend +the night where they were. The blankets were spread on the flinty floor, +and Deerfoot, setting down his gun beside theirs, helped to gather the +wood with which to keep a fire burning. The three were so active that it +took but a short time to collect all that was needed. This was thrown +into one pile, from which it could be withdrawn as wanted. + +I must give you a better idea of the spot where the three decided to +spend their first night in the woods together. They had walked northward +from the trail, and, so far as they could see, the country was of the +most broken nature, though the abundance of trees and undergrowth did +not permit an extended view. Two masses of stone rose to the height of a +dozen feet, and were separated by about the same distance. These rough +walls extended back to a distance of three or four yards, where they +came against a similar formation. Thus, as may be said, there were three +sides to an inclosure, that part facing the brook being entirely open. +On top of these supports were tumbled an irregular mass of bowlders and +rocks which formed the roof. The latter had so many openings that it was +as well ventilated as the roof of the house about which the Arkansas +Traveler tells us. + +The rear part of the cavern, if it may be allowed that name, was stone, +while the front was earth. Near the center, Deerfoot had kindled his +fire when he staid there, the smoke finding ready escape through the +openings above. Such a fire might give some warmth were it needed, but +the blaze was so well hidden by the surrounding walls that it was not +likely to be seen by any one passing no nigher than fifty feet: therein +lay the reason why it was selected by Deerfoot. + +After piling up the fuel for the night, the youths threw some branches +on the ground, near the rear of the cavern, and then spread their +blankets over them. The Shawanoe carried no blanket with him, so it was +expected that he would share the couch of his friends. + +While the three were busying themselves in this manner, Fred Linden was +disturbed by a suspicion that had been growing from the moment Deerfoot +expressed dissatisfaction with the spot selected for their camp. This +suspicion was that the young Indian had a fear of something to which, as +yet, he had made no reference. + +I have already shown that it was not generally considered a dangerous +business in which the hunters of Ozark engaged. The rough, outdoor life +sometimes brought with it hardships, and occasionally sufferings, but +chief among the dangers was not that from Indians. It was known that +now and then the red men fired spiteful shots at the invaders of their +hunting grounds (as was the case with Michael Clark, the father of +Terence), but in this section of the west that particular peril was +deemed less than that which threatened from wild beasts. There was no +instance of the hunters having been molested on their way to and from +the trapping regions: why then this special caution of Deerfoot? + +Fred Linden, while turning these thoughts over in his mind, gave but the +one answer--_the Winnebago_. He was an intruder in that part of +Louisiana, and he had shown by his acts how ready he was to shed the +blood of innocent white persons. It was not a supposition merely that +this fierce warrior had companions. The keen eyes of Deerfoot had +discovered the proofs that there were a half dozen, at least, with him, +and from whom he separated for a short time while he entered into the +"side speculation" with Brindle and her bell; so it will be seen that +Fred Linden was not only right in his suspicion that the Wolf had to do +with the unrest of Deerfoot, but that the latter possessed good cause +for his misgiving. + +The Winnebagos, having drifted so far away from their own hunting +grounds into this part of the world, were either going further from +home, or were on their way back. Had the Wolf behaved himself, the band +would have gone and come without the knowledge of any of the pioneers, +unless there was a chance meeting in the wood, when it is not likely +that any harm would have resulted. + +But one of the Winnebagos was struck in the face by a white boy, while a +young Indian, a friend of the latter, having "got the drop" on the Wolf, +had taken his gun from him. In other words, the crime of assault and +robbery had been committed. + +Would the rest of the Winnebagos pocket the outrage and meekly withdraw +from the country? + +That, it would be seen, was the all important question, upon which great +events, as affecting the friends in whom we are interested, hinged. + +It was in violation of the nature of the American race that any member +thereof should refuse to resent an indignity, when there was a chance +of doing so. The Winnebagos had the best of reasons for believing that, +by prowling around the settlement, or along the trail leading thereto, +they would soon gain an opportunity to wipe out the disgrace put upon +the Wolf, and, if not able to get back the gun that had been taken from +him, would be able to procure another. + +The fact that this valuable weapon was carried in the hands of a boy, +who had started to tramp through the woods to a point a hundred miles +off, and that it was not at all impossible that the Winnebagos found, or +would find it out, gave emphasis to the cause of Deerfoot's uneasiness. + +It is worthy of note that, while Terry Clark never once took this view +of the situation, it occurred to his friend Fred, who waited for the +Shawanoe to make some reference to it. + +"He knows best, and if he doesn't choose to say any thing about it, +there is no call for me to do so." + +The shadows of night were creeping through the wood when the fire was +started, and the smoke began stealing upward through the openings in +the rocky roof. + +"Deerfoot," said Fred, when the fire crackled brightly, "the rule is, +that a party in camp like this, must have some one on guard while the +others sleep. I don't know as there is any need now, but if you think +so, let Terry and me do it, for we are not in need of sleep." + +The Shawanoe looked at him intently for a moment as though he would read +his thoughts, and then quietly said: + +"Deerfoot will be sentinel to-night!" + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +AROUND THE CAMP-FIRE. + + +Inasmuch as Terry and Fred had enough lunch left to furnish all that was +wanted, Deerfoot decided not to hunt for any thing else. At that hour, +when it was growing dark, it would have been hard to find any game; but +he told them that at no great distance above, the tiny brook issued from +a small lake, where he could easily get all the fish he wanted. + +Accordingly, the fire having been started at the rear of the cavern, +where the smoke found free vent, the three sat within a circle of light, +and partook of the coarse bread and cold venison. The latter was tough, +but it could not withstand the teeth of the two youths, whose appetites +were such as wait on high health. + +It was noticeable that the young Shawanoe ate no more than half as much +as each of the others. Then saying that he wished to view the camp from +the outside, he went out in front of the cavern. He remarked that he +would be gone only a few minutes, but he took his gun with him. + +When Deerfoot emerged from the rude shelter it was fully dark. There was +a moon in the sky, but the density of the surrounding forest kept out +the rays, so that the gloom could not be penetrated to any distance. + +He stood still and listened. His sense of hearing, like that of sight, +was trained to a wonderfully fine point, as you have learned in the +incidents previously related, so that faint noises, such as you or I +could not have detected, would have told their full story to him. + +But nothing more than what may be called the natural sounds of the wood +fell on his ear. Then the young Indian leaped lightly across the small +brook in front of the cavern and walked some two rods beyond, where he +paused and listened again. After this he made a complete circuit of the +cavern. This compelled him to cross the little stream once more, +brought him back to the mouth of the retreat, and caused him also to +climb over a great deal of broken ground, but a shadow could not have +made the circuit more noiselessly. He stopped several times and listened +with the same profound attention, occasionally looking toward the cavern +within which his friends were eating their supper and talking together +in low, guarded tones. He caught the murmur of their voices, which would +have been audible to no one else beyond a dozen feet. Just above the +large opening in the cavern, through which most of the smoke found its +way, a faint, dull glow showed that the camp-fire was burning below. + +The inspection made by Deerfoot was satisfactory; he had discovered no +sign of any prowling enemy, and the party could not have found a place +where there was less likelihood of disturbance by any foes who were in +the neighborhood. It would seem indeed that nothing short of a most +exceptional mishap could bring any danger near. So he once more entered +the cavern, and seated himself by the fire, upon which Fred Linden had +just thrown a bundle of sticks that filled the cavern with a light like +that of noonday. + +Terry insisted that Deerfoot should take his blanket, because the +Shawanoe had none, and the one belonging to Fred Linden was enough for +the others. Deerfoot at first declined, but his young friend persevered, +so the half-dozen yards of heavy stuff were spread on the rock and earth +floor of the cabin, and then Deerfoot disposed of himself in a lolling +attitude, reclining on his left elbow, while he looked across and +through the blaze at his two friends, who were stretched out in almost a +similar attitude. It will be borne in mind that he was nearer the mouth +of the cavern than were the others: in fact he was about half-way +between where they were stretched and the open air. Fred and Terry did +not notice this, or, if they did, they supposed it was accidental, +though it was done with forethought by the sagacious young Shawanoe. + +The evening was yet young, and the circumstances were such as to make +the boys talk at a rate that almost overwhelmed Deerfoot, who always +showed a deliberation in his speech, as if he weighed each word before +allowing it to fall from his lips. + +Fred and Terry had formed a strong liking for the young Shawanoe, and +since he seemed to be in fine spirits, they plied him with questions +until they learned the chief facts in his history. When the long +conversation ended they knew that Deerfoot was the son of a Shawanoe +chief, and that he was born in the Dark and Bloody Ground. When but a +small boy he was like a spitting wildcat in his hatred of the white +people, and it was not until he was wounded and nearly beaten to death, +that he could be taken prisoner on one of the excursions of his people +against the white settlements. + +He fell into goods hands and was nursed back to strength. Not only that, +but those that had him in direct charge told him about God, who made the +world, who loved His creatures, and who sorrowed to see them trying to +harm each other, and who had sent His only Son to die for His lost +children. It was a wonderful story to which Deerfoot listened with rapt +attention, and all in time (as you have been told in another place), +the extraordinary young Shawanoe became a devout follower of the meek +and lowly One. He felt that he could never repay the whites for showing +him the way to eternal life. Thenceforward he became their friend, and +devoted his life to protecting them against the enmity of the red men. + +Deerfoot told Fred and Terry something about his stirring experiences +with Ned Preston and Wildblossom Brown, and afterward with Jack Carleton +and Otto Relstaub, but did not hint at one-tenth the services he had +rendered the white people. Of all the fierce tribes that made portions +of Ohio and Kentucky like sheol on earth, the Shawanoes were the worst: +they were the Apaches of the last century. Deerfoot had fallen into +their hands and many of his most desperate encounters were with them. +Finally the efforts to take him prisoner became so far reaching that he +saw that his usefulness as a friend of the settlements was at end. The +rage of the Shawanoes was such that it may be said that some of their +campaigns were planned with the sole purpose of capturing the young +renegade, whom they hated with a hatred like that of the tigers of the +jungle. + +You will see, therefore, that not only was the usefulness of Deerfoot as +an ally of the whites ended, but he became even an element of danger to +them. He had been urged to make his home with those who held him in such +high regard, but he could not do so. He quietly withdrew from the +country and crossed the Mississippi into the vast Louisiana Territory. +There he had lived for a couple of years, and there he expected to end +his days. + +"Deerfoot," said Fred Linden, when his remarkable narration had ended, +"Terry and I are not new hands in the woods, and we would be much better +satisfied if you would allow us to share the night in watching with +you." + +"Why does my brother think of danger?" + +"Because _you_ do; I know it by your actions." + +The quickness of this reply struck Deerfoot favorably. He did not think +that his conduct had been noticed, and he was gratified that his friend +was so observant. That there should be no mistake about his suspicions, +Fred added: + +"I don't know whether you have seen that Winnebago or not since you +started him on the run yesterday; he may be still running, but I am +quite sure, from the way you have behaved, that you suspect that he and +the rest of his companions are prowling through the woods, on the +lookout for a chance to revenge themselves." + +Deerfoot's face glowed. Fred Linden had hit the nail on the head. + +"My brother speaks the words of truth; his thoughts are the thoughts of +Deerfoot." + +Terry Clark looked at his companion in astonishment. + +"How come ye to know all that, Fred?" + +"I see nothing remarkable about it; all I had to do was to observe the +actions of Deerfoot since he joined us to-day. In the first place, he +wouldn't have made us change our camping place if he hadn't had some +misgiving, and then the way he has been mousing around the outside, and +his decision to keep watch to-night: why what could tell the story more +plainly?" + +"Begorrah," said the admiring Terry, "ye are not such a big fool as you +look to be; I never thought of that." + +"Which looks as if you are a bigger dunce than you seem; but," added +Fred, turning toward the Shawanoe, "have you seen any thing of the +Winnebagos?" + +"Deerfoot has seen their footprints in the woods; they are on the watch +for his white brothers that they may gain their scalps, because the gun +of the Wolf was taken from him." + +"They seem to have hard work in finding us: where do those Winnebagos +come from?" + +Deerfoot pointed to the northward, or rather to a little east of north. + +"Their hunting grounds are many suns' travel that way." + +"Why do the spalpeens come down in this part of the world, and why don't +they behave thimselves whin they do?" demanded Terry, with some +indignation. + +Deerfoot shook his head, as though the question was more than he could +answer. + +"Deerfoot has met Shawanoes and Sacs and Wyandottes and Pawnees far away +from their villages and hunting grounds, besides the strange Indians +who come much further from the setting sun. The red men travel whither +they will. Why the Winnebagos passed near the home of my brothers only +they can tell." + +"Well, they're a bad lot," said Terry, "to try the mean trick they did +on me; though," he added the next moment, "I'm glad they done the same, +for if they hadn't, how would I've got hold of this lovely gun? Do ye +think we shall have any more trouble with them?" + +"Deerfoot believes there will be trouble, and it will come soon!" + +"Well, if it does, all ye have to do is to take away the rist of their +guns and set 'em on the run home agin." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + +A SUSPICIOUS SOUND. + + +By and by Fred Linden and Terry Clark became drowsy. Devoutly kneeling, +they spent several minutes in prayer, and then stretched out on a single +blanket, with their backs toward each other, and the face of Fred in +such a position that he could look across the blaze at Deerfoot on the +other side. The latter had remained still and motionless, while the +lads, remembering the lesson they had learned at their mothers' knee, +asked their Heavenly Father to hold them in His keeping. The young +Shawanoe, who spent many an hour in communion with his Maker, was +touched to see that his friends did not forget their duty. + +Deerfoot stirred the burning wood so that it threw out more light, and +then, reclining on his left elbow, so that the illumination came +directly in his face (the worst direction possible), he drew from +beneath his hunting-shirt the small Bible, that had been presented to +him by the Preston family, and began reading it. + +Fred Linden, who had his eyes fixed upon him, was so interested that his +drowsiness departed. Without moving he watched him closely. He saw him +turning the leaves back and forth, as if looking for some place he had +in mind. It took him but a minute to find it, when, still leaning on his +elbow, and with the light striking his face and the printed page, he +seemed to become so absorbed as to lose all consciousness of his +surroundings. + +Fred Linden, without betraying that he was awake, surveyed this +remarkable performance with an admiration that for the moment made his +eyes misty with emotion. + +The eyes of Deerfoot were downcast, as he read the page, so that they +could not be seen but the handsome oval face; the luxuriant black hair, +with the eagle feathers thrust into the crown; the rows of gleaming +beads around the neck; the deerskin shirt that covered the breast and +arms to the wrists, on the left one of which shone the golden bracelet; +the red sash, behind which were shoved the knife and tomahawk; the +brilliant fringes of the hunting-shirt and leggins; the small, +ornamented moccasins; all these of themselves made a striking figure; +but Fred, handsome and rugged himself, who was not accustomed to see any +thing like beauty in the human form, was struck with the symmetry of the +figure before him. He particularly noticed the tapering legs, and could +not help saying to himself: + +"There is no Indian or white man that can run as fast as he." + +And the mental declaration of the lad was truth. The fleetness of the +young warrior had never been equaled, and he had never yet met the +person whom he could not outrun with ease and without putting forth his +whole speed. + +"He don't look strong, but he is the last person that I would want to +meet in a fight; I'll bet he is so quick that he could dodge the bullet +fired at him." + +I must draw the line here: Deerfoot could not do any thing of the kind. + +"And he is reading his Bible! I never in all my life saw an Indian who +could read a word of print, or do more than sign his name with a cross +or some figure like a bug: I wonder whether we couldn't hire him to +teach school for us at Greville." + +Fred thought a great many queer things about his new friend, but lay +watching him fully ten minutes before he spoke. Then, when he saw him +turn a leaf, he said in a low voice: + +"Deerfoot, will you please read aloud?" + +Fred expected that the Shawanoe would start and look up in surprise; but +he never raised his eyes, or gave the least sign that these words of his +were unexpected. He knew that Fred was watching him from the first, and +so, before the words were more than fairly out of his mouth, Deerfoot +began reading in a low, impressive monotone, as though he had merely +resumed, after turning over the leaf. + +"After this I beheld, and lo! a great multitude, which no man could +number, of all nations, and kindred, and people, and tongues, stood +before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and +palms in their hands; + +"And all the angels stood round about the throne, and about the elders, +and the four beasts, and fell before the throne on their faces and +worshiped God. + +"Singing, Amen; blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honor +and power and might be unto our God for ever and for ever, Amen. + +"And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, Who are these which are +arrayed in white robes? and whence came they? + +"And I said unto him, sir, thou knowest. And he said unto me, these are +they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes +and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. + +"Therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve Him day and +night in His temple; and He that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among +them. + +"They shall hunger no more, neither shall they thirst any more; neither +shall the sun light on them, nor any heat. + +"For the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and +shall lead them unto living fountains of waters; and God shall wipe +away all tears from their eyes." + +Deerfoot read a few minutes longer from his favorite part in the New +Testament and then ceased. He had not lifted his eyes from the page, but +he knew that Fred Linden was asleep. He observed it in his breathing, +which was as soft as that of an infant. + +The rocky cavern, the smoldering camp-fire, the two sleeping boys, the +motionless Indian stretched out and reading his Bible by the faint +light, the great, solemn forest walling them in, the profound stillness +that reigned everywhere: these were elements in a picture the like of +which it may be said (except where Deerfoot was one of the figures), had +never been seen anywhere else, and was not likely ever to be seen again. + +The fire sank lower and the light on the printed page became so dim that +even the keen eyes of the young Shawanoe could not trace the words. He +looked at the embers as if asking himself whether he should renew the +blaze and continue reading. But the hour for meditation had come, and he +closed the book. Looking fondly at the stiff, wooden cover, he touched +his lips with infinite tenderness to it, and carefully placed it in the +inner receptacle of his hunting-shirt, murmuring as he did so: + +"The best friend that Deerfoot ever knew!" + +O light of life! Comforter of the sorrowing heart! Consoler of the +stricken soul! + +In the flush of bounding health, when the passions throb high, we may +not heed thy blessed teachings, but when man's promises prove false, and +the head bows before the endless strife, and woes overwhelm us like a +flood, there is relief, there is light, there is life in Thee. The +wicked may jeer, the learned may scoff, the powerful may despise, the +favored may turn away, but there comes the time when learning, gifts, +wealth, power, beauty and all the world can give turn to ashes, and they +have no boon compared to Thine. "And God shall wipe away all tears from +their eyes." The pampered monarch, the dying beggar, the statesman, the +slave, the mother bowed with woe, the father shaken with grief, +childhood in its innocence, man in his strength, beauty in its scorn, +trembling old age, can find no balm but in Thee. Better that the sun +should be blotted from the heavens and the earth left a trackless void +than that Thy light should be denied the world. + +Deerfoot lay flat on his face, his arms crossed so that his head and +shoulders were held a few inches above the flinty floor, and his dark +eyes were fixed on the embers in front. It was his favorite enjoyment, +when the stirring incidents of the day were done, and he had read from +the only Book he ever wanted to read, to spend a time in meditating on +the truths that it may be said had become a part of his very being. + +Many a time had he lain thus, as motionless as if dead, while the +wonderful brain was busy with thoughts that stirred the profoundest +depths of his nature. There are beliefs that come to us at which reason +may laugh, but which it can not shake or disturb. There are questions +that the glib unbeliever may ask that we can not answer. But away down +in our hearts is a faith which the whole world can not remove, and which +can be uprooted only by ourselves. Woe to him who dares lay violent +hands upon it! + +Deerfoot no more doubted that he and every one was in the direct keeping +of God than he doubted that he breathed and moved. He knew that the +Great Spirit had caused him to be made a prisoner by whites so that he +might learn the way of life; he knew that He had given him an insight +into the mysteries of His word that was denied to many others. A deep, +outstretching sympathy for those less favored than he suffused his whole +being. Gladly would he have given up his life in pain and torture and +agony, as did One in the dim long ago, if by so doing he could earn the +smile of his Heavenly Father. + +But this remarkable young Christian felt that he was doing the work +appointed for him to do. Here and there he dropped a word that proved to +be seed sown upon good ground, and which had borne its fruit. He had met +his enemies in fair combat and had never taken wrong advantage of them: +his marvelous bow and arrow, and his still more effective rifle, had +brought many a dusky miscreant low, but he had used his amazing gifts in +the line of duty, and for the good of others. Would that he could have +won them by love, but it was not in the nature of things that he should +do so. He had "broken the Bread of Life" to more than one, and he hoped +that ere he should be called home, he should point the way to others. + +Suddenly he raised his chin from his hands and turned his head slightly +to one side. His ear, whose acuteness was almost beyond belief, had +caught a suspicious sound. Profound as might be the meditation of the +Shawanoe, he could never forget his surroundings. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +LIKE A THIEF IN THE NIGHT. + + +The crisp autumn night had not reached its turn when the full moon +climbed from behind the straggling clouds obscuring her face, into the +clear air above, and shone down on the wilderness, with the same calm +splendor with which it had shone during the ages before the foot of a +white man had rested on the soil of our country. Here and there, at +widely-separated points, as the orb moved toward the zenith, could be +seen the star-like twinkles of light which showed where the sparse +settlements had been planted by the pioneers. At intervals, too, miles +away from the clearings, could be distinguished the glimmer of the +hunters' camp-fires, where the hardy men had lain down wrapped in their +blankets, and to sleep the sleep of health. Still further away, by the +side of some calmly flowing river or creek, were the ragged tepees of +the wild Indians. Mountain, forest and stream made up the landscape, +that was illuminated by the moon on the night when Fred Linden and Terry +Clark lay down in slumber by the fire in the cavern, and Deerfoot the +Shawanoe took upon himself the duty of acting as a sentinel over them. + +It was not yet midnight when the figure of a crouching Indian emerged +like a shadow from the little gully which marked the course of the tiny +stream in front of the camp. Just at the point where he appeared, a few +rays of the moonlight found their way among the limbs, and added +impressiveness to his appearance. A glance would have told that he had +approached at the most stealthy gait of which he was capable, and was +still using all the skill at his command. + +Finding himself within the faint light of the moon, he straightened up, +like one who is not certain of his surroundings and is using his eyes +and ears to their utmost. Standing erect in this manner he showed +himself to be a full-grown warrior in middle life, of strong limbs and +frame, and attired in the usual dress of his people. + +The long, coarse hair dangled about the shoulders, some of the strands +having fallen forward in front of the chest, at the time his head drew +it over while in a crouching posture. It grew so low on his forehead +that no more than an inch was between the roots and shaggy eyebrows. +Beneath these the eyes glittered like those of a snake. The ugly +features were made more ugly by the different colored paints--most of it +black--that was daubed over them, and the countenance was distorted by a +swelling recently produced. + +The breast and arms were covered by deerskin, a fringe running down in +front to the belt, which held his tomahawk. The frightful horn-handled +knife was tightly grasped in his right hand. Below the belt was +breechcloth, followed by leggins and moccasins, but it was noticeable +that he carried no rifle with him. + +Perhaps you have guessed the reason; he had none to carry, for he was +the Wolf who had been deprived of his valuable weapon on the day before +by Deerfoot the Shawanoe. + +As was learned in due time, the Winnebago, after being despoiled by +Deerfoot, had made all haste to rejoin his band, that were encamped at +no great distance from Greville. When he told his brother warriors of +the indignity to which he had been subjected, they were as rampart as he +for revenge. They were on the point of starting for a settlement, +intending to await the chance to shoot down some of the unsuspecting +people, when the leader, a man of iron will, interposed. + +He said that according to the story of the Wolf himself, his gun had +been taken from him by a single warrior. A Winnebago ought to be ashamed +to confess such a thing, and the only way by which the Wolf could redeem +himself was to recover his gun unaided by any of his people. Let him +come back to the party with his rifle and then they would risk their +lives a dozen times over to repay the young Shawanoe and his youthful +friend (they knew nothing about Fred Linden) for the insult they had put +upon one of the leading warriors of the Winnebago tribe. + +You can well understand how displeasing this decision was to the Wolf, +but there was no help for it. The warrior who gave the order was not +only the leader of the company, but the principal chief of the tribe. No +one dared to dispute his command, and he intimated that it was not only +necessary for the Wolf to recover his gun in order to enlist the +services of the rest, but his standing at home would be compromised if +he went back without his rifle and the story that it had been taken from +him by a single warrior of another tribe. + +From this you will understand the eagerness with which the Wolf set out +to regain the weapon. + +The fact that Fred Linden and Terry Clark left Greville the next morning +after the affair, mixed matters to that extent that, for a time, the +Winnebago was at fault. It was his intention to prowl around the +settlement, awaiting his chance, for he suspected that Deerfoot had gone +thither with the lad who had given the Wolf such a blow in the face; but +the discovery of the footprints of the two boys leading to the southward +mystified the Indian. He was quite close to the creek, and the sun had +crossed the meridian at the time this discovery was made. It was natural +that he should look for the trail of the Shawanoe, but he could not find +it. + +Finally, with a half-suspicion of the truth, the Wolf went into the +settlement to make inquiries. He could speak enough broken English to +make himself understood, and, as it so happened, it was Mr. MacClaskey +himself whom he accosted. He told the inquirer the truth, adding that +Terry took with him a gun that was captured from a vagabond Indian. But +for that he would not have been allowed to go, for there was but one +rifle in the family, which the settler would trust in no hands but his +own for any length of time. + +The Winnebago was shrewd enough to disarm any doubt that might have been +felt about himself. It was the rule in the settlement to show kindness +to every wandering Indian that visited them, and no one dreamed that any +thing was to be feared from the Wolf. But his heart was full of exulting +malignancy. He knew who had the gun, and aware that the two boys had +started for the camp of the Ozarks, he understood where to look for it. +The fact that the Winnebago had no gun with him would have caused the +belief that he was the vagabond Indian, had he not explained that he +left it in the woods as a token of comity. + +The Wolf sauntered back until he was across the stream and out of sight. +Then he sped along the trail, with a long, loping trot, which his race +can maintain for hours without fatigue. He had a long distance to +travel, but he reached the scene of the encounter with the strange +animal, just as it was growing dark. + +At this point, he showed admirable woodcraft. The signs on the ground +puzzled him for a time, but there was the carcass of the animal, and by +and by he found the imprints of the small moccasins, which told him that +the young Shawanoe had rejoined the others at this point. + +As you can well believe, this was any thing but a pleasant discovery, +for, superior as was the strength of the Winnebago, he would have +preferred to meet the two boys, even though both were armed, than to +find himself face to face again with the remarkable Indian youth. + +But there was no help for it, and the dusky Winnebago compressed his +coppery lips with the resolve that the gun should be in his hands before +the rising of the morrow's sun. + +The light was rapidly fading among the trees and he improved what was +left of it. Prowling around the spot in a circle, with his nose close to +the ground, he discovered that the three youths had started along the +bank of the brook toward its head. + +Thereupon the Winnebago formed the correct conclusion; they had moved +from the main trail (doubtless on the suggestion of the young Shawanoe), +in search of some place to encamp where there would be less danger of +detection. + +By the time the Wolf had satisfied himself on this point, it had become +too dark among the trees for his eyes to detect the trail, which at +mid-day would have been as distinct as a beaten path. He therefore +adopted the plan of which I have made mention elsewhere: he followed a +general rule. + +The conclusion being that the parties for whom he was searching had +located themselves somewhere along the creek, it was useless to try and +follow the footprints, though there were points here and there where the +sense of touch might have helped him. He decided to creep stealthily up +stream until he found the camp, and then bide his time. + +It is hard to form an idea of the extreme care with which this was done. +Had the Winnebago not known of the presence of Deerfoot, he would not +have taken half the time consumed, but he had seen enough of that +wonderful youth to know that it would require more than a child to +outwit him. + +At a point about half way between the trail and the camp among the +rocks, the Wolf thought his hands touched some imprints in the earth +which showed that the three had turned to the right and gone deeper into +the woods. It required reconnoitering before he discovered his mistake. + +With the same amazing patience he renewed his stealthy progress up the +stream, until at last he emerged into the moonlight and found that at +last he had reached the spot for which he had hunted so long. + +It so happened that as he straightened up, he looked directly into the +mouth of the cave and saw the dull glow of the camp-fire, like the open +eye of some monster. Not only that, but he observed the three forms +stretched out by it. The heart of the savage throbbed with pleasure, for +he felt that success had come at last. + +With the same absolute noiselessness he began creeping into the mouth of +the cavern. One of the embers fell apart with a soft rustle, which +caused him to stop and hold his breath lest the sleepers should awake. +But they did not stir, and in a minute he resumed his advance. + +The two white lads had flung the blankets from their faces, so that he +saw Fred Linden plainly, and enough of the other to identify him as the +one who had smitten him. Nearer to the Winnebago than they was the third +form, which he knew equally well. + +"It is the Shawanoe," was his thought; "I will bury my knife in his +heart and then slay the others." + +A minute later he reached forward his upraised right hand and suddenly +brought it down with a force that pinned the blanket to the earth. But +to his unspeakable disgust Deerfoot was not within it. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +SHAWANOE AND WINNEBAGO. + + +While Fred Linden and Terry Clark lay in that part of the cavern where +the floor was of rock, the blanket of Deerfoot was spread on the earth. +Consequently when the Winnebago brought down his knife with such vicious +spitefulness, it went through the folds of the blanket and was buried to +the hilt in the ground underneath. + +You know that, despite the marvelous quiet with which the Winnebago +approached the cavern, he was heard by Deerfoot, who, pausing only long +enough to make sure that an enemy was approaching, whisked outside. +There he stood in the impenetrable shadow under the trees, and saw the +Winnebago at the moment he emerged into the faint moonlight and stood +upright. + +The first look confirmed his suspicion that it was the Winnebago, who +had come back to avenge himself for the affair of the preceding day. +Deerfoot smiled to himself, for there was a tinge of absurdity about the +whole business that was sure to become still more so. + +The Shawanoe paused a few seconds before darting out of the cavern, +until he could arrange his blanket, so that it would appear as if it +infolded his sleeping form, and then he quietly awaited events. + +It must be admitted that it looked like leaving Fred and Terry in great +peril to permit such a savage enemy to creep so close to them while they +were sound asleep; but Deerfoot knew that the first thing that the Wolf +would do would be to attempt his life, precisely as he did attempt it. +Before he could do any thing more, the Shawanoe concluded to impress his +presence upon the visitor. + +At the moment, therefore, that the Winnebago stopped his advance and +slowly raised his knife, as he supposed over the breast of Deerfoot, +that gentleman, kneeling on one knee, brought his rifle to bear upon the +Winnebago, the dull light from the fire shining along the barrel, whose +muzzle was within a yard of the unsuspicious Wolf. + +The blanket through which the keen-pointed knife had been driven was no +more firmly transfixed for the moment than was the Wolf when a slight +hissing noise caused him to turn his head, and he saw the dreaded +Shawanoe in a kneeling position with his gun leveled at him, the finger +on the trigger, and the bright eye glancing along the barrel. + +The Winnebago was literally unable to move or speak, and Deerfoot, +motionless himself, held him thus for several seconds. Then with the gun +still pointed, he said in a low voice: + +"Dog of a Winnebago! Deerfoot has spared the life of the Wolf, and he +now seeks to strike him in the dark." + +This address loosened the tongue of the terrified warrior, who, seeing +his captor raise his head from sighting along the barrel, though he +kept the weapon leveled, obeyed the beckoning motion of Deerfoot, and +crept noiselessly out of the cavern. On the alert for any chance, he was +ready to seize it, but the first object on which his eye rested in the +dim moonlight was the figure of the young Shawanoe holding his gun in +such a position, that, should it be necessary, he could fire like a +flash. + +Deerfoot would not have hesitated to lay his gun aside, and, drawing his +knife, give the Winnebago the same chance with himself; but the Wolf had +left his weapon where he forced it through the blanket into the ground, +so that he had none except his tomahawk, and he was not likely to +attempt any thing with that. + +Besides, while Deerfoot had not the least fear of his enemy, he did not +wish to fight with him. He did not engage in his many desperate +encounters through love of victory, but because it had seemed to him +that it was his duty, and there was no other way out of the trouble. + +It must be said, too, that at this hour the Shawanoe happened to be in a +mood which rendered such encounters more than usually distasteful to +him. After he had closed his Bible and lay on his face, looking into the +embers and meditating, the same thought that had stirred him many a time +before filled his mind again. + +Why do men strive to kill each other? + +It was a question which has puzzled many a wise man in the past and has +not yet been answered. Thousands of affectionate husbands unlock the +white arms of the loving little children from their necks, kiss the +heartbroken wife good-by, and then rush out to try to murder one whom +they have never seen, who has also just torn himself loose from his +family. There is something in the thought that mystifies beyond all +explanation. + +The problem which directly interested Deerfoot was whether the day would +not come when the red men of every tribe could meet the pale faces in +friendship instead of hatred. Why should they always be at war? Could he +do a little to bring about that day of universal peace? Was there not +some work which the Great Spirit had laid out for him by which he could +help to soften the feeling of the two peoples toward each other? + +But Deerfoot had asked himself the same question many a time before, and +the only answer was that the most he could do was to follow the light +within him: that is, aid to remove a part of the antagonism between the +two races. + +Alas, too, that while he was considering the question, his ear caught +the soft rustle that told him one of his own race was seeking his life. +Deerfoot was sorrowed more than angered. He wished that the Winnebago +had taken some other time to make his stealthy attack. + +Joined to this emotion was that of another akin to sympathy for the +Winnebago in his complete discomfiture. He had come back to regain his +rifle, but not only had failed, but had lost his knife, and now was +standing at the mercy of a Shawanoe young enough to be his son. The +latter resolved that, though the Wolf had earned death, he would not +harm him, unless forced to do so in self-defense. + +For half a minute the warriors, with ten feet separating them, looked +straight at each other in silence. Fred Linden and Terry Clark slept +soundly, for as yet there had been no noise sufficient to awake a light +sleeper. + +"Why does the Wolf seek the life of Deerfoot?" asked the latter, willing +to relieve the embarrassment of the other. + +"The Wolf sought the gun that had been stolen from him." + +"But it was not hidden in the blanket, that he should drive his knife +through it." + +"The Wolf believed it was," was the curt response. + +"Does the Wolf strike with his knife at his own gun?" asked the +Shawanoe, without betraying any emotion. + +"He would rather do so than that it should stay in the hands of an +enemy." + +"It never would have been in the hands of an enemy had the Wolf acted as +a brave warrior; but he sought the life of the young pale face who had +never done him harm." + +"Has not his people stolen the hunting grounds of the red man?" demanded +the Winnebago, who, seeing that some grace was to be allowed him, burst +into the argument that multitudes of his people have used before and +since. Before he could proceed further, Deerfoot asked: "Are these the +hunting grounds of the Winnebagos?" + +"They are the hunting grounds of his race, though they may not be of his +totem; Deerfoot should join with his brother the Wolf in driving the +white men into the sea." + +"There was a day when that might have been done," replied Deerfoot, who +felt that faint throb and thrill which sometimes came to him, as if to +tell him that his Indian nature was not yet entirely dead within him; +"once the pale faces were but a handful, and the red men hunted over all +the ground that lies between the great waters. They could have swept the +pale faces into the sea, but they would not be brothers with themselves; +they fought each other. So the pale faces grew, and the day will never +come when they need fear the red men." + +"The brave warrior does not ask what can be done, but does with all his +might that which he knows the Great Spirit wishes him to do." + +"The Great Spirit does not tell him to kill his pale face brother; for +they are all His children and He loves them. The Great Spirit has spoken +to Deerfoot and told him that all His children should love one another." + +"Does Deerfoot do so?" + +"He does; he never strikes but when the Great Spirit tells him to do so; +if he was the Wolf and the Wolf was Deerfoot, he would have slain the +Shawanoe long ago." + +The Winnebago would have denied this had he not seen that it was idle to +do so. What would he not have given at that moment could he have +exchanged places with the handsome and triumphant young warrior? + +"The _true_ Great Spirit loves all His children, whether they be pale or +red or of the color of night; He smiles when they meet each other as +friends, and He will reward in the spirit land those who do His will on +the earth. Let the Wolf bury the words of Deerfoot in his heart, for +they are the words of truth, and if they are heeded he will be +happy--Go!" + +The amazed Winnebago doubted for a moment that he had heard the command +aright; but the wave of the hand which accompanied it, and the fact that +it was in perfect consonance with the words he had just heard, satisfied +him there was no mistake about it. + +"The Wolf thanks his brother for what he has done." + +The heart of the Winnebago forced the words between his lips as he +turned his face away and walked down the bank of the stream in the +direction whence he came. He vanished the next instant in the darkness. + +Deerfoot did not stir until every sound of the soft footsteps had died +out. Then he lowered the hammer of his gun, bent his shoulders slightly +forward, so as to walk freely, and entered the cavern where his friends +were still sleeping. + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +ANOTHER NIGHT VISITOR. + + +Deerfoot the Shawanoe was convinced of one thing--the Wolf would trouble +him no further that night. What he might do in the future must be left +for the future to tell. Whether the few words that he had dropped should +prove the good seed of which I have spoken, or whether they should be +choked up by thorns, not even the Wolf himself could tell. + +The young warrior showed his convictions by flinging some wood on the +fire, so that its blaze filled the cavern, and preparing for sleep. He +first sat down and pulled out the knife of the Wolf, whose blade took on +an additional gleam from the cleansing it had received in being forced +into the flinty earth. He examined it with no little curiosity, though +it was similar to his own. + +A glance, however, showed that it was an inch or two longer. It was +straight and oval-shaped, the blade not quite two inches wide, with a +handle that had been cut from a deer's horn and fitted with no slight +skill. Whether it was the product of aboriginal ingenuity or was the +work of some cutler of the Caucasian race could only be guessed, the +matter really not being worth the trouble of guessing. Its two edges and +the point were very sharp. Deerfoot having laid aside his gun, grasped +the blade in his left hand and circled it through the air like a +swordsman at play. He was so pleased with it that he decided to keep it. +He would not throw away the one that had served him so well, but would +present it to Fred Linden, while he retained the one with which he was +sure he could do better work. + +It was singular that while the Shawanoe was turning the weapon over in +his hand, and examining it with so much interest, that the occasion for +its immediate use should come, but so it was. + +He was on the point of shoving it in behind his belt and lying down to +sleep, when a movement of the bushes outside was heard. It was so +distinct indeed that he knew it was not caused by a person. + +The rustling was accompanied by a scratching sound and low growl. +Turning his head, he saw an immense wolf standing at the entrance of the +cavern, his whole figure revealed in the firelight. With his jaws parted +and his form erect, he was a formidable creature, before which almost +any one would have recoiled. He would have advanced straight to an +attack upon the young warrior but for the fire which partly interposed. +Even as it was, he seemed making ready to leap at the throat of the +youth, who was sitting on the blanket, looking coolly at him. + +It would have been the easiest matter in the world for Deerfoot to catch +up his gun and shoot him dead, but he chose to do otherwise. Drawing one +of the embers forth by the end that was not burning, he held it before +him in his right hand, and, grasping the knife in his left, ran lightly +toward him, as though he meant to jam it into his eyes. + +The bravest animal can not stand unmoved before such an attack, and the +namesake of the human enemy whisked about and darted out of the cavern +with the Shawanoe close behind him. The former bounded a half dozen +steps, pausing on the very spot where the hostile warrior was first +seen, and facing about, as if to observe whether his foe dare follow him +any further. But Deerfoot had him now where he wished, and he flung the +torch aside among the undergrowth, where it lay smoking for a few +minutes before it went out. + +The fierce animal must have been of the opinion that he too had his +antagonist where he wanted him, for, without the least hesitation, he +uttered a snarling growl and made two leaps straight at him. The first +carried him a little more than half the intervening distance, and the +second was meant to bear Deerfoot to the earth. + +The young warrior, however, stepped lightly to one side, so that the +wolf missed him altogether, and would have been forced to wheel about +and make a second attack had the chance been given him, but at the +instant it landed, the left hand, grasping the long, keen knife, shot +forward with great force and lightning-like swiftness, and was buried to +the hilt in the throat of the brute. + +It was a blow as effective as a cannon ball could have been, for the +knife clove the seat of life in twain, and the beast rolled over on the +earth dead, almost before it could emit a single yelp of agony. + +Deerfoot stood a moment surveying the carcass before him, and then, with +no more excitement than he would have shown in speaking to Fred or +Terry, he said: "'Tis a good weapon, and will serve Deerfoot well." + +Then he walked to the tiny brook, carefully washed the gleaming blade, +shoved it behind his belt, where it was held in place without the sheath +that clasped the other, and walked back to the cavern. The boys had not +been disturbed by the outcry of the wolf, and Deerfoot, throwing some +more wood on the flames, lay down on the blanket, drew it partly about +him, and in ten minutes was asleep, not opening his eyes again until the +light of morning streamed into the cavern and only a few smoldering +embers were left of the camp-fire. + +He smiled when he looked upon the two youths, who were still soundly +sleeping, all unconscious of the stirring events that had taken place +during the darkness. There was no call for a renewal of the fire, and, +after spending a few minutes in communion with the Great Spirit, he +passed outside the cavern, drank from the clear water in the brook, and +laved his face and hands. + +Just as he finished, Fred Linden emerged, rubbing his eyes and yawning, +while Terry Clark was close behind him. + +"Good morning, Deerfoot!" called the former; "it was just like you to +let us sleep all night while you kept watch: to-night you must let us +take our turn." + +"Fred has exprissed me own sintimints," added Terry; "we have had so +much slumber that we can kaap awake for a month. Helloa!" + +The gaze of the boys at that moment fell on the body of the wolf, +stiffened in death. + +"You have had visitors," said Fred; "my gracious, but he's a big fellow! +Killed by a knife thrust too, that looks as if it had gone half way +through his body; how was it, Deerfoot?" + +The Shawanoe waited until they had finished bathing their hands and +faces, and then he quietly told them the story, including the account of +the warrior's visit. As you may well suppose, the boys opened their +eyes, and Terry, running inside, brought out the blanket, which had been +folded in such a manner that the knife of the Winnebago passed through +three thicknesses of the cloth. + +"And to think that we slept through it all!" + +"Begorrah, but wasn't it lucky that we didn't have the blanket wrapped +about us?" gasped Terry, who was in earnest in his momentary belief of +the narrow escape of himself and companion. + +"It is well that you kept guard last night; neither of us would have +heard the approach of the Winnebago; and wouldn't have known any thing +about the other wolf until he lit on our shoulders." + +"My brother is mistaken," said Deerfoot; "he is like the rattlesnake; he +gives warning before he strikes; I heard him growl, and he stopped at +the entrance to the cavern, afraid of the fire." + +"Why didn't you shoot him?" + +"Would he have died more quietly, or with less pain than from the knife? +It is the knife that the Winnebago left; Deerfoot wanted to learn +whether it would serve him well." + +"And I should think ye ought to be satisfied, as a cousin of me own once +remarked after working five years for a man without any pay excipt +starvation and kicks." + +"The knife proved itself a good one," said Fred; "but the poorest knife +would be just as effective in your hands." + +Deerfoot withdrew his own weapon from its skin sheath, and handed it to +Fred. + +"Let my brother carry that, for the hour may come sooner than he thinks +when it will be of use to him." + +Fred accepted it gratefully, saying, as he managed to find place for it +somewhat after the manner of Deerfoot: + +"If I can handle it with half of your skill, it will serve me well +indeed, but that can never be." + +Deerfoot placed the larger weapon within the sheath from which he had +withdrawn his own and made no reply to the compliments of his friends. +He had heard many such before, but he placed no value upon them. He +regarded himself as simply trying to use in the best way the gifts of +the Great Spirit. His many escapes from death and injury were due solely +to God's protecting care, and he could never take to himself any credit +for what he did. + +The excitement of the boys having subsided, the three sat down in front +of the cavern to eat their breakfast. Enough of the food brought by Fred +was left to give each and all the meal needed, but when they were +through, not a particle was left; henceforth they must depend upon what +their rifles brought them for support while on the way to the camp in +the Ozarks. + +"We have two or three days' travel yet before we can reach camp," said +Fred, while they were making ready to resume their journey; "but I don't +think we shall want for food. What troubles me the most is that scamp of +a Winnebago. You have spared him twice, but I don't believe it will +make a friend of him." + +"He was so boilin' mad," added Terry, "because he lost his gun that now +that he has also lost his knife he may get so much madder that he'll +flop over and become pleased again." + +This, however, was a kind of philosophy to which the others could not +agree. Deerfoot owned that he was in doubt; the sentiment of gratitude +is not one of the chief virtues of the American race, though many +story-tellers would have us believe that it is. There have been +instances known where a red man has shown something of the kind, but as +a rule they have no more of it than had the frozen serpent that was +warmed in the bosom of him who proved his foolishness by making the +experiment. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + +THE CAMP OF THE WINNEBAGOS. + + +Now that the little party had started once more toward the camp in the +Ozark Mountains, they moved at a brisk pace. It took them but a short +time to reach the main trail, where there was a short pause while +Deerfoot made what may be called a microscopic scrutiny of the ground. + +The result did not please him, for he saw the proof that the Wolf had +turned to the right, and had preceded them over the route which they +were to follow. He would have been better satisfied had he crossed the +trail or turned the other way. The fact that he had gone southward meant +that the main party which he was seeking to join were in that direction, +though the keen eyes of the Shawanoe could detect no signs that they had +trodden the same ground. That signified nothing, however, as they might +have pursued a slightly different route, falling back upon the main path +further on. + +Deerfoot, in telling his young friends what he had learned, added that +he had no doubt that they would hear from the Winnebagos again, and +possibly at an hour when least expected. Fred Linden was disturbed more +by the knowledge that the party were approaching the camp where his +father and his companions were unsuspicious of the danger. They could +easily steal close enough to the cabin to shoot down all three without +warning. + +When he mentioned his fear to Deerfoot, that sagacious young warrior +told him that he saw no cause for anxiety, though he could not deny that +something of the kind might take place. His theory was that the +Winnebagos were not disposed to attack any party of whites in mere +wantonness, the act of the Wolf being the whim of a single +gnarly-brained warrior. + +Be that as it may, our young friends were anxious to make the best +progress they could, and, for fully a dozen miles, they kept up their +brisk gait. At the end of that time, the sun was overhead, and they +were obliged to stop on the bank of a broad, swiftly-flowing stream. The +prints made by the hoofs of the horses that had passed that way some +days before were plainly seen, though there had been a fall of rain +since. A glance at the water showed that it was so deep that the hunters +must have swam their animals across. + +It would have been an easy matter for the boys to swim also, but they +preferred to use a raft. Accordingly, they set to work, and it did not +take them long to gather enough logs and driftwood to float all three. +These were deftly fastened together by Deerfoot, who used hickory withes +for that purpose, and, then, with a long pole which he cut and trimmed +with his tomahawk, he pushed from shore. + +The propelling pole was fully fifteen feet long, and in the middle of +the stream, the boys were surprised to see that when one end was pressed +against the bottom, no more than two feet were above the surface: the +depth was much greater than they had suspected. + +It was hard work to keep the clumsy raft moving at such disadvantage, +but Deerfoot would not yield the pole to either of his companions, and, +after awhile, he drove it against the shore, and all stepped upon dry +land, without so much as their feet having become moistened. + +They had been carried some distance below the trail by the current, but +they quickly regained it, and pushed on. Having eaten nothing since +morning, all three were ahungered, but Fred and Terry grimly determined +to wait for Deerfoot to suggest a stop before they asked for it. Had +they but known that many a time, when on the tramp, he had gone two days +and nights without taking a mouthful, they would not have been so +willing to await his pleasure. + +But though he would not have thought of stopping before nightfall had he +been alone, he was too considerate to subject them to discomfort; but it +was useless to stop, since as yet they had seen nothing in the way of +game to shoot. + +Terry and Fred were beginning to feel impatient with each other because +of their mutual stubbornness when the Shawanoe, who had been walking +quite fast, slackened his pace and turning his head, said: + +"My brothers are hungry, and they shall have to eat." + +"Ye couldn't tell us better news," replied the grateful Terry, "though I +would be obliged to ye if ye would impart the information where there is +any chance of our gettin' any such thing, as the people used to say whin +me uncle on me mother's side offered to bet a sixpence on anythin'." + +Deerfoot made no answer, but walking still more slowly, he was seen to +raise his hand to his mouth. Then followed the peculiar cry that a wild +turkey makes when it is lost from its companions. The Shawanoe knew that +the birds were in the surrounding woods, though none had shown itself. + +By and by there was an answer to the call from a point ahead. Asking the +boys to wait where they were, he trotted lightly forward, and was not +absent ten minutes when he came back with a plump turkey, whose neck he +had wrung. + +Since the lads had heard no report of a gun, they wanted to know by what +means he had secured it. He replied that he had stood behind a tree and +repeated the call until a group of the birds approached within a few +rods, when he made a dash among them, and seized his prize before she +could spread her wings and fly--all of which told of a dexterity that +few others possessed. + +In a brief while, a good dinner was boiled over the coals, a short rest +taken, and the three were on the road again, it being their wish to +travel further than on the day before. Had Deerfoot been alone he would +have broken into a trot that would have doubled the distance before the +set of sun. + +But the trail over which they were walking grew rougher. It was so rocky +in some places that it must have tried the endurance of the horses +ridden by the hunters. Instead of being direct, it grew very sinuous, +made so by the efforts to avoid many formidable obstacles that rose in +front. All this was of little account to the dusky leader, though of +necessity it prolonged the journey, and he was obliged to slacken his +pace to suit those who were less accustomed to such work. + +It was about the middle of the afternoon, when they were checked again +by coming abreast of a stream that was too broad and deep to be forded. +The trail, however, instead of entering the water, turned up the bank, +and the three, under the leadership of Deerfoot, did the same. + +This diversion continued for fully two hundred yards, when the path +struck the water, the point on the other side where the horsemen had +emerged being in plain sight. The former method was resorted to, and in +less than an hour after reaching the creek the three had safely ferried +themselves across. It was neither so broad nor so deep as the other, but +it delayed them fully as much. + +Within a half mile from the stream last crossed they came upon the trail +of the whole Winnebago party. Just as Deerfoot suspected, they had taken +another route, and had come back to the main path a good many miles away +from where the Wolf left it the night before. + +His experienced eye told him that they were close upon the company, who +numbered precisely twelve--several more than he supposed. Whether the +Wolf was with them could not of course be learned until a glimpse of the +party themselves was obtained. + +Matters had now taken such a shape that the Shawanoe told his companions +that the utmost care must be used, since they were liable to stumble on +the very ones whom they were anxious to avoid. He instructed them to +allow him to keep fully a hundred feet in advance, and never to diminish +the distance without orders from him. + +This was a prudent step, and Fred and Terry did their best to carry out +the wishes of their guide, who walked on at a moderate pace, without +once glancing back at his friends, who he knew would respect what he had +said to them. + +Bear in mind that this arrangement was made toward the close of the +afternoon of an autumn day. The three had not traveled more than two +miles, with the leader so far in advance, when the gathering gloom +became such that he would not have been visible to his followers had he +not fallen back so as to keep in sight. + +Finally, when less than a dozen yards separated them, and the graceful +figure of the young Shawanoe looked like a shadow gliding in advance, he +suddenly halted. The eyes of the boys were upon him, and they saw him +raise his hand as a signal to stop; they obeyed without so much as a +whisper. + +He stood like a statue for two or three minutes, and then, turning his +head without moving his body, beckoned them to approach. They could +barely see the motion of his arm, as they stepped softly to his side; +but before reaching him, they caught the glimmer of a light among the +trees, somewhat in front and to the right. When they stood near him, +they saw it more distinctly. + +In a partly open space, near the invariable stream of water, were a +group of Indians, some stretched lazily on the ground, some squatted +like tailors, two busy cooking something over the fire, and nearly every +one smoking long-stemmed, stone pipes. They were a sturdy set of +warriors, who were likely to give a good account of themselves in a +hunt or fight, and both Fred and Terry knew who they were before +Deerfoot, with his arm extended and his finger pointing toward them, +said: + +"It is the camp of the Winnebagos!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + +"KEEP TO THE TRAIL" + + +It was an interesting scene on which the three youths looked. There were +a dozen Winnebago warriors lolling and smoking in camp, while two of +their number were preparing their supper, by half-broiling it over the +blaze and coals. Fred and Terry stood in silence by the side of +Deerfoot, gazing upon the strangers with a curiosity such as no other +sight could have inspired. + +A small tree interfered somewhat with the view of Fred, and he took a +step forward. Immediately the Shawanoe put out his arm and shook his +head to signify that that would not do; they were as close as was safe. +Then Fred shifted his position a little to one side, as you feel like +doing in a public hall when a column is in front of you. To this +Deerfoot offered no objection, and the lad was satisfied. + +"Begorrah, but there's the spalpeen!" whispered Terry, in some +excitement, pointing his finger toward the camp, and with no thought of +the uselessness of such an act. + +The others knew that he referred to the Wolf, who had caused them so +much trouble, but they had already seen him. He was standing at one end +of the group, with folded arms, while he scowled, and the firelight +fell upon his features with such directness that the scowl could be +plainly seen. He appeared to be looking at the two warriors busy with +the fire, though more than likely his gaze fell indifferently upon them +and the rest, all of whom were in his field of vision. + +The tomahawk showed in his girdle, but of course he was without any +other weapon, and Terry could not avoid a smile when he noted it and he +had to say something despite the displeasure of Deerfoot. + +"Do ye observe his left eye and the end of his nose where one of me +blows landed? What could be foiner than the swell that ye see there? He +will naad to use no black paint for siveral days, as me grandfather--" + +At this point Deerfoot deliberately placed his hand over the mouth of +the speaker, abruptly ending what he proposed to say. + +Now, nothing could be clearer than that if the Winnebago party were in +such plain view of the three youths, the latter in turn were liable to +be discovered by them. They were standing beyond the circle of +firelight, where the darkness screened them from sight, and, if one of +the red men should look in that direction, he could not have seen them; +but there was the probability that any moment one of the warriors might +start out to reconnoiter their surroundings, in which event, discovery +was almost certain. Besides, the exuberant spirits of Terry Clark taught +Deerfoot that it was unwise to trust him in such a delicate position. + +Altogether, the time spent in watching the Winnebagos was barely ten +minutes. During that period, some of those reclining on the leaves got +up, walked about and sat down again; others kept their feet, and one +stepped to where the two were busy with a steak of some kind that they +were broiling over the coals, as though his hunger was making him +impatient. + +But the Wolf never stirred a muscle, and Terry afterward insisted that +he did not wink his eyes, so motionless was he. The same scowl added +hideousness to the painted face, and it was easy to understand that his +meditations were of any thing but a pleasant nature. + +Turning his back upon the camp, Deerfoot motioned for them to go back. +They did so, he following on their heels until not the faintest glimmer +of the fire could be seen. Then he led them by a round-about course to +the trail beyond the camp, and explained his wishes. + +He was now free to admit that there was reason to believe the Winnebagos +intended an assault upon the three hunters among the foothills of the +Ozark, and who were unsuspicious of such danger. Of course the Shawanoe +had no direct knowledge that such was their purpose, but he was so +convinced that he meant to take the utmost precautions against it. + +He therefore proposed that he should linger near the camp until he could +learn of a verity what their intentions were. If they meant to attack +the Hunters of the Ozark, then he would hasten to give warning to +Linden, Hardin and Bowlby, who, re-enforced by the three youths, would +be strong enough to beat off an Indian party twice as strong. + +In the meantime, Deerfoot wished Terry and Fred to push toward the camp +with all the speed of which they were capable, he promising to follow as +soon as he could. They had walked almost the entire day with scarcely a +halt on the road, but he wished them to keep on into the night so long +as they could. They would need nothing to eat before morning and between +sundown and sunup they ought to make a long advance on their journey. + +You will probably wonder why (the situation being such as was explained +by Deerfoot), he did not keep company with the lads and help them in +their forced march to the mountains. One reason was that he was +convinced in the first place that a demonstration would be made by the +Winnebagos against the Hunters of the Ozark, and he wanted to get both +boys--especially Terry--out of the neighborhood as soon as he could; for +their presence hampered his own actions. The safest place for them was +in the strong cabin to the southward, and they could not get there too +soon. + +Yet they would certainly travel as fast in his company as by themselves, +and Fred and Terry, therefore, could not see why he should stay behind +instead of going with them; yet Deerfoot the Shawanoe never took a step +of that kind without the best reason for it, as you will admit when it +is made clear to you. To give this explanation would require such a long +diversion from the thread of my story that you would be impatient. +Before I am through with the history of Deerfoot, you shall know not +only the reason for his course but for several other things that have +been referred to in the stories told about him. + +The confidence of Fred Lincoln and Terry Clark in the wonderful young +Shawanoe was so perfect that they did not question any decision, no +matter how little they failed to see its reason. If what he asked was in +their power, they would bound at the chance of doing it, just as they +did now. + +He had a parting warning to give. + +"Let my brothers make sure that they do not lose the trail; they must +look at the ground often: when they do not see the path they must stop +and await the rising of the sun; they can not reach the cabin too soon, +but they can never reach it by going wrong; _keep to the trail_!" + +The circuitous route which they had taken under the guidance of +Deerfoot, had brought them back to the path at a point fully a hundred +yards beyond the camp-fire, which had been started in the small open +space only a few rods from the path. So far as they knew there was +nothing now between them in the way of a direct advance to the cabin of +their hunters. + +"Fred," said Terry, after they were fairly under way, and while he +almost stepped on the heels of his friend; "Deerfoot thinks we won't go +more than five or six miles; let's show him that we ain't such babies as +he thinks." + +"I feel as you do; I propose that we keep it up all night." + +"Will ye be kind enough to raich yer right hand over your lift shoulder +and shake wid me on the same?" + +Instead of doing precisely as asked, Fred laughingly turned about and +shook hands with his friend, whom he loved and for whom he was ready at +any time to risk his life. They were on their mettle and they meant to +show the young Shawanoe that they were capable of doing much more than +he seemed to believe. They intended that when, after a few hours, he +started to overtake them, he would find that he had a good many miles +further to travel than he supposed. + +Had Deerfoot known of their thoughts he would have smiled and been +pleased. He wanted them to do their best and he was willing, should it +prove to be safe, to allow them to keep up the delusion that their gait +could bear any comparison with the speed of which he was capable. + +Meanwhile, the boys started in earnest to carry out their intention. +Their only fear was that they might be hindered by the difficulty in +keeping to the trail; for though the full moon was again overhead, and +though many of the leaves had fallen from the trees, little light was +there to help them. + +But for a time, at least, the difficulty was much less than they +expected. The path, though it continued to lead over rough places and +around obstructions, sometimes up-hill and sometimes down, was still so +clearly marked that Fred Linden went forward with scarcely a halt or any +hesitation. + +Though there are men who have walked their five and six hundred miles +with little rest on the road, it is a severe task for any one to keep it +up through an entire day and night, as you can soon become convinced by +making the experiment; but Fred and Terry were sturdy, strong-limbed +fellows, born and bred on the frontier, who were capable of standing a +great deal. When, therefore, they meant to astonish Deerfoot by their +progress during the night, they felt no distrust of their ability in +that direction. + +There was no reason why they should put any restraint on themselves, and +they talked quite cheerily, Terry indulging now and then in some of his +quaint remarks. But a tired boy does not feel like keeping up a lively +conversation for any length of time, and so it came about that after +awhile they walked steadily forward, for miles at a time, without +exchanging more than a few syllables. Terry could see the figure of his +friend with his rifle over his shoulder always a few feet in front, +there being just enough light in the gloom to keep his form in sight, +while Fred heard the steady tramp, tramp behind him, sometimes keeping +pace with his own and sometimes falling "out of step." + +"Helloa! this is too bad!" suddenly exclaimed Fred, coming to an abrupt +halt; "I guess this ends our tramp for to-night." + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + +AN INFURIATE SHAWANOE. + + +WITH the departure of Fred and Terry, Deerfoot felt as though he had +flung off a blanket that had been wrapped about his shoulders: his arms +were now free and he could use them at will. + +He shrewdly suspected that his young friends would fancy they had been +put upon their mettle, and would, therefore, exert themselves to their +fullest to meet his expectations. He was glad it was so, and he would +have been much better pleased could he have known they were in the cabin +at the foot of the mountains, or, better still, safe at their home in +Greville. + +Deerfoot now stealthily approached as close to the camp-fire as was +safe. He screened his body behind a tree, but he was nigh enough to +catch every word that was said in an ordinary tone, and he understood +the Winnebago tongue well enough to want no interpreter. + +The Shawanoe had hardly taken his position to act as cowen, when the +venison steaks were about one-fourth broiled, which was enough to +satisfy the parties interested. Those who had charge of the culinary +operations divided the meat into a dozen slices, so that each warrior +was provided for, and the feast opened. The strong animal appetites, and +teeth like those of the steel traps that were set at the foot of the +Ozarks, soon brought the feast to a close, after which the feasters +walked the few steps necessary to the brook near at hand, and lying down +on their faces drank their fill, just as so many pigs would have done, +grunting with satisfaction as they came back and resumed their pipes. + +All this Deerfoot had seen so often that it had no interest to him. He +kept his eyes on two warriors--the Wolf and one whom he had never seen +before. These two sat near each other on the ground while eating, and +they talked together in low tones. Since none of those around could +overhear the words, it was impossible for Deerfoot, with all his +wonderful acuteness, to catch a syllable. He would have given a great +deal could he have done so, for he suspected the dark plot that was +taking shape in their dusky brains. There was a dangerous flash in the +black eyes of the young Shawanoe while he watched their movements. + +It was clear to him that the Wolf had lost prestige, instead of gaining +sympathy by his last misfortune. Having gone out to gather wool he had +come back shorn, to go out a second time and to come back shorn to a +still more ludicrous degree. The manner in which the Wolf kept apart +from the rest, affiliating only with the single warrior at his side, +showed the feeling in the party. + +It was easy to recognize the leader or chieftain, though his dress was +precisely like the rest, but his air of authority told the story plainly +enough. The Winnebagos were a fine set of men in their war paint, and, +as I have said, were able to give a good account of themselves in any +scrimmage in which they might become engaged. + +As unexpectedly to the warriors as to Deerfoot himself, the Winnebago +chieftain, who was standing on one side of the fire where his rifle with +several others leaned against a tree, took his pipe from between his +lips and spoke to the Wolf in tones which caused that redskin to look up +in wonder. Seeing that the sachem hesitated, as if waiting for him to +rise, the Wolf came nimbly to his feet, as did his friend at his elbow. +The majority of the rest, however, sat still and showed no special +interest in what was going on. + +"The Wolf was the bravest of the Winnebagos," remarked the chief, "when +our war parties met those of the Sauks and Foxes and Pottawatomies who +dared to come into our country; the heart of the Wolf bounded with +delight and no tomahawk was hurled with such swiftness as his: no gun +was fired more often; no scalping knife took back more scalps to hang +upon the ridge-pole of his wigwam. + +"But the Wolf came across the Big Water and his heart longed for the +scalp of the pale face; he went out to hunt for it; he came back; the +tongue of the Wolf is not double and tells no lies; the Wolf met a +Shawanoe warrior who took his gun from him. + +"It was the young Shawanoe called Deerfoot; the Winnebagos have been +told about Deerfoot, the friend of the white man; the heart of Black +Bear (meaning himself) was angry; he was chief of the Winnebagos; he +told the Wolf that he must go forth and bring back his rifle; the Wolf +went; he did not bring back his rifle, but left his knife behind; +Deerfoot saw him and took it away from him. + +"Deerfoot is but a youth; he is not a mighty warrior; the Wolf must get +his gun and knife; he must bring back the scalp of the Shawanoe, he +shall take Wau-ko-mia-tan with him; each shall have his gun; let them +bring back the scalps of Deerfoot and the two pale faces with him; then +will Black Bear forget that the Wolf was not always a great warrior. + +"Let the Wolf and Wau-ko-mia-tan make haste; the Winnebagos are on the +war path; they will carry back with them the scalps of the pale faces +who are gathering the skins of the beaver and otter and foxes by the +base of the mountain." + +It may be said that this little speech developed the plan of the +Winnebago campaign. The Wolf had fallen so low in the opinion of his +chieftain and brother warriors, that it was necessary for him to take +heroic measures to restore himself. Seeing this, the sachem had just +notified him that he must secure the scalps of Deerfoot and the two +white boys with him. Wau-ko-mia-tan (who was the warrior that sat at the +elbow of the Wolf), was to be his companion. The chieftain knew how +closely the two were allied, and he indulged in the little fiction of +allowing one to keep company with the other, when the truth was he was +afraid to let the Wolf go alone. Since on each of the two former +excursions he had lost something, the probabilities were that if he came +back again, it would be without his scalp. + +The eagerness with which the Wolf accepted this task, the moment he +found that he was to have a companion, showed that he was an admirable +representative of the average Indian: gratitude to him was a vice rather +than a virtue. + +The expression on the face of Deerfoot showed that all forbearance was +ended. He had twice spared the ingrate: he would do so no more. + +Had the Wolf told his leader that the mercy of Deerfoot had touched his +heart, so that his arm could never more be raised in anger against him, +but that he would seek the scalps of the hunters at the base of the +mountains, the Shawanoe would have felt an admiration for him. Had he +sought out Deerfoot and asked for the return of his weapons (though that +would have been very unlike his race), Deerfoot would have restored them +to him. But now, as it was, when they should meet it would be as mortal +enemies. + +Nothing showed the vicious ingratitude of the Wolf more vividly than the +fact that instead of waiting for the morning before entering upon his +wicked enterprise, he started within three minutes after Black Bear, the +chieftain, finished his little speech. The sachem picked up his own +rifle from where it leaned against the tree and handed it to him, while +Wau-ko-mia-tan stood at the other end of the group, until the warrior, +his ugly face glowing like that of a demon, stepped to his side. Then +the two, without a word or motion like a farewell, turned away and +vanished in the gloom of the wood. + +They had not taken a dozen steps, when Deerfoot glided from behind the +tree and passed after them, as if he were the shadow thrown out by the +light of the camp-fire. The expression on his face was such as would +have hushed Fred Linden and Terry Clark to awed silence could they have +seen it. + +The two Winnebagos did not come directly back to the trail, but fell +into it at almost the precise point where Deerfoot had led his two +friends. They stopped a few minutes and talked in their low, guttural +tones, none of which was understood by the Shawanoe, who listened with +the closest attention. + +There was considerable distance at that time between the warriors and +Fred and Terry, who had set out with the ambition to keep up their +traveling through the entire night. The Winnebagos did not wait long, +when they moved on at their usual pace. + +Less than a mile from the camp, the warriors again came to a halt and as +before talked in a low voice. The point was where the wood was more +open, so that the moonlight which found its way among the limbs above +showed their forms quite plainly. More than that, enough of their words +were audible to enable the listening Shawanoe, who had crept dangerously +near, to catch their meaning. + +The Winnebagos turned off at almost a right angle and left the trail +behind them. The ground was broken, but they had not gone far, when it +became evident that they were following another path, though it was so +faintly marked that no eye except that of an American Indian could have +discovered it in such an uncertain light. + +As they advanced, the surface became not only rougher, but the grade +which they ascended was so steep that it would have been tiresome to an +ordinary traveler. + +Suddenly Deerfoot himself wheeled aside from the indistinct path to +which the Winnebagos clung and passed lightly and with great speed +through the wood where no one had walked before. So swiftly did he make +his way, that, though he crossed a deep ravine and went a considerable +distance, it was less than live minutes before he came back to the +shadowy trail. + +Instead of keeping along this path, in the same direction as that of his +enemies, he turned about and advanced to meet the red men who had dared +to come that way. He walked with his usual noiseless step, and stopped +on reaching the edge of the ravine over which he had leaped when it +crossed his path only a few minutes before. + +This gully was more than twenty feet in depth, and about half as wide. +The trail led to the edge on one side, continuing on the margin directly +opposite, so that any one who wished to keep to it was perforce +compelled to leap the chasm--a slight task for any Indian, though it +would have been easy to make a bridge by means of a fallen tree. + +The moon was now directly overhead, so that a flood of light fell into +the craggy ravine, lighting up the gray rocks and bowlders, the +prostrate trees that had fallen from the sides, the vegetation along the +slopes and the mossy grass that had been watered by the torrents when +they roared through. The trees grew rank and close to the edge at the +top--so close that some of them had slidden off and fallen part way +below, carrying the gravel, sand and earth with the prong-like roots +part way to the bottom. + +So faint was the mark of the trail opposite that even with the help of +the moonbeams, it took an eye as keen as that of Deerfoot to tell where +his enemies would appear. But he coolly awaited them, though his +calmness was the fearful calm of a fury such as even he rarely knew. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + +THE DEFIANCE. + + +The expression of the face of Deerfoot was terrible. The whole fury of +his nature was at white heat. He knew that the two Winnebagos had set +out to commit a fearful crime, and it was his work to stay their hands. +There was but the single way in which they could be stayed. + +The young Shawanoe kept back a couple of paces from the edge of the +ravine, where the shadow of the stunted trees above would hide him from +his foes when they should come in sight. He held his gun pointed and +cocked. Though his passion had the glow of the furnace, he was as calm +as death. + +[Illustration: "There was a fierce whizz like the rush of an eagle's +wing."] + +He had not long to wait. By and by a low guttural exclamation struck his +ear, and his hearing, strung to a marvelously fine point, caught the +sound of the soft moccasins on the hard earth. Less than a minute later +the form of the Wolf came into the moonlight, as a bather emerges from +the side of a lake. Seeing the open ravine at his feet, he stopped, and +instantly his companion, Wau-ko-mia-tan, appeared at his side. + +They quickly saw that the leap was an easy one. + +"Wau-ko-mia-tan will leap across," said that warrior, "then the Wolf +will follow; let us lose no time, for the Shawanoe may be gone." + +The speaker recoiled a single pace and gathered his muscles for the +leap. He took one quick step and made a terrific bound upward and +outward, straight for the rocky brink whereon Deerfoot the Shawanoe +instantly stepped into the moonlight. + +The Winnebago was in mid-air, crouching like a leaper, with his legs +gathered under him and his arms at his side, when there was a fierce +whiz, like the rush of an eagle's wing, something flashed in the +moonlight, and the tomahawk, driven by a lightning-like sweep of the +Shawanoe's arm, was buried in the chest of the Winnebago as it would +have sunk in so much sodden earth. + +An ear-splitting screech burst from the throat of the smitten warrior, +who struck the edge of the ravine like a bundle of rags flung thither, +and then tumbled to the bottom as dead as the jagged rock on which he +lay. + +The Wolf stood transfixed, unable to understand what had taken place. +Then he saw the figure of the youthful warrior on the other side and +heard his voice. + +"Rattlesnake of a Winnebago! Die the death of the rattlesnake!" + +The wretch was given no time to protest again, for the words were yet in +the mouth of Deerfoot when the flash of his rifle lit up the partial +gloom, and the crack of the weapon mingled with the death shriek of the +redskin, who slumped end over end down the ravine and lay beside the +body of Wau-ko-mia-tan as dead as he. + +"Thus shall die all that seek to follow your footsteps," muttered the +Shawanoe, who, standing where he stood when he slew both, proceeded to +reload his rifle with as much coolness as though he had just fired at a +target on a tree. + +This finished, he let himself over the edge of the ravine, holding fast +a moment by one hand, and then letting go, dropped lightly beside the +two bodies that lay below. His face showed no excitement now, and he +moved with his usual care and deliberation. Drawing the hunting-knife +which he had taken from the Wolf, he partly bent over, but straightened +up again, saying to himself: + +"Deerfoot is a Christian Indian and can not scalp a foe though as base +as they." + +Picking up each rifle (that of Wau-ko-mia-tan being still clutched by +his nerveless fingers while the Wolf's had fallen from his grasp), he +deliberately broke the locks of each by striking them on the stones. He +then recovered his own tomahawk, and carried off the useless weapons +with him. + +He passed down the ravine until he reached a point where the sides were +not so high. There he clambered out, still keeping the two broken guns. +He had reached high ground on the side from which had come the +Winnebagos, and he walked grimly forward, until in a brief while he +reached the main trail over which he and the boys had passed a brief +while before. + +He turned toward the left, which led him in the direction of the camp of +the Ozarks as well as toward the camp of Black Bear and his Winnebagos. +He took longer steps than usual, but did not trot or run. + +When he once more caught the glimmer of the camp-fire among the trees, +he slackened his pace and drew nigh with the caution that had become a +second nature to him. He quickly saw that the Winnebagos had disposed of +themselves for the night. The fire was burning as brightly as ever, +because of the attention it received from the two warriors who were +standing on guard. + +The party were in a portion of the country where they knew there was +scarcely a possibility of their being molested by any one; but the +American Indian loves nothing like laziness and war; and, treacherous by +nature himself, he expects treachery at all times in others. And so, +although they knew of no enemies within miles of them (unless it was +Deerfoot, whom they did not fear) they had two vigilant sentinels on +duty. The rest were stretched out on their blankets with their feet +turned toward the blaze, sleeping like so many tired animals. + +At the moment of Deerfoot's approach, the Winnebagos on guard were +standing some twenty feet apart, with the fire burning between them. +Each held a loaded gun in hand and cast his keen glance hither and +thither in the gloom, eyes and ears alert for the first suspicious sight +or sound. + +The sentinel nearer Deerfoot was Black Bear himself. The chieftain +evidently believed that the best way to instruct his warriors in their +duty was to set the example. His attitude showed that something had +arrested his attention. Deerfoot knew that the sound had been made by +his moccasin, for he purposely rustled the leaves. + +Black Bear looked intently off in the gloom, but seeing nothing, turned +his head and told the other guard to fling more wood upon the fire. He +obeyed, and the circle of light quickly extended out among the trees. + +It would have been an easy matter for the Shawanoe to slay both, but he +had no thought of doing so. That would have been killing without +justification. + +The Winnebago chieftain was gazing intently into the night, when from +behind a tree, no more than a dozen steps distant, softly stepped the +young Shawanoe. + +"Listen, Black Bear," said he, "to the words of Deerfoot the Shawanoe. +Twice did he spare the life of the Wolf and the Wolf thanked him, but he +went out a third time to take his life; he was a rattlesnake, but he had +not the courage of the rattlesnake, for he took with him Wau-ko-mia-tan, +whose heart was that of a rattlesnake also; they bent their steps where +none but Deerfoot has the right to go; therefore Deerfoot killed them +and took away their guns. _There they are!_" + +In the same minute that Deerfoot began speaking, the second sentinel +stepped forward and took his place beside his chief. That both were +amazed need not be said. Each stood with the muzzle of his gun lowered, +neither dreaming that the youth thought of assailing them. + +Deerfoot spoke in the slow but impressive voice natural to his race. But +the last exclamation escaped him like the discharge from a Leyden jar. +So quickly that neither saw a movement, he hurled the broken gun of the +chief straight at him, following it with the second gun driven at his +companion. + +Both hit their mark. Black Bear was struck in the chest with such force, +that he was carried off his feet and knocked half fainting to the earth. +The other was hit and compelled to recoil a step, but the weapon struck +him lengthwise, and he was not harmed. He rallied and brought his gun to +his shoulder, but by the time it was leveled, the Shawanoe had vanished. + +Such an exploit, as you may well suppose, caused consternation among the +Winnebagos for the space of several minutes. No gun had been fired, but +the American Indian is a light sleeper, and slight as was the +disturbance, it aroused every one. There was a gathering about the +fallen chieftain, who, however, came to his feet without help, though he +gasped and was weak for a few moments. The explanation given by the +other sentinel removed the general fear of an attack, but three of the +warriors scattered through the wood to make sure that no surprise +overtook them, while the others with an agitation rare among red men +talked over the astounding occurrence. + +The broken rifles lying on the ground left no doubt that when the +Shawanoe declared he had slain both the Wolf and Wau-ko-mia-tan he spoke +the truth. Else, how could their shattered guns be in his possession? + +And this same youth, with an audacity beyond comprehension, had flung +the two guns at the chieftain and his brother warrior and defied them. +It seemed as though he must be more than a human being, to be capable of +such deeds. Legends had reached them of some of the exploits of the +wonderful young Shawanoe, but this surpassed them all. + +The Winnebagos, however, were among the bravest tribes in the west, and +when they broke camp at early dawn, Deerfoot, who was on the watch, knew +that it was their determination to slay every one of the three hunters +in the camp at the foot of the Ozarks, as soon as they could reach +them. + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + +THE SIGNAL FIRE. + + +Deerfoot the Shawanoe remained in the vicinity of the Winnebago camp +until the warriors made their start at an early hour the following +morning. He took more than one survey of the red men, who gathered about +the blazing fire and talked over the remarkable events of the night. He +could easily have slain every one of the scouts whom they kept moving +through the wood, but he had no wish to do so. + +He heard and saw enough to convince him that they intended to make an +attack on the camp in the mountains, but he did not feel absolutely sure +that they would not turn aside and follow in the path of the Wolf and +Wau-ko-mia-tan, until the party had advanced several miles to the +southward along the Ozark trail. + +It seemed strange that the Winnebagos paid no attention to the two +missing warriors, and yet, after all, it was not singular. They knew +they were dead and it was therefore a waste of time to give heed to +them. If by any possibility they were alive, they must take care of +themselves, just as all brave Indians did: if unable to do so, the +consequences must be on their own heads. + +So the ten Winnebagos, under the lead of the famous chieftain Black +Bear, moved along the trail in the direction of the camp of the Hunters +of the Ozark, and the expressions and words that had been overheard by +the watchful Shawanoe, left no doubt that by way of revenge they meant +to slay the three trappers who had located there for the winter. + +The Winnebagos came from the north-east. Their lodges, villages and +hunting grounds were many moons' travel away, and the section of country +through which they were journeying was so sparsely settled that they had +no fear of pursuit. Now, when you give an American Indian the chance to +commit some vicious mischief with no fear of being made to pay +therefor, you may set it down as a truth that nine hundred and +ninety-nine out of every one thousand will commit that crime. It was a +matter of indifference, in the first place, whether they harmed the +hunters or not. Since the latter were removed some distance from their +path, it is probable that they would not at that time have taken the +trouble to go in quest of them: it was the feeling of revenge that was +the deciding weight in the scale. + +Let us recall the situation as it was on the second morning after Fred +Linden and Terry Clark left their homes in Greville. The boys themselves +were the furthest advanced along the trail to the mountains, while at a +considerable distance behind, filed the ten Winnebago warriors, and +hovering in the vicinity was Deerfoot the Shawanoe, watching every +movement with the vigilance of a lynx. + +Whenever he chose he could make a circuit around the Winnebagos, and +joining the boys beyond, hasten to the hunters' camp and apprise them of +their danger; but there remained an abundance of time in which to do +that, and he did not wish to leave the vicinity of the enemies until he +saw a little more of them. + +It was evident that the Winnebagos were in no hurry. They must have +known that two of the youths were following the trail in advance, for +the heavy shoes of the lads could not fail to leave their imprints in +many places; but, such being the case, the red men might ask in what +manner they could know that a party of Winnebagos were following them, +unless such knowledge came through Deerfoot the Shawanoe, who, wherever +he might be, certainly was not in front of them. + +When the Indians came to a stream of water, they did not rush in and +wade or swim to the other side, as they would have done had there been +any call for haste, but like those who had gone before, they stopped +long enough to make a raft on which they could float across. The +American Indian is not as fond of water as he should be, and though the +Winnebagos would have cared little for the chill of the stream, it was +more pleasant for them to pass over dry shod; so they made their several +rafts and poled themselves to the opposite bank. + +You would not look for humor under such circumstances, and yet on one of +the three rafts there was so much of it shown that even the grim +Shawanoe smiled. + +The structures on which the red men floated were, as a matter of course, +of the frailest nature, intended as they were to last only long enough +to bear them to the other shore. With proper management, all would have +done this, but on one of the rafts holding four of the warriors, there +was an aboriginal wag. A single Indian managed the pole, while the +others squatted carefully in their respective positions and were +expected to keep quiet, so as not to disintegrate the frail structure. + +The wag to whom I have referred, while sitting with an innocent +expression on his painted countenance, quietly loosened the two or three +withes, and gave the logs such an impetus that they separated like two +bodies positively charged with electricity, when brought together. The +warrior who handled the pole was standing with legs somewhat apart, +resting on a different log, when they suddenly separated still more, and +he sat down with a splash in the water. Another log revolved backwards, +as did the savage who was sitting on it, while the others were also +plashing in the stream, which was not deep enough to make them swim, +though it came to the neck of the shortest one. The four warriors waded +to shore amid the grins of the others, and with no suspicion of the +criminal that had played the trick upon them. + +The next stream was reached by the Indians a couple of hours later. This +was not as deep as the other and they did not stop to make rafts. After +a little searching, they found a portion where the current did not come +above their knees and they waded. + +In doing so, Black Bear took the lead, and, in accordance with a custom +universal among Indians, each warrior carefully stepped into the +footprints in front of him. The water was so limpid that the impression +made by the chieftain's moccasin was plainly shown, so that there was no +difficulty in this respect. Had a person been trailing them, he would +have seen before him what seemed to be the footprints of a single man. +There was but a slight variation near the further shore, where the +moccasin of one of the Winnebagos had slid from a stone on which, like +all the others, it was placed. The brown stone was slippery with a faint +coating of slime, and the scrape of the deerskin down the side gave it a +white gleam like the belly of a fish. It was a "slip" in every sense, +and, when the slight splash announced it, Black Bear at the head of the +procession turned about with his most impressive scowl. + +The party made a halt on the other bank. It was considerably past noon, +and, while some busied themselves in starting a fire, and a couple began +fishing in the stream, two others going into the woods with their guns, +Deerfoot was quite sure that they had decided to spend an hour or so for +dinner. He concluded, however, to follow the two who went into the +woods, and it was fortunate that he did so. + +The first surprise that came to him was when the Winnebagos had gone +nearly an eighth of a mile from camp. All this time they were making +their way up quite a steep slope, so that they were close to the top of +a high, wooded ridge. + +The Shawanoe might well wonder why they had taken such a course, but +when two frightened deer burst through the undergrowth and dashed by at +full speed, within easy gun shot, and the Winnebagos looked at them +without raising their guns to fire, then it was that Deerfoot was +genuinely astonished. + +The conclusion was inevitable that these red men were not looking for +game. + +With a suspicion of their real errand (and that caused another +surprise), Deerfoot stealthily followed the Winnebagos until they paused +on the highest part of the ridge. He was not long kept in doubt as to +their business. + +The top of the ridge was almost bare. There were a few stunted trees, a +number of bowlders and rocks, and here and there, patches of scraggly +grass. From this elevation, however, a magnificent view opened out on +every hand before the spectator. To the north stretched the undulating +country covered with prairie, stream, valley and forest, the last +brilliant with all the gorgeous hues that come with the frosts of +autumn. + +These flaming colors were visible in whatever direction the eye turned, +and the same varied surface was seen everywhere, but to the southward, +the Ozark Mountains had a faint bluish tinge, like a mass of clouds +resting in the horizon. It was in that direction that the camp of the +hunters lay, and thither the footsteps of pale face and redskin were +directed. + +The two Winnebagos spent only a minute or so in scanning the surrounding +country, when they began gathering wood, until they had quite a pile. A +quantity of leaves, some of which were damp, was mixed among the twigs, +so that when with a little trouble they were fired by means of the flint +and steel in the hands of one of the red men, the fuel did not burn +clearly but gave off considerable dark smoke, which was what the +Winnebagos wanted. + +As soon as the fire was fairly burning, one of the Indians flung his +blanket over it, his friend seizing the other part, while both held it +thus until it was in danger of taking fire or smothering the flames. Had +the coarse cloth been a little more cleanly it is likely that it would +have been burned, but as it was it strangled the blaze until it may be +said there were several bushels of smoke gathered beneath and the embers +were at their last gasp. + +At that moment, the Indians raised the blanket so that they stood +upright, and plenty of fresh air was allowed to feed the blaze. Then +they slowly waved the blanket between them, sometimes lowering it until +it was scorched by the sleepy flames, and then elevating it above their +heads. All the time, they manipulated the blanket, sometimes straight up +and down, sometimes diagonally, and indeed, in every possible way. + +The result of all this varied swinging was that the black column of +vapor which slowly climbed the sky, was broken into circles, spiral +curves, and all sorts of odd-shaped figures, which did not dissolve for +several minutes in the clear air above. + +I need not tell you what this meant, for in another place I have +described the same thing. It was a signal fire intended by the +Winnebagos for the eyes of a party of friends who were too far off to be +reached in any other way. Deerfoot had seen such telegraphy many a time +and oft, and more than once he had used it. He could interpret such a +signal when made by a Shawanoe, Wyandotte, Sauk or Fox, but he had never +learned the code in use by the Winnebago military authorities. + +However, it was not possible that there was any very fine shade of +meaning in the various manipulations of the two warriors. Keen brained +as is the American Indian, he is unable to do a great many things with +which he is credited: one of these is to do more than telegraph the +simplest messages by means of fire, though it is beyond question that +important tidings has been flashed hundreds of miles in a single night, +from mountain top to mountain top, by means of the signal fires of the +Indians. + +What disturbed Deerfoot was this proof that there was a second party of +Winnebagos in that section of the country. He had not dreamed of such a +thing, and it might well cause him alarm, that is, for the three men who +were so intent on gathering their furs comparatively a short distance +away. + +Carefully screening himself from observation, the Shawanoe looked +intently in the direction of the gaze of the Winnebagos. He saw that +they were not peering at any other ridge, but at the broad low valley to +the north-west. They had not long to look when they detected a thin +bluish column of smoke creeping upward among the tree tops and +dissolving in the clear air above. + +Deerfoot also saw it, and he knew that it was a reply to the first +signal. There was another party of Winnebagos in the neighborhood; they +would soon join Black Bear's party, and there was no time for delay. +Indeed, but for the discovery he had made, the Shawanoe would have felt +that he had tarried too long already. + +It was not far now to the camp of the Hunters of the Ozark, and it was +perilous to wait to warn them. Every hour counted. Not only that, but, +as you can readily see, Fred Linden and Terry Clark were in still +greater danger. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI + +ON THE EDGE OF THE PRAIRIE. + + +The night was far advanced when Fred Linden and Terry Clark reached the +stream, where the former remarked that their progress was stopped. Of +course he meant that they could continue if they chose to make another +raft or they could wade, but they had journeyed so far since dusk, and +the trouble of constructing a float was such that he thought it best to +wait where they were until daylight. They were pretty well fagged out, +and nothing could have been more grateful than to throw themselves on +the ground and sleep for several hours. + +Terry was as tired as his companion, but he stood irresolute, inclined +to think it best that they should push on. + +"The stream doesn't look very deep," said he, "and if ye agraas wid me +that we can wade, it'll be wiser if we make tother side and then +journey to the nixt straam." + +"But that may be a good many miles further on." + +"Thin all we have to do is to travel a good many miles," said the plucky +Irish lad, sitting down to take off his shoes. + +"I shall never give in to _you_," remarked Fred, also seating himself +and beginning to remove his foot-gear. + +Before any thing more could be done, however, both were startled by the +discovery that some one was on the other side of the stream. First they +heard the guttural exclamations which they knew were made by Indians, +and then they saw one of the red men come out into full view in the +moonlight. + +Without a word, the boys hastily moved back under the shadow of the +trees, making sure that they also placed several rods between them and +the trail which they had followed to the edge of the water. Secure from +observation, they fastened their eyes on the other bank, where they saw +an interesting sight. + +Three Indian warriors stood for fully five minutes in plain sight, +while they discussed the same question that had engaged the lads--that +is, in what manner the stream should be crossed. + +It did not take them long to decide. The foremost stepped into the +water, followed by the other two, none removing his moccasins or +leg-gear, and in a brief while they came out upon dry land again, within +fifty feet of where the lads were crouching under shelter. + +The boys trembled as they realized how narrow their escape had been. Had +they not paused for a few minutes, they would have been in the middle of +the stream, just as the others came down to the edge of the water. In +the light of their recent experience with the Winnebagos, they had not a +particle of doubt that the three belonged to the same tribe and that +they were fierce enemies. Had they not slain the boys, they would have +made captives of both and conducted them to the main party. Then when it +should have been found that one of the prisoners had the gun that once +belonged to the Wolf, their fate would have been sealed. + +The incident drove from the mind of Fred all wish to tarry on the road. +He wished that they were many miles on their way to the camp in the +Ozarks. They considered themselves members of the little party of +hunters whom they could not reach any too soon. + +"I obsarved while the spalpeens were wadin'," said Terry, "that none of +them wint lower in the water than their knees. Why didn't they take off +their shoes like dacent gintlemen, and cross as they should; but bein' +as they didn't do the same, why, we'll sit them the example." + +A minute later, the boys stepped into the stream, and, by using care, +reached the other side, with all their garments dry. Their shoes were +quickly replaced, and the two were off again, so moved by what they had +seen, that for the time they forgot fatigue and every thing else. + +"I tell you, Terry, that matters are beginning to look worse than even +Deerfoot thought, and you know that when he left us he didn't feel +satisfied, by any means." + +"Could it be," asked his companion, "that these spalpeens don't belong +to the same crowd that we saw?" + +"I am quite sure they do; these three would not have been so separated +from the others." + +"Where could they have come from?" asked the puzzled Terry. + +"Where all the Indians come from--the woods. I suppose a large party of +Winnebagos have been off on a tramp, and they are coming together with a +view of going home or of making an attack on some place or persons." + +A random guess, like this, sometimes comes closer to the truth than a +labored theory. The three Indians whom they had so narrowly escaped were +members of Black Bear's party and were on their way to meet him. +Furthermore, there were more of them at no great distance. + +"Me father lost his life by the Indians," said Terry, in a soft voice; +"but though it was not known what tribe the same belonged to, I don't +think they were Winnebagos; but Indians are Indians and are always ready +to kill white people whiniver the chance comes along." + +"You are right; father doesn't think there is the least danger or he +wouldn't have sent for me. He has hunted several seasons without any +trouble with them, but he ought to have learned long ago to be forever +on the watch." + +"Fred," said the other, stopping short in his excitement; "do ye think +they are goin' to attack the _sittlement_?" + +"Impossible! There's the blockhouse and plenty of men to defend it +against a thousand savages." + +"But the woods saam to be full of thim; there may be some kind of an +Indian war that has broke out and these are the first part of the rid +army that is to coom down and swaap us over the Rocky Mountains." + +But Fred could not share in this prodigious fear. He faced to the front +again and laughed, as he resumed his walk. + +"There couldn't be any thing like _that_ without warning reaching us; +some of the runners would have come to Greville with the news; besides, +Deerfoot would have been certain to know something about it." + +"_That_ sittles it!" exclaimed Terry, with a sigh of relief; "ye are +right in sayin' the Shawanoe would have knowed about it; he would have +larned it before the spalpeens that started out on the war path, and, +bein' as he didn't say any thin', I'm sure ye are right; but all the +same, it looks bad for the Hunters of the Ozark, which maans oursilves +as well as the men in the mountains." + +"There's no use of denying that there is enough to make all of us +anxious, but when I remember that father and Mr. Hardin and Bowlby have +spent so many years in the Indian country, I can not help feeling hope +that they will be able to take care of themselves. You know they are all +good shots and they have a cabin strong enough to stand a rough siege." + +"I don't forgit the same; but there's a good many more rid than white +men and Mr. Bowlby is lame." + +"What of that? He doesn't expect to fight with his feet." + +"There are many scrimmages in which it's handy to use yer faat. If +Deerfut hadn't popped along just as I keeled over the Wolf I'd jumped +on him; then, do ye not mind that the men may take it into their heads +to run away." + +"They have their horses," said Fred, foreseeing and agreeing with the +response that his young friend would make. + +"Not one of 'em is worth a cint at such a time; a one-legged Indian +could outrun the fastest; they would have to stick fast to the trail +while the spalpeens would walk all around 'em." + +"All that is true, but if they could get a good start, it would be very +handy for Mr. Bowlby to have one of the horses to ride." + +"I don't see much chance of the same," was the sensible comment of +Terry; "but, me boy, have ye any idaa of what time it is?" + +"It must be far beyond midnight: surely we are a long ways in advance of +the Winnebago camp where we left Deerfoot." + +"They are not meaning to make a start to-night?" + +"Of course not; they will not move until morning." + +"Thin I'm in favor of an adjournment _sine die_, at once and without +waitin' any longer." + +"What do you mean?" asked the puzzled Fred, stopping and looking around +at his companion. + +"I'm tired out." + +"So am I, but I made up my mind to keep walking till I dropped, before I +would give in to you. It will be a sensible thing for us to rest, but we +must get far enough from the trail, so that if any more stragglers come +along this way, they won't stumble over us." + +This was only simple prudence. They groped along for several rods, +through the undergrowth and among the limbs, and were still walking, +when Terry's foot struck some obstruction and he fell flat. + +"Are you hurt?" asked Fred. + +"Hurt? No; that's the way I always lay down, as me uncle obsarved whin +he fell off the roof--call me early, Fred, and be sure ye don't take up +more of the bed--than--a--gintleman----" + +The poor wearied fellow was asleep. + +Fred smiled, as he lay down beside him The air was quite brisk, so he +unstrapped his blanket and flung part of it over his friend and the rest +over himself, the two lying back to back as they lay the night before in +the cavern. The dried leaves made as soft a couch as they could want and +Fred had only time to murmur a prayer to heaven, when he too became +unconscious. + +They slumbered for four full hours, when both awoke at the same moment, +refreshed and strengthened. The sun was well up in the sky, and +fortunately the weather continued clear, crisp and bracing. Indeed it +could not have been more nearly perfect. + +They laughed when they saw where they had made their bed, right in the +open wood, just as any wild animal would have done when overcome by +fatigue. There was no water within sight and no food at command. The +blanket was quickly folded up into a neat parcel and strapped to the +back of Fred and the two retraced their steps to the trail, which they +hoped to follow until it took them to the camp at the foot of the +Ozarks. + +"I have found out one thing, that have I," remarked Terry, with the air +of one announcing a great discovery. + +"What is that?" + +"The hungriest young gintleman on the western side of the Mississippi is +the handsome youth whom ye have the honor of walkin' with this very +minute." + +"I can feel for you on _that_ question," added Fred; "for it seems to me +that I never wanted food so bad in all my life; we must be on the +lookout for game. Do you know how to make that call that Deerfoot used +to bring the turkey to him?" + +"No, but I know how to use the turkey after the same is brought to me. +If I should try the signal, it would scare all the turkeys and deer and +foxes and bears and wolves and beavers out of the country, which bein' +the same, I won't try it, principally because I don't know how to begin +to try it." + +"My gracious, Terry; if you could shoot like you can talk, we wouldn't +have to wait long for something to eat." + +"Whisht, Fred," whispered Terry, in some excitement; "the wood just +beyanst ye looks as if it wasn't any wood at all." + +Fred Linden had noticed the peculiarity. The trees were becoming so +scarce and far apart that it was evident they were approaching some +extensive clearing where no trees grew at all. The next minute the two +stood on the edge of an immense prairie, which revealed a sight that +profoundly interested them. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +A MORNING MEAL. + + +The two boys stood on the edge of a prairie which had a varying width of +from one to three miles. Looking to the right and the left, neither end +could be seen, so that there was no means of judging its length. + +The trail led straight across to the wilderness on the other side, which +at that point was all of two miles distant. You can understand that +walking was so much easier on the open ground that any party of +travelers would hasten to take advantage of such a chance. The hoofs of +the half dozen horses had left such a distinct impression that the eye +could follow the trail a long ways from the margin of the woods. + +This prairie was entirely covered with a growth of succulent grass. The +season was so late that it had lost most of its verdancy, but there was +an abundance of nutriment in the blades and it was splendid +feeding-ground--one of those breaks in the almost limitless forest of +which grazing animals were sure to take advantage. + +The boys had paused only a minute or two, gazing out on the almost level +expanse, when Terry uttered an exclamation of delight and pointed to the +right. Looking in that direction (as Fred had done at the moment his +companion spoke), he saw a welcome sight indeed. A herd of buffaloes +were cropping the grass within gunshot of the young hunters. + +As I have said in another place, there were no such droves as have +sometimes been seen on the vast prairies of the far west, numbering +fully a hundred thousand, though a century ago some amazing collections +of animals were met within sight of the Mississippi. + +The herd upon which our friends looked with so much interest numbered +little more than a hundred, and they were ruminating along the side of +the prairie instead of cropping the grass in the middle of the plain. +Some of them seemed to be browsing among the trees and undergrowth, but +the major part were scattered over the prairie to a distance of two +hundred yards, while they were strung to a still greater extent parallel +with the course of the prairie itself. From this you will see they were +much dispersed, none of them being close to another, except he may have +brushed against him now and then. + +The front of the drove was not less than two hundred feet away and +others could be heard ruminating among the trees, where their huge bushy +heads and big round eyes were often thrust into view. Some of them may +have caught sight of the lads, but if so, they did not consider them +worth attention, for they continued browsing and grazing, advancing step +by step toward the spot where our young friends stood. + +"Frederick," said Terry, laying his hand on the arm of his companion, +and speaking with the gravity of a judge, "whin ye swoop yer gaze on +thim playthings out there, bear in mind that there's our breakfast, as +me grandmither obsarved whin the dinner table upsit and ivery thing +rolled down cellar." + +"Our opinion is unanimous on that point; I have already selected my +victim, and if you will go away and start a fire, it will hurry matters +along." + +"It ain't as bad as that," said Terry in some surprise, "I'm not so near +dead that I'm goin' to die in ten minutes if I don't git somethin' to +ate: I will stay and superintind the operations of shootin' one of them +little pets out there." + +"It isn't the first buffalo I have killed--" + +"I'm not aware that ye have killed that yit," interrupted the Irish lad +in his quizzical fashion. + +"You soon will be, but I have been out with father before to-day and +shot buffaloes: have you?" + +"No; whin I goes out huntin' yer fither has't the proud distinction of +bein' taken along. Lucky for the buffaloes I niver took a notion to go +out and kill siveral thousand: for that raison we find the drove out +there so innocent and confidin' that they don't know enough to be afeard +of us." + +"Maybe they have no cause to be." + +"But they can't know that _I'm_ not goin' to shoot among them,--so why +shouldn't they be scared out of their siven sinses? Howsumiver, ye have +me permission to show the animals that ye are actin' under me own eye +and orders and it will be an incouragement to yersilf to know the same." + +From what has been said, it will be understood that Fred Linden knew +much more about buffaloes than did his companion. [The proper name is +_bison_: the genuine buffalo is not found in America.] As he had said, +this was not the first time he had hunted them, but with Terry Clark it +was different. He had spent a good deal of his time in the woods and had +gone in quest of wolves, bears and deer, but he had never brought down +one of the lumbering animals for whose flesh he now yearned with a +yearning that only the most ravening hunger can inspire. + +Terry had formed a deep plot during the short conversation. He did not +know the best manner in which to shoot a buffalo and he was too proud to +ask instruction. He encouraged the scheme, therefore, of Fred making the +first shot. That would give him a chance to see how it was done, so +that when he came to exhibit _his_ skill, he would make no mistake. + +Although up to this time the animals had not shown that they cared a +straw for the two beings who stood so near and were looking at them with +loaded guns in their hands, yet they were liable to become stampeded at +any moment. A snort and jump by a single animal were likely to set the +whole drove on a dead run, in which all hope of a breakfast on buffalo +steaks would be gone for that morning at least. + +So, as a matter of prudence, Terry stayed where he was, but partly +sheltered himself, so as not to startle any one of the animals that +might come upon him suddenly. At the same time, Fred bent low and with +loaded and cocked rifle began stealing toward the nearest buffalo. + +As it happened this was a cow in fine condition. She was plucking a +ribbon of grass that followed the edge of prairie. By some chemistry of +shadow and sunshine, there was this little strip of unusually tender +herbage, which the cow was eating in her quick, vigorous way, as though +afraid that some of her companions would find and take it from her. + +Fred singled out this one as his prize. Being so close to the wood, he +could not have wanted a better chance to steal up to her. Indeed he had +but to stand still, for she was coming a regular half step at a time as +she clipped the grass in front of her; but the youth's hunger would not +allow him to wait the few minutes that would have been required. + +When within fifty feet of the cow, Fred knelt on one knee and brought +his rifle to a level. The cow was still advancing, "head on," when he +made a noise similar to that which comes natural to you when you wish to +drive the hens out of your garden-patch. The cow stopped abruptly, threw +up her head and stared at the hunter. The sight of the crouching figure +must have suggested to the stupid animal that every thing was not right, +for with a frightened whiff, she bounded short around with the intention +of joining the other animals. + +At the very moment she turned, Fred Linden fired, sending the bullet +directly back of her fore leg, where it tore its way through flesh, +muscles, bones and the heart, the battered bullet humming off through +the air on the other side. + +No shot could have been more effective. The cow made a couple of wild +leaps and then lunged forward, her nose striking the earth with such +force that her head doubled under her and she swung over on her back and +side with a violence that made it seem as if she had fallen down a high +precipice. + +Following his old rule, Fred loaded his gun where he stood, before +moving out to examine his prize. It was at this juncture that a stampede +of the whole drove was due. Now that the boys had secured their +breakfast they would not have cared had the animals thundered off out of +sight. + +But the terror of the smitten creature was too brief to affect the rest, +even though several were quite close to her at the time she gave the +snort and rolled over on the ground. A cow grazing near did raise her +head for a moment and look at her fallen friend as though she hardly +understood it. She seemed to meditate plunging into the rest of the +drove with head down and with tidings of the disaster, but she must +have concluded that since the other cow was dead, it wasn't worth while +to make any fuss over it; for she dropped her head and resumed her +grazing as though she had no further interest in the matter. + +Even when Fred ran out, and, stooping down, began cutting a large slice +from the shoulder of the victim, none of the others paid any attention +to him. Close behind him came Terry, who was so desirous of examining +the prize, that he postponed starting the fire. + +"Terry, how will that do for a shot?" asked Fred, with some pride, as he +plied his knife. + +"Where did ye land the shot?" + +"Right there, behind the fore leg; you can see the hole where it +entered." + +Terry turned his head to one side, closed an eye and surveyed it as +though he was measuring the height of a wall: then he shook his head. + +"What's the matter with you?" asked the impatient Fred. + +"Ye are a sixteenth of an inch too far forward, be the token of which +the ball wint through the upper part of the heart: whin ye kill a +buffalo coow ye should always sind the ball through the lower instead of +the upper part of the heart. Ye surprise me so much that I am graved +with ye, me own Fred." + +The latter laughed. + +"I suppose it would have done as well had I sent the bullet through her +brain; but that takes the finest kind of marksmanship." + +"Av course, which explains why ye didn't dare attimpt it: whin we have +finished our dinner, supper and breakfast all in one, I'll step out on +the perarie, strike an impressive attitude and drop the biggest bull in +the drove, just to tach ye the gintaal way of doin' that same thing." + +"Well, I shall be glad to learn the best style of bringing down the +creatures." + +By this time, Fred had severed a piece of meat from the shoulder of the +buffalo. It weighed several pounds, but Terry broke in with the +wondering inquiry: + +"What are ye goin' to do with _that_?" + +"That's for our dinner; what would you suppose?" + +"I thought that was the part of the coow that ye were goin' to be +sinsible enough to lave behind while we built a fire around the rist and +had enough of a maal to stay the pangs of hunger." + +Without waiting to hear the response of his companion, Terry ran among +the trees and began gathering wood with which to start a blaze. Both +boys were such experts at this that only a brief time was necessary. +Fred laid the buffalo steak on the leaves and took part, striking the +flame with his own flint and tinder. There was no water within reach and +this was quite a deprivation, but the boys were hungry enough to wait +for that. From his scant store of mixed salt and sugar, Fred drew forth +enough to season the enormous slice and it was speedily half broiled. + +Two such hungry youngsters are not likely to be particular about their +dinner being done to a turn, and they were eager to eat it when it was +exceedingly rare. Leaving Terry to make known when it was ready for the +palate, Fred walked to the edge of the prairie to take a survey. + +He could not forget that they had serious business before them, and, +though he was warranted in believing that there was nothing to fear from +the Winnebagos who had caused so much trouble, he was too wise to take +any thing for granted. + +He saw the buffaloes cropping the grass with the same vigorous +persistency which they will show for hours, while the prairie, extending +far to the right and left, failed to show any other living creature upon +it. So far as he could tell, there was no cause for fear. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +A STRANGE RIDE. + + +When the boys had eaten their fill, there was a quantity of meat left. +This was cooked still more over the coals, wrapped about with the +greenest leaves that could be got, and then packed in the bundle which +Terry Clark strapped to his back. + +"There's enough of the same," he explained, "to presarve us from pinin' +away with starvation, which reminds me now that I promised ye that I'd +show ye the properest way in which to bring down a buffalo." + +"I'm willing to wait until some other time," said Fred, who feared there +would be dangerous delay; "I am more anxious to get forward than I am to +see you make an exhibition of yourself." + +"It will not take me long," replied Terry, who was sure there could be +no miss where the animals were so plentiful, while of course the delay +ought to be slight. + +"If thim Winnebagos that we obsarved last night have started this way, +they ain' t any more than fairly goin', which puts thim at the laast +calculation a dozen good miles behind us; they won't walk any faster +than we do, so we'll git to the camp a long ways ahead of 'em." + +"All this sounds reasonable, but you know we have learned that they are +not the only Winnebagos in these parts; but then they are under the eye +of Deerfoot and he would give us warning." + +"That sittles it, as I previously remarked some time ago, in token of +which we will shake hands on the same." + +The Irish lad had made such an enjoyable meal that he was in the highest +spirits. He extended his hand to his friend and shook it warmly, as he +was inclined to do for slight cause. + +"Now stand still, obsarve, admire and remimber." + +And with this high flown counsel, Terry with his gun in position began +moving toward an enormous bull. The latter really was not so close to +him as was a cow, but he thought it beneath his dignity to spend his +ammunition on such game as had served for their dinner. + +Although Terry Clark's natural love of humor often led him to assume +what he failed to feel, he was hopeful in the present instance that he +would be able to carry out the little scheme in mind. He knew that the +weapon in his hand was a good one, and he was already so close to the +buffalo that he was sure of bringing it down at the first fire. + +While he was willing to admit that Fred's shot could not have been +improved, so far as effectiveness was concerned, yet he was in earnest +in his intention of firing at the head. He knew that no animal is of any +account after its brain has been perforated, and it seemed to him that +it was more appropriate for a true sportsman to bring down his game by +that means instead of firing at its body. + +Terry made a mistake from which his experience on the border ought to +have saved him. Had he driven his bullet into the eye of the buffalo, he +could have slain him, but he was almost certain to fail by firing +simply at the head. It would have been far better had he followed the +example that his companion set. + +The bull upon which he had cast his eyes was about twenty yards from the +wood. He did not raise his head until this distance was diminished by +one half. Just then a cow showed some alarm of the approaching figure +and walked hastily away. This caused the bull to throw up his head and +stare at Terry. + +"Obsarve!" called the latter to his friend, who began to feel uneasy +over the appearance of things. + +A dozen spears of grass seemed to be dripping from the mouth of the +magnificent bull, who glared at the figure of the young man in the act +of leveling his gun as though he had some curiosity to know what was +going on. + +Terry aimed at the head, making the part between and above the eyes his +target. This was probably the most invulnerable spot of the animal. + +The bull was still staring at the intruder, when the latter, aiming at +the point named, fired. The bullet struck the bony ridge at the upper +part of the head and glanced off into space, inflicting no more real +injury than a paper wad. + +But the impingement of the lead must have given the stupid brute an idea +that harm was meant. His anger was roused, and, dropping his head with a +savage bellow, he charged the young hunter at full speed. + +This was giving the matter an unpleasant turn, but there was no time to +argue, and flinging his gun aside, Terry gave the finest exhibition of +running he had ever shown. No one could have realized better than did he +that the bull "meant business" and it would never do to allow himself to +be caught. + +Fred Linden himself was so startled by the sudden onslaught of the +animal that he was flurried and fired without taking proper aim. He +struck him, but he was unable to check his charge: indeed he rather +added to his fury. Stepping back, so as to shield himself as much as he +could behind the nearest tree, he began reloading his weapon with the +utmost haste. + +Meantime Terry, by desperate running, reached the tree at which he aimed +a few steps in advance of his formidable foe. He had no time to climb +the trunk, but believing the lowermost limb was within reach, he made a +leap, seized it with both hands and swung himself out of reach, just as +the bull thundered beneath like a runaway engine. + +Finding he had missed his victim, the savage beast snorted with rage, +wheeled about, came back a few paces and was passing beneath the limb +again, when a singular accident gave an astonishing turn to the whole +business. + +The limb which afforded Terry Clark his temporary safety was unable to +bear his weight, and, while he was struggling to raise himself to the +upper side and it was bending low with him, it broke like a pipe stem +close to the body of the tree. + +This took place so suddenly that the youth had not the slightest +warning. Indeed it would not have availed him had he known what was +coming, for the time was too brief in which to help himself. + +Down he came with the limb grasped in both hands and fell squarely on +the back of the buffalo bull. Fortunately the bewildered animal had +just shifted his position, so that the lad fell with his face turned +toward the head instead of in "reverse order." + +Even in that exciting moment Terry saw the grotesqueness of the +situation. His legs were stretched apart so as to span the animal just +back of his enormous neck. Letting go of the branch that had played him +the trick, he grasped the bushy mane with both hands and yelled in a +voice that might have been heard a mile away: + +"_All aboard! off wid ye!_" + +So far as a bull is capable of feeling emotion, that particular specimen +must have been in a peculiar frame of mind. He glared about him, here +and there, turned part way round, as if the whole thing was more than he +could understand, and then as his bulging eyes caught sight of the +remarkable load on his back and he felt the weight of the burden, he was +seized with a panic. + +He emitted a single whiffing snort, and flinging his tail high in air, +made for the other side of the prairie as if Death himself was racing at +his heels. His actions were of that pronounced character that his +fright communicated itself to the rest of the herd. There was a general +uplifting of heads, and then, as the bulls and cows saw their most +eminent leader tearing across the prairie with a live boy astride of his +back, the sight was too much for them. A wholesale series of snorts and +bellows followed, tails were flirted aloft, and away the whole herd +went, fairly making the ground tremble beneath their tread. + +By the time the alarmed Fred Linden had his rifle reloaded there was not +a buffalo within a hundred yards of him. The one that bore his friend on +his back was making as good time as the fleetest and was well toward the +head of the drove. The panic began like an eddy of the sea; there was a +surging of the animals toward the other side of the prairie and away +they went, as I have said, with their tails and heels in the air, as if +they meant to keep up their headlong flight for twenty miles, as is +sometimes the case, when an immense drove become stampeded on the great +plains of the west. + +Whatever feelings of amusement might have been first aroused by the +figure that Terry cut on the back of the terrified bull were lost in the +dreadful fear of Fred that it would prove a fatal ride for his friend. + +He could see him plainly for a fourth of a mile, but by that time the +trampling hoofs raised a dust in the dry grass which partly obscured the +herd and made it impossible to distinguish the figure of the lad +clinging to the mane of his novel charger. + +"He will fall off," was the exclamation of Fred, "and will be trampled +to death by the others." + +He recalled that the bull must have been wounded by his own shot, but +that knowledge gave him concern instead of relief; for if the bull +should give out, he would be trampled by those who were thundering so +close at his heels. + +The buffaloes did not preserve the open order which marked them when +they were grazing, but crowded together, so that their backs looked like +brown dusty waves, rising and falling rapidly from the motions of their +bodies. + +Fred quickly recovered from his astonishment. He had reloaded his gun, +but when ready to fire, was afraid to do so. Too many other buffaloes +interposed between him and the bull, and had he discharged his weapon, +he would have been as likely to hit Terry as to wound the brute that was +carrying him away with such speed. + +Running to where the rifle of the boy lay, Fred picked it up, hastily +reloaded it, and started after the herd. He broke into a loping trot +such as an Indian shows when hurriedly following a trail. He kept his +eyes on the fast receding animals, his interest being now centered on +the moment when they should reach the wood on the other side of the +prairie. + +"It will be the death of him if they dash among the trees," he thought; +"for he will be struck by some limb and have his brains dashed out." + +But such a catastrophe did not take place. The fleeing animals must have +known that their headlong speed could not be kept up among the trees and +undergrowth; so, when those at the head of the drove were close to the +edge of the wood they swerved to the left, and the others followed with +the same furious swiftness with which they had sped across the open. + +Fred Linden at this time was not a third of the way across the prairie, +and he stopped and viewed the sight. He could distinguish the animals +much better than when they were tearing straight away from him. They +ran, so to speak, from under the cloud of dust that had obscured his +vision, which, sweeping backward, left all in plain view. + +What he saw, too, showed that the buffaloes possessed varying rates of +speed. A dozen were well to the front, still crowding close together, +while the rest, also in close order, were strung along at different +distances. Still, they were so far from Fred that his view was any thing +but satisfactory. Shading his eyes with his hand, he peered through the +autumn air in the search for his friend. + +"There he is!" he exclaimed, but the words were hardly out of his mouth +when he saw he was mistaken. The distance was too great for him to see +clearly. + +"How long will this keep up?" was the question which he would have been +glad to answer, for it included the fate of Terence Clark. If his steed +should grow weary and fall behind the others, possibly he would give his +rider a chance to leap to the ground and make off; but the likelihood of +that taking place was so remote that Fred could feel no hope. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + +A YOUNG HUNTER'S STRATEGY. + + +Fred Linden walked rapidly forward until he reached the middle of the +prairie, when he paused and bent his eyes on the swiftly vanishing drove +of buffaloes. They were speeding at right angles to the course he had +been following, and, so far as he could judge at the distance, were on +the same dead run with which they started. + +He was convinced that he was mistaken a brief while before, when, for a +moment, he thought he caught a glimpse of Terry on the back of the +terrified bull. He was unable to distinguish any thing that looked like +him. He might--and it was not at all improbable--be still clinging to +his steed, but he was too far off and too mixed up with the others for +even the keen eyes of Fred Linden to identify him. + +There seemed but the one thing to do: that was to follow the drove +until he learned the fate of his friend. Certain that he would find him +sooner or later, Fred resorted again to his loping trot, which he could +keep up for several hours without great fatigue. + +But he had not gone twenty steps at this gait, when, to his astonishment +and alarm, he observed three Indian warriors, each mounted on a horse, +issue from the wood at the point where the buffaloes would have entered +it had they not turned to the left. The red men headed their animals +directly toward Fred, and advanced at a moderate gallop. + +The sight was enough to make the bravest person thoughtful; for you will +readily see the critical situation of the boy. It was useless to turn +and run, for they would overhaul him before he could get half way to +cover. He was in the middle of a grassy prairie, where there was not the +slightest object which could be used as a screen in a fight with them. +He glanced quickly about, but did not see a stone as large as his hand. +Except so far as his weapons were concerned, he was absolutely +helpless. + +Never did Fred Linden display more coolness and knowledge of Indian +character than he did at this time when caught at such fearful +disadvantage. He knew that if he showed any timidity, the red men would +attack him at once, while, if he could deceive them, as he hoped, there +was a possibility that he would escape. + +Two hundred yards away, the Indians drew their cantering horses down to +a walk: they evidently saw there was no call for haste and they could +afford to take all the time they wished. They were riding beside each +other, instead of in Indian file, and being nigh enough to be observed +distinctly, showed that they were dressed precisely like the Winnebagos +whom he had noticed the night before around their camp-fire. This might +have been, had they belonged to another totem, for there is a similarity +in the dress of different tribes, but Fred had no doubt that these were +Winnebagos. It began to look indeed as if there was an irruption of them +into that section of the Louisiana Territory. + +During those trying moments, when Fred calmly watched the approach of +the dusky horsemen, he was observant of the smallest things. He recalled +that they were the same in number as the party which he and Terry so +narrowly missed the night before on the edge of the stream and he half +suspected they were the same, though such supposition did not correspond +with the theories formed and accepted at the time. + +He saw the middle horse, which was darker in color than the others, +slightly stumble; then the rider turned his head and said something to +the warrior on his left, who made answer without taking his eyes from +Fred; then the one on the right said something, his painted features +relaxing into a frightful grin, the guttural words being plainly +audible: all these points being noticed, as I have said, by the young +hunter who had so much more important matters to engage his thoughts. + +He recalled with relief that on picking up the gun of Terry he had +reloaded it, so that he now had two weapons ready for use. With these he +could make a brave resistance, and you may depend upon it that the last +thing he thought of doing was to surrender. He might easily be shot +down where he stood, but he would die fighting. + +The three horsemen advanced with the same deliberate pace, their black +eyes fixed upon Fred, who stood erect, looking straight at them. When +they were within twenty yards, he quietly turned so as to face the other +way, and waved his cap several times over his head. At the same moment +he uttered a resounding whoop, replaced his cap, laid Terry's rifle at +his feet and leveled his own at the amazed savages, who could not have +suspected what was coming. + +You understand that the purpose of Fred was to make the Winnebagos +believe that he had friends on the edge of the wood behind him to whom +he had signaled. The act of laying down his gun was to give the +impression that he was so sure of support that he was ready to fight +until it should appear. + +Now, the red men might have been deceived by this to as full an extent +as the youth desired, but the fact remained that, even if there were +re-enforcements on the margin of the prairie, they were so far off that +they could give no help if the Indians chose to assail the boy. I am +inclined to think that had the Winnebagos believed that a dozen white +hunters were encamped there, they would not have been restrained from +carrying out their design by such fact: but when the cool defiance of +the youth was added to the same, there was enough to make them pause. + +They might shoot him down, wheel and dash for the woods from which they +had emerged but a short time before; but they would be liable to +pursuit, and, when a white borderer takes to the trail, he can be as +persistent as the red man himself, though, as I have said, had they been +eager to shoot the boy, they would not have been stopped by that +knowledge. But they saw that he had his loaded rifle leveled at them: +each Winnebago probably imagined he would be the special target. Their +guns were still in their hands and no doubt the moment any one attempted +to raise his weapon the white boy would fire. + +The distance was so short that there could be no miss. It followed +therefore that the cost of an assault upon the lad would be the death +of one of the Winnebagos, and none of the three could know that he would +not be the victim. + +The cost was more than they were willing to pay, for it must be borne in +mind that not only was the death of one of their number considered +assured, but it was not at all unlikely that such a daring youngster +would be able to do something with the gun at his feet before +succumbing. + +But it is not to be supposed that three mounted Indians would +deliberately ride away from a single youth through fear alone,--that is, +not until they had tried to circumvent him by strategy. And so it came +to pass that within the same minute that Fred raised his rifle, the +Winnebago who sat in the middle waved his hand toward him as a sign of +comity. At the same time he called out: "Yenghese! Long Knife! +Friend--friend--friend!" + +But Fred knew too much to be deceived. He was the master of more +vigorous English, and, without lowering his gun, he called out: + +"Keep off or I'll fire! If you ride another step, I'll let daylight +through you!" + +As if to add emphasis to his words, he gently swayed his rifle from +right to left, so that it covered each warrior in turn. There was an +involuntary ducking of the heads, and the Indians, seeing that nothing +was to be done without large risk, opened out--two riding to the right +and one to the left. Thus they passed by Fred without lessening the +space between him and them. + +After all, this was the most trying moment to the youth, for it diverted +his attention in the most exasperating manner. The three horsemen were +in his field of vision, but it was hard to keep watch upon each. He +suspected the maneuver was for the purpose of taking him off his guard, +but it is doubtful whether such was the case, for there was something in +the grim pose of the youthful hunter which warned them that it was +unsafe to trifle with him. + +When the horsemen were opposite each other and on a line with Fred, he +suddenly wheeled with great quickness and held his piece still leveled +so that he could shift it from one to the other the moment needed. On +their part, the Winnebagos watched him with cat-like vigilance, keeping +their heads turned until they came together a hundred feet beyond, and +between him and the wood which he had just left. There they stopped, +their position such that the sides of their animals were turned toward +the lad, whom they continued to view with an interest that it is safe to +say they had never felt in any other of his race. + +It was tiresome to hold his heavy rifle leveled, but Fred stuck to it, +for he knew how much depended on the next minute or two. + +It looked for a time as though the Winnebagos had decided not to leave +without a demonstration, but finally they moved off with their backs +toward Fred, and their horses on a walk. + +"How nicely I could pick one of them off," said he to himself, as the +broad shoulders, with the black hair streaming over them, moved gently +up and down with the motion of the animals, and ranged themselves beside +each other like three dusky targets. "I could hit _him_ or _him_ or +_him_" he added, shifting his aim from one to the other in turn, "and +it's because they know it that they are afraid to risk a shot. If one +of them had made a motion to take aim, I would have let fly, and I +wouldn't have missed either. Then I would have done something with +Terry's gun." + +These thoughts had hardly found expression, when the middle Winnebago +suddenly turned on his horse, raised his gun and discharged it at Fred +Linden. The instant he did so, he and his two companions threw +themselves forward on their animals and dashed off on a dead run for the +wood. + +Had the warrior been less hurried, it is probable he would have struck +the astonished youth, who plainly heard the _pinge_ of the bullet as it +almost touched his ear. His own arms were beginning to ache because of +their constrained position, but he took as careful aim as possible and +fired at the savage who fired at him. + +More than that, he hit him. A screeching yawp broke the stillness, the +warrior half straightened up on his steed, seemed to sway, and would +have fallen had not one of his companions caught his shoulder and +supported him for a minute or two. The horses were brought down to a +walk, and finally came to a standstill, though they halted at a point +beyond rifle shot. + +"I hope I finished him," muttered Fred Linden, with a snap of his eyes; +"they are seeking my life, and, if I could have my way, I would tumble +every one of them off his horse." + +Never was the value of two rifles shown more strikingly than at this +time. The moment his gun was discharged--had he possessed no other--Fred +would have been helpless, and the Winnebagos would have been upon him +before he could reload his piece; for that was in the days of +flint-locks, when the charge had to be rammed down and the powder poured +into the pan before the weapon was ready for use. It may be said, +however, that under such circumstances he would not have fired. + +But before the horsemen could wheel about, they would have found the +youth standing at "present arms" precisely as before, and the situation +unchanged, except that one of their own number had been disabled, and to +that extent (which was considerable) the gain was on the side of the +lad. + +There could be little doubt that the stricken Winnebago was hit hard, +though after some attention from his companions, he was able to sit his +horse. The three warriors seemed to have lost all interest in Fred, for +a few minutes later they rode off at a walk, without, so far as he could +judge, once bestowing a look upon him. + +It struck him as singular that after his stratagem, by which he believed +he gave the impression that he had a party of friends on the margin of +the wood, that the Winnebagos should guide their horses to the very +point. After all, it began to look as though he was not so successful in +that respect as he imagined, and that it was his own courageous demeanor +that for the time had saved his life. + +"I am glad they have ridden off in that direction," said the youth to +himself, as he saw them carefully enter the wood, where they were lost +from sight; "for if they had ridden the other way they would have +bothered me in my hunt for Terry." + + + + +CHAPTER XXX. + +TERRY FINISHES HIS RIDE. + + +That ride of Terry Clark on the back of the buffalo bull was one which +he could never forget had he wished to do so, which of course he did +not. The first thrill, when the beast dashed off on a dead run, and the +wind began blowing by the ears of the lad, was that of pleasure. He was +having an exciting ride, and, as good fortune would have it, the animal +was bearing him straight along the trail toward the camp in the Ozarks. + +"If the baste will show enough consideration for me," thought the lad, +"to kape up his coorse for twinty miles or so, he will give me a good +lift toward raichin' the folks, though sorry I am that I haven't Fred +alongside or rather behind me." + +The bull being on a run, his progress consisted of a series of quick +jumps, which jarred the rider so much that had he not kept a good grip +upon the shaggy mane, he would have been unseated. The hair of the +animal was so long that he was able to make his hold secure, though he +had a constant fear that he would stumble, in which case the rider was +sure to take a tremendous header that was likely to break his neck. + +Terry could feel the throb, as it may be called, of the engine. His +position was such that his heels touched the body close to the shoulders +of the bull. At that point there was an alternate swelling and sinking +of the muscles, as the animal alighted on his feet and leaped away +again, which Terry felt as plainly as if he had held his open hand on +the shoulder. Then, too, the bull had a peculiar sidelong motion, as +though some of his muscles occasionally got out of "gear," and the +action of the hind legs did not "dovetail," so to speak, with that of +the fore legs. + +Nothing escaped the eye of Terry during those exciting minutes. He +thought the head of the bull was held unusually low, but he noticed the +short, thick horns, curving outward and then coming over until they +ended within a few inches of each other, and he was sure that amid the +dusty frontispiece of the immense area of skull bone he could see where +his useless bullet had struck and glanced off; once or twice he caught a +whiff of the breath of the buffalo, redolent with the not unpleasant +odor of grass, and now and then he could hear his fierce snort. It +seemed to Terry that the animal turned his head partly to one side as if +to get a view of the strange creature on his back. Doubtless such was +the fact, and, after each sight, it seemed that he bounded away with +more terror than before. + +Brief as was the time taken by the bull in galloping across the prairie, +it allowed Terry to see every thing. As soon as he felt sure of +retaining his seat, he glanced at the other animals, all of which were +galloping in the same direction as the bull. Some of them were so fleet +that they passed him, but he retained his place near the middle of the +herd. + +The buffalo, or properly the bison, is a stupid animal, but a peculiar +fact about the small drove amid which Terry Clark was riding was that a +number noticed him and in their way tried to push him off. They would +dash up beside the bull with head lowered, and rub their horns against +him in the effort to reach the rider and unseat him. + +"The only way in which ye can do that," said Terry, when he saw what +they were trying to do, "is to climb up and take a saat behind me. Thin, +if ye'll lock yer arms about me nick ye may persuade me to stip down, +but ye can't do much while on the ground." + +The buffaloes were too dull of intellect to realize their helplessness +in this respect, and they continued crowding close to the bull until +they must have caused him some discomfort. This crowding was of such a +marked character that, as you will remember, it was noticed by Fred +Linden as far off as he stood. + +Once or twice the rider had one of his feet slightly jammed, but he was +able to lift it out of danger without imperiling his position. The dust +caused by the hoofs of the animals did not rise until his steed had +passed beyond, so that he suffered nothing therefrom and every thing in +front was in plain view. The speed of the beast, however, caused some +inconvenience, for the wind made him blink, and it was only by half +closing his eyes that he could peer out between the lids and see +clearly. + +Before the other side of the prairie was reached, Terry Clark began +asking himself the natural and important question,--How is this to end? + +The same theories that I have mentioned as occurring to Fred Linden +passed through his brain also. If the bull should dash among the trees +at that headlong pace, the rider could not retain his place for more +than a minute or two; if he was wounded enough to cause him to give out +and fall to the ground, he would be trampled upon by those behind and +Terry of course would share his fate. + +Brief as was the time given for thought, the youth considered a half +dozen plans. He glanced over his shoulder and was alarmed to see how +many animals were in the rear of him. He asked himself whether he could +not slip backward, grasp the swinging tail, and dropping to the ground, +keep his feet while he held fast to the caudal appendage, and pulling +the other way, act as a brake upon the progress of the animal until all +the others had passed on. Then he would "release brakes," and allow the +bull to continue his career as suited himself. + +But he was compelled to admit that the plan was not feasible. The bull +was going at such a pace that the rider would be sure to lose his +balance the moment he struck the ground, and, though he might still hold +fast to the tail and retard the progress of the beast, he was sure of +getting in the way of his heels. + +"If his tail was a little longer," reflected Terry, "I would try the +same, but I'm afeard I would git mixed up with his hind hoofs and things +wouldn't be agraaable." + +So that plan was abandoned. + +"If he goes in among the trees, I'll lean forward on me face until he +knocks out his brains--that is, if he has any--whin I'll dismount." + +That was all well enough if the bull should happen to follow the +programme, but the prospect of his doing so was too remote to afford +much comfort to the youth. + +"I guess I'll kaap erict like a gintleman," he concluded, "and as soon +as a chance comes for me to jump off, I'll go." + +Terry had no thought but that the buffaloes would dash among the trees +and continue their flight in the same headlong fashion, as long as they +could; but, to his amazement, the head of the drove suddenly swerved to +the left and the bull followed. + +"Be the powers, but this will never do," was his conclusion; "this +perarie may raach all the way to the Gulf of Mexico, and the bull +doesn't act as if he meant to stop before he raaches there; I'm goin' to +make other arrangements." + +He kept his seat until the drove had gone several hundred yards with +unabated speed. So far as he could judge, the bull was holding his own +with the rest: whatever wound he had received was of no account, so far +as its immediate effect was seen. The others continued crowding up as +before, but Terry did not mind them. He yelled and shook his head in the +hope of frightening them off so as to give him the room he wished in +order to make his venture, but they did not mind him. The odd crackling +of their hoofs, the rattling of their horns as they struck together, and +their occasional bellowing, made a din amid which no shout that he could +raise would gain any consideration whatever. + +"There's one thing sartin," said Terry, compressing his lips and showing +by his action that he had made up his mind to end the business one way +or the other. "I'm tired of this crowd, and I ain't goin' to spind any +more time with it." + +Between him and the wood were seven or eight buffaloes, crowding close +in their idiotic fashion, as though to push off the rider. Terry +recalled the day, early in spring, when he ran rapidly across the creek +near his home, by stepping upon the surging masses of ice, one after the +other, and leaping off again before they had time to respond to his +weight. He resolved to try something of the kind. + +Holding fast to the wiry mane with his hands, he drew his feet up under +him, balanced himself a moment, then straightened up, and, turning +quickly, stepped upon the back of the bull that was immediately +alongside. Before that creature could know what had been done, the +pressure was removed and the weight of the lad was borne by a cow which +was his next neighbor. + +Terry Clark ran as nimbly as a monkey across the backs of the +intervening buffaloes, until his foot rested on the one nearest the +wood. A slight slip at the moment of stepping upon his back disconcerted +him so that he could not recover himself. His intention was to land on +the ground with his face in the same direction he was going. Then, even +if he could not keep his feet, he could run with such speed that his +fall would not hurt him; but unfortunately as he struck the ground he +faced the other way, and before he could check himself, he went over +backward with such force that he was knocked senseless. + +After all, the fall may be considered a fortunate one, for he was not +seriously hurt and soon recovered himself. He had received a severe +shock, but in a short time he sat up and stared about him. Recalling +what had taken place, he looked in the direction of the herd of +buffaloes. None of them was in sight, but a dark heap a short distance +away showed where the bull on which he had ridden had given out and +fallen to the ground. He was wounded more seriously than at first seemed +to be the case. Had Terry stayed on his back a few brief minutes longer, +he would have gone down with him and been trampled to death by the hoofs +of those in the rear. + +"I think I'm all here, as me cousin used to remark after he had enj'yed +himself at Donnybrook Fair," said Terry, rising carefully to his feet, +swinging his arms and kicking out his legs. He had been violently +jarred, and he was alarmed by a dizziness that caused him to sit down +again. But he recovered quickly, and soon was as well as ever. He turned +to the left and passed among the trees, where, despite the coolness of +the day, he felt the relief of the shade thus afforded him. + +"I s'pose Fred will be jealous whin he finds out what a foine ride I +have had," he added, his old sense of humor coming back; "but all he has +to do is to catch a buffalo bull and git on his back: but I don't think +he'll forgit the same right away." + +Looking over the prairie, he saw the figure of his friend walking in +almost a direct line toward him, though he was so far off that he was +not distinctly visible, partly because of the dust which still lingered +in the air. + +Fred's encounter with the Winnebago horsemen had taken place and ended +while Terry lay senseless on the ground, so that the latter had no +suspicion of the exciting occurrence. + +Terry ought to have walked out on the plain, swung his hat and cheered +his friend; but that would have been contrary to his nature. He kept out +of sight among the trees, until Fred was quite close, when he broke into +vigorous whistling. + +Fred heard the familiar sound, stopped short, looked about him and then +burst into laughter as he saw his comrade. The next moment they ran +together, shook hands and mutually congratulated each other, as you will +admit they had full warrant in doing. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXI. + +THE DEVIL'S PUNCH BOWL. + + +It was a thrilling story which Terry Clark had to tell about his ride on +the back of the buffalo, but, after all, it was not so stirring as the +experience which befell Fred Linden, and the Irish lad declared that it +surpassed his own in every respect. + +"Thim Winnebagos are gittin' altogether too plintiful," said he; "whin +they come on horseback as will as on foot, there must be more than we +can take care of, though you managed the three as well as I could have +done the same mesilf. And so ye hit one of 'em whin ye touched off yer +gun, did ye?" + +"There is no doubt of it, though I am sorry to say that it did not end +his career right away." + +"It'll sarve him the good turn of givin' him time to think what a maan +spalpeen he is any way, and that's a good deal. And so ye say they was +mounted on horseback: what has become of thim?" + +"They rode in among the trees over yonder, near where we kindled the +fire and cooked the buffalo steak." + +Terry walked out to the edge of the prairie, and shading his eyes, +peered in that direction. + +"I can see nuthin' of thim; they must have found out that ye hadn't any +frinds there after all the fuss ye made, and it may be they will come +back to sittle with ye." + +"If I alone could attend to them, do you think we together have any +thing to fear?" + +"Of course not, if it's only thim three, but we have seen so many of the +spalpeens that they won't be loikely to foind much trouble in scarin' up +a few hundred more and makin' it uncomfortable for us." + +"Well," replied Fred, with a sigh, "I am so relieved and thankful to +know how well we got through it all, that I am hopeful we shall have no +great trouble during the rest of the way. We ought to be able to reach +the camp by to-morrow night if we don't have any interruption." + +The young friends surely had good reason to feel grateful for their +deliverance from the perils of the morning, and with hopeful hearts they +walked along the margin of the wood until they came to the point where +the trail turned to the left. Over this they started at a brisk pace, +Fred slightly in advance of his companion, for the path was not broad +enough for them to walk any other way with freedom. + +"Terry," said the elder, "do you think it possible that the three +Winnebagos with whom I had the trouble could be the three that we met +last night, when we were about to cross the stream?" + +"Niver," was the emphatic reply; "how could they have got around so far +in front? It was a good many miles the ither way that we saw the same!" + +"I have thought of that, but, you know, we spent several hours in sleep, +during which they might have turned back." + +"But where could they have got their horses?" + +"They may have had them within easy reach?" + +"It couldn't be." + +"I guess you are right; we hadn't a very good view of them last night, +though the moon shone on them when they were wading the stream and I had +a fancy that one of them looked like the fellow I hit when I fired." + +"All a fancy," insisted Terry. + +"Well, there's no use of guessing, for any way it must be only a guess; +but where do you suppose Deerfoot is?" + +"I've been thinkin' of the fellow and it saams to me that it's time he +showed up." + +"I wonder whether he could have passed us in the night." + +"That couldn't be, for he meant to stay near the camp-fire where we lift +him till he found out what the spalpeens were goin' to do, and he +couldn't have got that chance till mornin'." + +"Unless they made a start last night." + +"Which the same they didn't do." + +The boys were more in want of water than food, and fortunately they had +not gone far when they struck another stream, narrow enough for them to +leap across, and which afforded them a draught with which to quench +their thirst. + +"Now," said Fred, "since we have had such a good breakfast, we will +think of nothing more to eat until night." + +"I don't know about not _thinkin'_ of the same," said Terry doubtfully, +"but I am with ye in agraain' that we won't go out of the path to hunt +any of the same onless--that is, onless we should think what I've +brought along isn't aqual to our appetites." + +"We must have passed considerably more than half the distance between +home and the camp in the mountains," added the elder, some minutes +later; "so, if all goes well, we ought to be with our friends some time +to-morrow afternoon." + +"I'm of the opinion," remarked the sagacious Terry, "that Deerfut sint +us on ahead last night so as to git us out uv the way; thim pritty legs +of his can travel so fast that he wanted a chance to stritch the same +without waitin' fur us." + +"More than likely you are right; whenever he thinks it necessary, he +will branch out ahead of the Winnebagos and overhaul us; so even though +we see nothing of him, we ought not to feel much concern." + +"How about the wither, me lad?" + +Fred had noticed since resuming their journey, that the sky, which was +clear and sunshiny in the morning, had become overcast. The sun was no +longer visible, and a chilliness in the air warned them that the fine +weather could not last much longer. They had not only been favored in +this respect, but for several days before leaving home equally charming +skies had spanned them. And so, in accordance with the laws of our +changeable climate, a disagreeable turn was to be expected. + +"I was hopeful that it would keep off until we reached camp," said Fred, +looking up through the tree tops at the darkening sky; "but that is too +much, and we must take it as it comes." + +"Push on as fast as ye choose." + +Taking his friend at his word, Fred broke into a slow, easy trot, not +much more rapid than an ordinary walking gait, but one which they could +keep up a long time, where the ground was not too rough. Terry of course +did the same, and they covered fully two miles in that manner, when they +slackened their pace before an extensive rise of the ground. But for +that, they would have gone much further at the same speed. + +Some fifteen minutes were spent in clambering up the stony incline, when +they descended into a broad valley, the path still rough and difficult +of passage. They recognized a dull but increasing roar as made by a +rapid torrent, and ere long stopped on the edge of a stream fifty feet +wide, which dashed and foamed over the rocks, breaking into eddies, and +agitated pools, falling in foamy cataracts and splashing forward again +with a rollicking freedom that formed one of the prettiest and most +romantic sights on which they had ever looked. + +Directly at their feet was a curious formation. By some means at a +remote day, a number of hard stones had been flung downward and given a +spinning motion, which, acting on the softer sandstone beneath, had +begun hollowing it out, as if by the chisel of an engraver. This +strange operation had gone on for years, until a bowl a dozen feet +across and half as deep had been formed. It was almost mathematically +round, very smooth and with a tapering shape to the bottom that made the +resemblance to an enormous punch bowl strikingly accurate. + +This formation (which in accordance with the taste prevailing in all +parts of our country, should be christened the "Devil's Punch Bowl"), +was full of limpid water, fed by a slight overflow from above and +overrunning and flowing calmly over the lower rim. In the bottom lay +three stones, looking like cannon balls. These were the tools with which +the stream had carved the Devil's Punch Bowl. Having done their work, +they were resting in the bottom, where they had lain for a period that +could not be guessed. + +Out beyond, a thin sheet of the water hung like a transparent curtain +over the edge of the rocks. It was so smooth and unruffled that it +seemed stationary, like a film of glass, but, after striking the stones +below, it broke into foam, whirlpools and eddies, which helped to form +as lovely and picturesque a scene as the most devoted lover of nature +could long to see. + +The picture was so pretty indeed that the boys stood for several minutes +lost in admiration. They had never viewed any thing of the kind, and it +was something that would always be a pleasant memory to them. + +But, great as was their admiration, there was a startling question that +came to them: how was this interesting stream to be crossed? + +In front and up and down the bank, the eyes searched in vain for a ford. +It was idle to think of ferrying themselves over, while the cascades, +pools, eddies and general "upsetting" of a broad deep stream, made its +passage as perilous as that of the rapids nearer home in which the two +had come so near losing their lives. + +"There is no possible way by which we can reach the other side," said +Fred, after they had walked a few rods up and down the stream. + +"I don't obsarve any way mesilf," was the response of Terry. + +"But there _must_ be, for how could father and the rest have crossed?" + +"They may have put up a bridge." + +"But where is the bridge? There are no signs of any thing of the kind," +said the bewildered Fred; "they couldn't have made a bridge without +leaving it behind." + +"The high water has swipt it away." + +Fred stood surveying the stream and the banks, for several minutes, +during which he once more walked back and forth, but he was right when +he said that the place had never been spanned by even the simplest +structure, for it could not have been done without leaving some traces +behind. + +This being the case, the mystery was greater than ever; for it was +certain that at that hour their friends were many miles distant on the +other side. + +"This is a little ahead of any thing I ever heard tell of," remarked +Fred, taking off his cap and scratching his head, after the fashion of +Terry when he was puzzled. + +"It couldn't be," ventured the latter, who also had his cap in his hand +and was stirring up his flaxen locks, "that they carried a bridge along +with 'em." + +"Impossible!" + +"That's what I thought, as me sicond cousin remarked whin they told him +his uncle carried his shillaleh a half mile and passed two persons +without beltin' 'em over the head." + +"There's something about this which I can not understand." + +Terry turned and looked at him in his quizzical way and solemnly +extended his hand. Fred shook it as he wished, though he was far from +feeling in a sportive mood. + +"They _must_ have crossed," he added, replacing his cap with some +violence, compressing his lips and shaking his head in a determined way; +"do you walk up the bank, while I make a search in the other direction; +we _must_ find the explanation." + +The proposition was acted upon, Terry clambering carefully along the +slippery bank and over the rocks, until he was fully a hundred yards +from his friend, who busied himself in doing the same thing in the +opposite direction. + +All at once the Irish lad shouted. Looking up to him, Fred saw that he +was beckoning him to approach. + +"I knew there must be something of the kind," thought Fred, who after +much labor placed himself beside his friend. + +To his disappointment, Terry had paused before the worst part of the +series of cascades. It was at the broadest portion of the stream, where +the falls, whirlpools, eddies and deep water would have turned back the +most skillful swimmer. + +"What do you mean?" asked the astonished Fred. + +"I thought I'd show you the place where they _didn't_ cross," was his +reply, and then he broke into the merriest laughter, as well he might, +for he had solved the mystery. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXII. + +THE TERROR IN THE AIR. + + +"Do obsarve where the trail comes down to that big bowl?" asked Terry, +pointing to the huge, circular cavity below them. + +"Of course." + +"Well, that's a mistake; _that isn't the right trail_." + +Fred turned about, and jumped and ran back to the Devil's Punch Bowl, at +a rate that threatened his neck. Stooping over, he carefully examined +the path. He saw that his companion was right; the trail which they had +followed to the edge of the stream was one that had been worn by animals +in coming to and going from the Punch Bowl. You will admit that no +better punch in the wide world could be furnished the dumb beasts than +that which was thus freely given to them. + +As if to confirm that which did not need confirming, a large buck at +that moment appeared in the path, within a hundred feet of where Fred +had straightened up, after examining the trail. He threw up his head on +catching sight of the young hunter, gave one quick, inquiring stare and +then whirled about and was off like a flash. + +Fred Linden could have brought him down at the moment he wheeled had he +chosen to do so, but he recalled his own proposition to Terry some time +before, about firing such a shot. Indeed, since they had some of the +cooked buffalo steak left, there was no call to use any more ammunition +for game. + +Terry Clark came laughing down the rocks, looking upon the whole +business as one of the funniest of incidents, but to Fred it was any +thing but a laughing matter. Time was becoming of the utmost value, and +this divergence from the trail meant delay--a delay, too, whose length +could not be guessed. If they had turned aside several miles back, it +was more than likely that they would lose all the advantage gained by +the laborious travel of the night before. + +"How could we have made such a blunder?" asked Fred, his eyes wandering +back over the path, as though searching for an explanation of the +mistake; "I suppose at the point where the trails cross the direction +isn't changed much and this is more distinct than the other. Terry, I +can't see any thing about this to laugh at." + +"I don't obsarve much of the same mesilf," said the other, whose face +nevertheless was on abroad grin; "I wasn't laughing at yersilf, or the +mistake we made." + +"What was it then that amused you so much?" + +"I was thinkin' how funny it looked to see the deer and bears and +buffaloes and foxes and panthers all standing round that big bowl and +winkin' at each ither while they drank their health." + +"Terry, there's going to be trouble because of this blunder." + +"What do ye signify be the same?" + +"I believe that all the advantage we gained by traveling so hard last +night is lost. When we follow this trail back until it reaches the main +one, more than likely we shall meet the Winnebagos at that point, if +they will not actually be between us and the camp in the Ozarks." + +"I'm afeard it's not all a falsehood that ye are telling me," said +Terry, with an expression in which there was nothing like a jest. + +"Let's be off then." + +At this juncture the Irish lad made a proposition which his companion +accepted, for he thought it promised them much saving in time and +travel. + +It was quite certain that the false trail followed pretty much the same +direction as the true one: at any rate there could be no doubt that it +crossed the stream which had stopped them, so instead of picking their +way back for several miles, they decided to keep along the edge of the +water itself until they struck the path. + +To make sure of avoiding another blunder, one should have gone up and +the other down stream, for manifestly they could not be certain they +were above or below the true path; but each felt too strong a misgiving +about such a course. Their surroundings required mutual support. + +Beside this, they were convinced that the trail which they wished to +recover lay above instead of below, so that, when making their way they +were not held back by any doubt, though each could not fail to see that +it was only a piece of guess-work. + +Fortunately for their peace of mind, they were right, and the plan saved +them much time and travel. They had not gone very far, when they came +upon the path, marked so distinctly that there could be no possible +mistake. + +The width of the stream was about the same as below. The water was +smooth, deep, clear and sluggish. The bank sloped gently down from each +side and on the other shore were plainly seen the prints of the hoofs +where the animals had left the water. It was so deep that whoever went +over there had done so by floating or swimming. + +The crossing was so far above the point where the cascades began, that +nothing was to be feared from them. The clumsiest raft could be ferried +over by a child before it would drift into danger, while in case of +swimming, the peril was still less. + +"If it wasn't so chilly," said Fred, "I would propose that we swim the +stream." + +Terry shivered and shook his head. + +"We must go over on a raft; it is not only cowld, but is gittin' +cowlder." + +"There's a storm brewing; it looks as black as ink off yonder." + +At this moment the boys made a discovery which both pleased and alarmed +them. Such a float as they needed was at their call. There lay a half +dozen logs and trees fastened together by several withes, and with +enough buoyancy to bear them to the other side. Even the pole to be used +in propulsion lay upon the heavy timbers that were pulled just far +enough against the bank to prevent them floating off with the current. + +While it was pleasant to know that they would not have to go through the +labor of constructing any thing of the kind, yet there was a cause for +fear in the presence of the structure which led them to hesitate several +minutes before using it. + +It proved that some one had crossed from the other side upon it, while +the withes were so white and fresh at the angles, where they were +twisted open, as to show that the raft had been made but a short time. + +The natural question was as to who could have been coming from the other +way. + +"I know," said Terry, compressing his lips and shaking his head. + +"Who?" + +"Winnebagos; they're so plintiful that it couldn't have been any one +ilse, for they wouldn't have had a chance." + +"I suppose you are right," remarked Fred thoughtfully, "for they do seem +to be almost everywhere, though I can't understand why they should be +coming this way." + +"Suppose there was but one of the spalpeens, and he'd been out on a +scout, and was on his way back to the rist of the spalpeens with the +news, would it be onraisonable to think he would take a little pains to +kaap his leggins and moccasins from gittin' damp enough to give him +cowld?" + +"Well, I can think of no better reason than that, and am willing to +believe it is correct, but don't you see, Terry, that all this goes to +prove that we have lost a dangerous amount of time? We ought to have +been many miles further on the road than we are." + +"The buffalo bull had a good deal to do with our impolite tarryin', and +as he is slaapin' with his four mithers, I maan his forefathers, let him +rist in pace." + +The boys did not allow their words to delay their hands. The raft was +shoved clear, and the two took their positions upon it, Fred holding the +pole, while his companion looked after the guns. They were astonished to +find, directly after leaving land, that the pole, which was nearly +twenty feet in length, would not reach bottom. + +This compelled them to use it as a paddle. The progress was slow, but +the distance was so slight that it did not take them long to reach the +other bank, where they set the structure adrift, so that it could not be +used by any one else. + +Looking directly up stream, where the sky was in plain sight, its +blackness startled even the boys, who were used to seeing the most +violent changes of temperature. The hue was not of the dark blue which +often gives warning of the coming tempest, but there was a greenish +tinge to the blackness that would have awed any one. + +While they looked, a zigzag ribbon of flame fluttered across the +darkened portion, accompanied by a crash that seemed to shiver the +earth. Fred Linden, who happened to be staring straight at the fiery +burst, saw the upper part of a large cypress that leaned over the water, +leap from the trunk as though it had been sawn short off and flung into +the water. + +It was all ablaze, and, falling upright into the current, kept its +equilibrium, that is, it did not fall to any side, but swept slowly +downward as upright as when on the tree, and suggested that some giant +as big as the Statue of Liberty was walking beneath, with an enormous +torch held above his head to light his path. + +"Did ye iver see the like?" asked Terry. + +"No; it is wonderful." + +[Illustration: "Did ye iver see the like?" asked Terry.] + +Although it was about mid-day, the heavens were so overcast that the +gloom was like night itself. At the same time the darkness had a ghastly +tinge which made the faces of the boys, when they looked at each other, +livid and unearthly. + +The scene was so impressive that they stood motionless, watching the +flaming tree and the inky heavens beyond. Suddenly in the sky they saw a +figure that resembled a vast balloon slightly inclined to one side, and +spinning on its axis with inconceivable swiftness. + +At the bottom the snout-like appendage wavered off to one side as though +the amazing velocity of the upper part was twisting it loose. A similar +formation appeared a few minutes after a short distance behind. + +And now began the most extraordinary exhibition of all. Imagine two +whirling balloons, a hundred feet in height, and so black that they +stood out from the surrounding gloom, showing like pitch against the +dimly lit sky behind. They began a witches' waltz in the firmament, +sometimes leaning far backward, then dancing forward, as if saluting +each other, then "balancing," then dancing up and down, then so far away +from each other that one would pass out of the field of vision, soon to +reappear, however. At times they seemed as if about to rush into each +other's arms, and then they coquetted away again and resumed the weird +dance in the skies. + +You understand that I am trying to describe one of those terrible +visitations of the west known as a cyclone. Little was heard of them a +century ago, and the balloon to which I have compared the form of the +ghostly dancers, was unknown to the lads, who watched the exhibition +with an interest that was not turned into terror, as it would have been +to-day, by the knowledge of the awful power for death and destruction +that lies within that concentration of electricity in its most fateful +form. + +It seemed a long time that this strange scene lasted, though it could +not have been many seconds. Suddenly, while the balloon-like forms were +saluting each other, they rushed together. There was no shock +perceivable when they met, but there were vivid flashes from within the +murky folds, as the heat lightning sometimes plays among the clouds at +the close of a warm day. + +Having met, the forms engaged in a wrestling bout. Round and round they +spun with the same bewildering swiftness, leaning far to one side, as +though about to fall, and all the time whirling with such speed on the +one spiral leg that it seemed unable to keep pace with the bulkier part +above. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIII. + +FRED LINDEN AWAKENS TO AN ALARMING FACT. + + +The approach of the cyclone was attended by an appalling roar, and a +mass of branches and trees flying through the air, which warned the boys +of their danger. + +"Terry, it won't do to stay here," shouted Fred, casting about for some +place of refuge; "where shall we go?" + +Quite close to the stream which they had just crossed was an enormous +rock. Its irregular surface, a dozen feet in extent each way, must have +reached far down in the ground, so that nothing could have been more +immovable. It was not the refuge that the boys would have taken, had +they been given time to hunt for one, but surely they could not have +found a better. + +A couple of leaps took Terry to the place, and, as he threw himself on +his face, Fred was directly behind him. As they lay, the shelving rock +was less than two feet above their heads. Though they could hear, they +could not see what was coming. They could look to the right and left, +but only for a few seconds in front. + +Using their eyes as best they could, they saw the air filled with +leaves, twigs, branches, huge limbs and trunks, which spun forward and +over and over, like so many feathers in a tornado. + +The first shock that came to the boys crouching behind the rock was a +dead thump near their heads. An uprooted tree had been hurled from some +point above, like an enormous spear, and, striking the rock at a slant, +slid over the rough surface like the finger of a player over the face of +a tambourine and out beyond, hunting for some spot where it could +penetrate. It found it on the ground, but it was instantly wrenched +loose by the resistless power that had first thrown it forward, and went +end over end into the general wreck and ruin beyond. + +The next sight which startled the boys was on their left, directly over +the stream. The air was filled apparently with snow, as if a violent +squall had suddenly sprung up. It was accompanied by a hissing noise, +which mingled with the fearful roar that had not stopped and was like +that of the stormy Atlantic beating upon the rock-bound coast. + +Striking the stream, the cyclone whirled most of the water from its bed, +scattered the mist and foam among the trees, and saturated the boys +where they lay. The huge torch was quenched as suddenly as it was +lighted. + +The most terrifying moment to Fred and Terry was when they felt the rock +in front of them move. It was turned several inches to one side, and for +one frightful moment, they believed that that too would be sent skimming +through the air, or whirled over upon them. But there was no other +refuge to which they could fly; had they attempted to rise to their +feet, they would have been snatched up and dashed to death. So they +flattened themselves as much as they could on their faces, and the +terrific outburst could not reach them. + +Such an elemental fury can not last long. Having torn up the ponderous +trees, overturned rocks, and cleaned out the stream, the cyclone seemed +to mount upward and leave the earth entirely, probably to descend some +miles away and continue its work of destruction. + +Fred lay still several minutes after it had passed, and then turned to +look at his companion. He had unrolled the package and taken therefrom +the cooked buffalo steak, which had been so roughly handled during his +ride on the bull. + +"Well, well," said the astonished Fred, "I believe you are the only +person in the world who could eat his dinner in the middle of such a +storm as this." + +"I was thinkin', bein' as we are in so much of a hurry, that I would +save some toime by dinin' without delay, though ye do me an injoostice +by sayin' I'm through the same; I'm jist about to begin and I'll be +plaised to have yer company." + +Terry may not have had much sentiment, but he was sensible. Fred sat up, +his head just rising above the rock, and, for a few minutes, they gave +their attention to their meal. There was enough for a fair lunch, but no +more. A gentle wind blew against them, being the remnant left by the +cyclone, and while they ate, you need not be told they used their eyes. + +The sight was a striking one: the trees lay across each other, many with +their prong-like roots pointing toward the sky, limbs and trunks having +been tossed about in the most bewildering confusion. The water that had +been lifted from the creek rendered not only their clothing wet, but +every thing around them was saturated. Walking to the side of the +stream, they looked down at the sloping banks, wet and muddy, but with +little water except in the bottom. The current, however, was pouring so +swiftly from above that this was rapidly filling up, and before long +would reach its former level. + +Now that the cyclone had passed, the sky rapidly cleared. There was a +chilliness in the air, and the sun did not show itself. + +The boys took but a short time to view the destruction, great as it was, +when they faced about in the direction of the camp which was their +destination from the first. It looked as though they were finally +separated from the trail, for since it was so covered by fallen trees +and limbs, not the slightest trace of it was seen. They were filled with +dismay, and indeed would have been at their wits' end had not the +cyclone confined its fury to exceedingly narrow limits. All its +prodigious force was spent in and directly along the stream. Twenty +yards away, the forest was undisturbed, so that the elemental scythe had +made a clean swath as it sped along. + +"Hurrah!" called out Terry, "here's the path; I follyed a straight line +as I could from the water here, so I'm sure I couldn't coom out very far +from the right place." + +Fred hurried over the ruins to his side, and a glance at the ground +showed that his friend was right: there was the trail at their feet. + +"Now," said Terry, recovering his spirits, "if we had only knowed that +that storm was coomin', we could have fastened our guns to our backs and +swum across, without waitin' to build the raft, and saved all the time +that we lost." + +"But we would have been wetted all the same, had we done so." + +"And gained that much time; do ye know," added Terry, in a half +frightened voice, "what I obsarved?" + +"I suppose you saw what I did,--the air full of water, trees, limbs, +stones and lightning." + +"While we were peepin' over the edge of the rock, ye moind that the wind +cut our faces so we had to lower 'em to keep our heads flyin' off where +we couldn't find 'em agin. It was yersilf that stuck yer nose in the +ground, but I took a paap off beyanst the creek and I saan one of the +Winnebagos." + +"Can it be possible! what was he doin'?" + +"Turnin' summersets at the rate of twinty to the second and about a +dozen faat above the ground; I had only the one glimpse of him, but whin +I obsarved him it looked to me as if his head and one leg wint off in +different directions; I s'pose he's lookin' for the same." + +Fred Linden could hardly believe that Terry had seen one of their +enemies, though, as you can well understand, from what cyclones have +done in recent years, it was not at all impossible. The youth insisted +so strongly on the first part of his statement, that Fred decided that +at the time the storm burst, one at least of their foes was on the bank +behind them. + +All this confirmed the belief he had expressed that they had lost +invaluable time by wandering from the trail, and that they would have +hard work to keep far enough in advance to reach the camp before the +Winnebagos. The proof that they had received too of some of the +Winnebagos being in front complicated the situation and added to the +mental discomfort of both. + +The sky which, as you will remember, had become overcast sometime before +the bursting of the cyclone, continued to clear, and to the surprise of +the young hunters, about the middle of the afternoon the sun showed +itself. The chilliness, however, remained, though the two walked so +briskly that they could have well stood a still lower temperature. + +Fortunately for them (though it also operated in favor of their enemies) +the trail was traveled without difficulty. The ground was uneven, +sometimes up and sometimes down, but it was not hard for the feet and +they made good progress. The distance they had to go was too great for +them to hope to reach the end of the journey before the morrow, even if +they traveled most of the night. They had already proven their pluck and +resolution, and you may be sure, now that they were on the right path, +that they did not throw away any minutes. + +They had eaten the extra buffalo steak sooner than was intended, but +they could afford to wait until the morrow before partaking of any more +food. + +The afternoon was far along and they were pushing forward in their usual +vigor, talking in a hopeful strain now and then, when both were startled +by the report of a rifle. It did not sound in front nor to the rear, but +only a moderate distance to the left. The boys stopped and looked in +each other's face. + +"Anither of the spalpeens," whispered Terry; "now there ought to be a +gun fired on tother side of us and one in front and one behind us." + +"They may be there, all the same," replied Fred, staring in the +direction whence came the report, as though he expected the appearance +of the one who had caused it. They looked and listened for several +minutes, but saw and heard nothing more, and resumed their hurried pace, +frequently glancing behind, for they were in that distrustful state of +mind which comes to one who has a strong suspicion that an enemy is +trying to steal behind him unawares. The actual presence of such an +enemy is no more trying than the suspense itself. + +The shot might have been innocent--that is, fired by some wandering +white man or Indian who had not the remotest thought that any other +person was within hearing. Probably such was the fact, though there was +enough uncertainty about it to prevent the theory affording the youth +the comfort it otherwise would have done. + +The lads, as you may well believe, did not stop to look into the matter, +but pressed on at a gait which they were confident would prevent any of +their enemies overtaking them, unless they broke into their loping trot, +which was hardly likely. + +Somehow or other, Terry seemed to be thinking more about the three +Winnebago horsemen with whom Fred Linden had had his encounter than he +did about his own experience. + +"How thim spalpeens could be ridin', whin all the rist are afoot, is +somethin' that puzzles me," said he, after they had walked some distance +further; "can't ye give some explanation that will relaave me mind, +Fred?" + +"I can certainly know no more about it than you do." + +"Didn't ye obsarve them with particularity?" + +"I can't say that I did; they were rather small, tough-looking; two were +bay in color, while one was black: I noticed the black one more than the +others, because the Indian that I hit was riding on him; I remember that +he had a star in his forehead." + +"Who? The Winnebago?" + +"You know well enough that I meant the horse----" + +Fred Linden stopped short, and turned his white, scared face upon his +friend. He had just awakened to an astounding fact. + +"What's the matter, Fred? Are ye ill?" + +"My gracious! why didn't I think of that before? Those three horses +belong to father, Mr. Hardin and Mr. Bowlby." + +"Are ye sure of the same?" + +"Why, of course; I can't understand why I did not notice it the moment I +saw them!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIV. + +THE CANOE. + + +It certainly was remarkable that when Fred Linden was watching the three +Winnebagos so closely, and when, as I have said, he noticed more than +one trifling matter, that he failed to recognize the animals they were +riding. All three were familiar to him, and the one he had spoken of as +being darker in color than the others, and as having a star in his +forehead, was the identical animal owned by his father. Fred, himself, +had ridden him more than once. + +It should be said, however, that they were the pack-horses, which even +when put to their best paces, could not make good speed. Nevertheless, +they were of great value to the hunters. + +The first conviction of the lad on awaking to the alarming fact, was +that his father and the other two men had been killed by the +Winnebagos. The thought overcame him so that he leaned against the +nearest tree and was on the point of fainting. + +"They are all dead, Terry--I know it--we may as well give up, and try to +reach home." + +Terry was agitated, but not so much so as his friend. + +"Why, my dear boy, it's not so bad as _that_," he said feelingly; "do ye +not moind that whin the gintlemen go to trappin' and huntin' they turn +the horses loose to graze? The spalpeens have coom along and run off +with the same." + +"Do you think so?" asked Fred, looking up yearningly for the grain of +comfort that his companion was able to give. + +"I don't _think_ so; I know so; if the gintlemen took the bastes into +the cabin and slipt with the same ivery night, as me rilatives do with +their pigs in Ireland, why ye might think that they had suffered before +the Winnebagos tuk thim away; but they have snaaked up where the animals +was grazin', jumped onto their backs and rid off." + +This view of the case was so reasonable, that Fred rallied and half +smiled at his own faintheartedness. He stood erect and drew a deep +breath of satisfaction. + +"I believe you are right, but it strikes me that such thieves would have +stolen all instead of half the horses." + +"They've lift the ither three for their frinds that I make no doubt will +be along to take thim, if they haven't done so now." + +"You know that the loss of a horse is considered almost as bad as the +loss of a man in this part of the world." + +"Sometimes he amounts to a good deal more, as me mither--" + +Terry paused in his remarks, for just then Fred uttered a +warning--"_Sh!_" to signify that something was in the path in front. The +next moment, he ran several paces to the right and sheltered himself +behind a tree, Terry being only a few seconds behind him. + +Both had discovered what it was. A brown bear of moderate size was +waddling along toward them. He had probably struck the trail, and +finding it easier walking than among the trees and undergrowth, was +swinging forward in the direction of the stream that had received such a +visit from the cyclone. + +The boys could not know for a minute or two whether the beast had seen +them, but they felt no alarm. As I have said, he was not very large nor +formidable looking, and, if he chose to turn aside to attack them, they +were more than his equal. As it was, their own eagerness to get forward +was all that prevented them from shooting him. + +Bruin lumbered ahead in his awkward way, and, as the boys peeped forth, +they fancied that his big brown eyes glanced mischievously at them; but +they were mistaken. He did not see nor scent them, but went by, and, in +a few minutes, disappeared from sight among the trees. + +Hardly waiting till he had vanished, the youths stepped back into the +path and resumed the rapid pace at which they had been traveling. The +sun, that had been partly shining from behind the clouds, was low in the +sky, and it was not long before they were journeying in the twilight. +The moon rose early, but its light was so much obscured by the mists +that it gave little if any help, and the friends were disappointed to +find it difficult to make any progress at all. + +At this trying juncture, they found themselves once more on the bank of +a stream that had to be crossed before they could go any further. It was +fully double the width of the one last passed, but did not look as if it +was deep. + +"My clothes ain't all dry yit," said Terry, "and I'm in favor of wadin' +if we can." + +"I am afraid it is too deep for that, and with our guns and bundles and +thick clothes it isn't an easy thing to swim. Besides it's colder than +it was last night and it won't be pleasant to spend a few more hours in +wet clothing: mine is about dry." + +Fred added that if they should decide to push on, the only way of doing +so was by the usual means of a raft. It would take considerable time to +build one, and probably still longer to work their way to the other +side. + +"No use of waitin'," said Terry; "let's take hold; I've an idaa that we +ain't far from the cabin and ivery mile that we can make now counts." + +Fred started to give his help, when to his unbounded amazement, he +narrowly missed going headlong over a small Indian canoe that lay at +their feet. They would not have been more surprised had they come upon +Deerfoot himself in a sound slumber, and not until they had stooped down +and examined it closely were they certain that it was not some log +fantastically shaped by nature that had floated thither. + +But an Indian canoe it was beyond all mistake, though after searching +all around it, they failed to find the paddle so necessary for its +propulsion. The boat had been drawn up the bank, underneath some bushes +and undergrowth, where it would not have been seen by any one further +off than six feet. It was so far back too from the stream that it would +require an unusual overflow to carry it away. + +It was not so dark that the lads could not see that it was of beautiful +pattern and fine make--one of those delicate vessels which under the +skillful guidance of its owner skim like a swallow over the water. It +was a prize indeed. + +Now, as you very well know, there is nothing wonderful about an Indian +canoe, but the astonishment of the boys came from the fact that they +found it in this place. Fred Linden, in listening to the accounts given +by his father on his return in the spring from his trapping expeditions, +had heard him say more than once that there was no Indian village +between Greville and the camp at the foot of the Ozarks, and that, +according to the friendly red men who occasionally visited them, he +believed that the nearest lodge lay nearly two hundred miles to the +north-west of Greville. It was this fact that gave the Hunters of the +Ozark so much confidence in themselves when they went on their long +hunts, though, as you have learned, danger did sometimes come from the +wandering Indians, the father of Terry Clark having lost his life at +their hands. + +All this being known to the boys, they had cause to wonder how it was +that an Indian canoe lay hidden under the bushes on the shore. None of +those people would go to the trouble of making such a boat, unless he +expected to use it many times. It would be the same as if you had a +costly rowboat constructed with which to cross only once a canal or +small stream of water. + +But, as in many other cases, it was idle to speculate, and the boys did +not allow any feeling of surprise to rob them of the valuable minutes. +Finding no paddle with which to manage the boat, Fred cut a small +sapling and trimmed it so that he had a pole fully twenty feet long. +Then the guns were laid in the bottom, Terry took his seat, and they +carefully pushed from shore, Fred managing the pole. + +As they suspected, the water was quite shallow, the depth nowhere being +more than three or four feet; but the current was rapid, and in some +places the bottom of the canoe grated over the gravel. Both had to move +well to the stern to raise the bow, so as to allow them to reach land +with dry feet. + +"It's a pity to allow this to float off and be lost," said Fred; "let's +draw it up the bank where the owner won't have any trouble in finding +it." + +"I would give a good deal if I could be introduced to that same +gintleman," remarked Terry, who took off his cap and scratched his head +as he added: + +"I wonder whither that is one of the canoes from near home?" + +"What are you talking about? How could it get _here_?" + +"By some subterranean communication, the same as we boys used to sind +notes to the gurls whin I was laarnin' the higher mathematics in +college." + +Fred made no comment upon the remark of his friend. The canoe, when +relieved of their weight, was so light that the bow was pulled to the +shore by means of the pole. Then Fred alone drew it up beyond the reach +of the water, and it was left until the owner should come forward to +claim it. + +The two now set out to hunt for the trail, with a view of making eight +or ten miles more before they stopped to rest; but the result was +discouraging. It took more than a half hour to make sure they had found +it, and then they had not gone twenty yards, when Fred said he could +not tell whether he was in the path or not. + +"It's no use," he added; "we may as well stop, for we are sure to repeat +the mistake of to-day: we'll get so far wrong that it'll take many hours +to find our way back again, and we shall lose far more than we gain." + +"That bein' the same--and I'm willin' to agraa that ye are now strivin' +to till the truth--let's turn off from the trail, go back so far that +there isn't any chance for any one to saa us and slaap till mornin'." + +Since there was nothing else to do, the boys did as Terry proposed. They +were not so tired as they were the night before, and they did not dare +to lie down on the leaves and sleep as they did then. There were wild +animals prowling through the woods, and the fact that the lads escaped +once could be no guaranty that they would have equally good fortune a +second time. + +Terry proposed that they should climb a tree and make a bed among the +branches; but that was hardly feasible. It is not often that the limbs +of a tree are accommodating enough to allow any one to rest with +comfort. The branches may be pleasant for a time, but the limbs soon +become like iron rods and the position so cramped as to drive away all +comfort. In addition, there was the danger of a fatal fall during sleep. + +So it was decided to hunt out the most secluded place possible and start +a fire. That would keep off the wild animals, and the boys were not in +such need of sleep that they could not afford to take turns with each +other in watching through the night. + +While hunting a suitable spot, they moved down the river bank for fully +a hundred yards, and then entered some dense undergrowth which they +penetrated until they were sure that no safer place could be found. So +they began gathering twigs, leaves and branches, and piling them against +the shaggy bark of a tree, and soon had all they wanted. This was fired +by means of the flint and steel, and a roaring, crackling blaze made +every thing look cheerful. + +"Let's walk off a little ways," said Fred, "and see whether the light +can be noticed very far; you know that we can not be too careful." + +Terry liked the proposal, and rose to act upon it. They moved in +opposite directions, walking several rods, and then carefully passing +entirely around the camp-fire. The result was satisfactory, for the +undergrowth in all directions was so thick that they felt as secure from +discovery as if the fire had been kindled within an impenetrable cave. + +And yet they were woefully mistaken, as they were destined to learn in a +brief while. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXV. + +AMERICA VERSUS IRELAND. + + +Having satisfied themselves that they could not have fallen upon a safer +place, the boys came back to their camp, as it may be called, and sat +down in front of the blaze. Their knapsacks were unstrapped from their +backs and the blankets spread upon the leaves. There was some moisture +in the thick cloth, but not enough to deter them from using them as +couches. Their own clothing had become dry, and, under the warm glow of +the fire, the blankets would soon be the same. + +In spite of the reconnoissance just made, both felt some uneasiness over +their own situation. They were confident that no one further away than +two or three rods would observe the fire, but the possibility remained +that some enemy might pass within that space, brief as it was. Their +experience since leaving Greville taught them that a large number of +Winnebagos were in the wilderness, and, as Terry remarked, the nearer +they approached camp, the more plentiful did they seem to become. + +It was this feeling which caused them to let the fire sink to half its +first size and led them to keep far back within the circle of light +thrown into the surrounding gloom. They talked in low voices, often +listening and looking around, and were in any thing but a comfortable +frame of mind. The feeling with them was that if any enemy should happen +to be lurking in the vicinity, every possible advantage would be on his +side. + +"I feel, Terry, as though all this is wasted time. I know it is more +than likely that the Winnebagos are doing the same as we, that is, +nothing at all; but that makes me more anxious to push on." + +"I've an idaa," remarked the Irish lad, who was stretched out in a lazy +posture, with his cap in hand, while, as was his custom, he scratched +his pate with the other; "I'm thinkin' why couldn't we aich take a torch +in hand and walk along over the path with the same?" + +Fred was half inclined to try the experiment, but fear prevented. They +had learned that the Winnebagos were not only in the rear but in front. +No more conspicuous target can be given than that of a person carrying a +lighted torch: it was the same as when a man with a candle in his hand +starts out to explore his house for burglars. So that plan was not +adopted. + +Terry was about to speak to his companion, when the latter saw him +start, and, rising quickly to the sitting position, stare at a point +beyond Fred. He had seen something that terrified him. + +With his big round eyes still fixed on the gloom behind young Linden, +Terry stealthily reached for his gun, which lay on the leaves close by, +and softly drew back the flint. Fred, as may be supposed, was alarmed, +and starting half to his feet, glanced nervously around. + +He saw nothing. + +"What's the matter?" he asked in an undertone, as he also laid his hand +upon his weapon. + +"Whin I was lookin' at ye," said Terry in a husky whisper, "I obsarved +one of the spalpeens standin' right behind ye and close enough to touch +ye with his hand. Before I could spake, he slipped out of sight like a +shadder." + +Fred did not ask his companion whether he was sure of what he said, for +he knew he was not mistaken. + +"That shows we shouldn't have started the fire; it has caught the eye of +some of the Indians, who will be here in a few minutes; let's slip back +in the darkness and get as far off as we can; it don't make much +difference what course we take, but it will never do to stay here." + +Fred Linden had no more than completed his guarded remark, when he too +caught sight of a warrior standing on the very edge of the circle of +light and looking straight at him. The view of the dusky intruder was +faint but unmistakable. + +The outlines and figure received enough of the firelight to cause him to +look like a dim painting against a dark background. He was holding a +rifle in one hand and appeared to be contemplating the lads, as if +seeking to learn their identity before he advanced or performed some +action. + +"_Sh!_ don't stir," whispered Fred, softly raising the hammer of his +gun, "I see him,--I'll drop him!" + +With the utmost caution he brought the gun around in front until it was +almost to his breast. Then as quickly as he could he raised it to his +shoulder and aimed at the daring redskin. + +But the latter was invisible, he had vanished like the picture on the +slide of a magic lantern. + +As you may suppose, the boys began to feel queer. There was something so +peculiar about this business that, as Terry expressed it, he was "crawly +all over." What they might have done can only be guessed, for before +they could move away from the fire, Deerfoot the Shawanoe, who had been +having a little amusement at their expense, advanced from the gloom and +addressed them. + +"The heart of Deerfoot is glad when he sees his brothers do not sleep; +he has watched them, but their eyes are open." + +"Wal, be the powers!" muttered Terry Clark, hastily rising to his feet, +as did Fred; "the spalpeen that plays that trick on me has got to fight +it out." + +And he began taking off his coat and spitting on his hands, to show that +the matter could only be settled by a bout at fisticuffs. Deerfoot had +extended his hand to Fred and he smiled at the combative Irish lad, who +put up his fists and began dancing about him in the most belligerent +fashion. + +"Give him a trial," whispered Fred, with a laugh. + +"Deerfoot loves his brothers; he can not hurt them." + +"If ye can git the bist of mesilf," said Terry, who was still sawing the +air and hopping about as though the ground had become hot; "I'll think +more of ye than iver before, bein' that I think more of ye now than I +ever can, and I defy ye to sit your gun aside and git the bist of me in +any way." + +"Go for him," urged Fred, knowing that the Irish boy, strong and active +as he was, had no chance with the Shawanoe; "he thinks he is your +master when you don't use your weapons. If you will give him a lesson, +it will do him good." + +"Deerfoot will try to be a teacher to my brother," said the Shawanoe +gravely, handing his gun to Fred, and following with his knife and +tomahawk, that he might have no weapons except such as nature gave him. +Then he threw some wood on the fire, so that the space immediately +surrounding them was as light as noonday. Finally, every thing being +ready, he proceeded to "go for" Mr. Terence Clark in a truly aboriginal +fashion. + +Now, it must be borne in mind that, though there was and could not be +the least ill feeling between the youths, yet each was resolutely +resolved to overcome the other in the most emphatic manner at his +command. Terry did not mean to batter the handsome face of his dusky +friend, but to tap it so smartly that he would feel it. The naturally +combative lad was an adept with his fists, and he meant to strike +Deerfoot often enough to convince him of his inferiority. Then he would +rush in, seize the young warrior and throw him to the ground, repeating +it several times, until his antagonist cried, "Hold! Enough!" Fred +Linden was to play the part of referee, and decide which was the better +man. Thus you see the match bore some similarity to those of the present +day, in which the victor is declared to be the one who in a certain +number of rounds gains the advantage of the other. + +"As I am to be the boss of this business," sald Fred, with the keenest +zest, "let me explain the terms: Each one is to strike the other as +often as he can, the blows to be sharp enough to be felt pretty plainly, +but not enough to cause any injury. I will let this go on until one of +you has enough, or until I am satisfied of the superiority of one over +the other. After that you are to have a wrestling match. When I call for +you to stop, you must do so, no matter how anxious you may be to go on. +Is that understood?" + +"The terms are agraaable to mesilf," said Terry; "it is sittled that +there's to be no bettin' on the match." + +"I have no objection to your betting if you wish, but inasmuch as you +haven't a cent and Deerfoot never did such a thing as bet in all his +life, I don't think there will be any trouble about holding the stakes." + +"There ain't to be any foul blows in this," added Terry, who showed that +he knew more than most of his friends about the "Irish champions" and +the cause that made them champions of England and Ireland. + +"What do you mean by foul blows?" asked the puzzled Fred. + +"Hits below the belt. What I wished to observe, howiver, is that we +ain't to recognize such things as foul blows in this fight for the +championship of Louisiana. Aich one is to git the bist of the ither in +the bist way he can. The rule, Deerfut, is for such pugilists to shake +hands before beginnin' to try to knock aich ither out." + +And Terry extended his hand, which the young warrior gravely shook, for, +as you can well understand, this was something to which he was +altogether unaccustomed. He knew, however, the nature of the contest +between himself and his doughty Irish friend, and he entered into it +with the calm confidence with which he would have engaged Tecumseh +himself in a fight to the death with knives. + +Deerfoot did not put up his hands after the manner of a pugilist, nor +did he even close them, but fixing his eyes on those of Terry (just as +he always did in his deadly fights with his antagonists), he began +softly circling about him, like a cat searching for a chance to leap +upon his prey. + +This did not disconcert Terry, whose pose would have been pronounced +excellent by any one competent to judge. The left arm and foot were +advanced, the right fist being held across and just in front of the +breast, ready to take advantage of the first opening that presented +itself. + +As Deerfoot circled around Terry, the latter moved around him, each on +the alert for a chance. + +"Moind yer eye," Terry was kind enough to say; "it's a pity to sp'il +such a handsome face, but a sinse of dooty will not allow me to thrifle, +and so here goes!" + +With that he made a creditable lunge with his left, instantly following +it with his right hand, and leaping back to avoid a counter. He did not +strike Deerfoot nor did he receive a blow in return. + +"Ye are quick on yer faat and very good at dodgin', but it is an +obligation ye owe to yersilf and to America to show whither thim foin +purty hands can hit----" + +_Rap, whack, spat!_ The Shawanoe smote one cheek of Terry, then the +other, and then his mouth, the blows being so quick that they seemed to +be simultaneous. At the moment they were delivered, the Irish lad could +not see that the young warrior had stirred. He appeared to be moving in +his cat-like way around him, but beyond reach of Terry's own tough +fists. Seeing that he must force matters, he made a furious rush for his +antagonist. + +You must not set down Terry Clark as an awkward fellow who went into the +contest without any skill. His father in his younger days was one of the +best fighters in the north of Ireland, and he had taught considerable of +his science to his only son, who gave an exhibition of what he could do +when he smote the Winnebago that was swinging the cow-bell. There was +not a lad anywhere near his years in Greville whom he could not master. + +Deerfoot knew nothing of the modern rules of self-defense. His +superiority lay in his unequaled dexterity and quickness. It was that, +as you will recall, which enabled him to win so many victories over foes +who were his superior in every other respect. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVI. + +AMERICA VERSUS AMERICA. + + +Terence Clark gathered himself for another rush and blow at the +Shawanoe, when the latter with a quickness which the eye of Fred Linden +could hardly follow, ducked under the arm of the Irish lad and again +struck him a resounding blow with the flat of the hand, first on one +side of the face and then on the other. Terry wheeled and returned the +blows with skill. Once his hand grazed the black hair that was dangling +about Deerfoot's head, and several times he touched the nodding +feathers, but strive as much as he might, he could not reach the fellow +himself. + +Now that the combat may be said to have opened, it went through to the +end without halt or break. Here, there, everywhere dodged and struck the +Shawanoe, while Terry was always just too late to catch him. Deerfoot +might have inflicted considerable injury upon his plucky antagonist, had +he struck him with his closed hand, but he always used his open palm. +Some of the blows resounded like pistol shots. Having delivered all that +he wished, Deerfoot doubled up his left hand so that only the index +finger was extended. With this he punched the right and left ribs of +Terry, then his chest, and then actually flipped each side of his nose, +easily dodging the blows which the half angered Irish lad aimed at him +in return. + +Suddenly Terry turned his back on his foe and deliberately struck +several times at vacancy. Then he dropped his hands and walked back by +the fire, saying, with a shake of his head: + +"I've enough! ye could bate the divil and his uncle." + +Fred Linden was sitting on the ground shaking with laughter. He had not +seen any thing for a long time that pleased him so much. He had observed +Terry in more than one fight with the boys at home and he knew he was an +ugly customer, as full of grit as a bull dog, but the Shawanoe struck +him fully a dozen times, while the Irish lad with all his skill +desperately put forth never once touched him. The discomfiture of the +brave Irish lad was complete. + +No witness of the bout, however, could have failed to admire the skill +and pluck of Terry. He acquitted himself well and kept up the struggle, +even after he was convinced that he could do nothing with his alert +antagonist. Then, when Deerfoot began to trifle with him, he turned +around as I have shown and struck the empty air. + +"Why did you do that?" asked Fred, as the three stood by the fire +discussing the incident. + +Terry passed his open hand over his cheeks, which were red and smarting +from the sharp taps of Deerfoot, and closing one eye and scratching his +head, made answer: + +"I had been sthrikin' at Deerfut until I obsarved that ivery time I +sthruck _at_ him I didn't hit him; so thinks I to mesilf, I will see +whither I can hit him by tryin' not to hit him; so I sthruck where I +knowed he wasn't, thinkin' he was there." + +"Well, I must declare Deerfoot the winner." + +"I can't deny that he is; I throw up the sponge and extind to him the +best wishes for himself and family." + +Smiling in a way that left no doubt of his relish of the incident, +Deerfoot warmly shook the hand of his friend, whose brave fight had +increased his admiration of him. + +"My brother is brave," said he admiringly; "perhaps he can lay Deerfoot +on his back; Deerfoot will rejoice if he can do so." + +"Be the powers! but that suits me," exclaimed the delighted Terry; "I +forgot we were to have a wrestling match; Fred, ye will be koind enough +to sarve as riferee again; we'll take side holts and it'll be the bist +two out of thraa." + +Terry was warranted in feeling more confidence in this test of skill. He +had failed--as he knew he would always fail--in a sparring contest, for +the reason that Deerfoot was so quick that he could not touch him; but +one of the necessities of a wrestling match is that the contestants +shall first seize each other. Terry believed that he had as much +physical strength as Deerfoot, and if he once got a fair hold, he would +not let go until he downed him. + +Terry being right and Deerfoot left handed, each was able to secure his +most effective grip. So, standing side by side, in the old fashioned +style, with a dusky left arm around the white neck and a white arm +around the dusky neck, they began the struggle. + +In this match, as before, Deerfoot allowed his antagonist to dally with +him awhile before he took the aggressive. Passing him over his hip Terry +gave Deerfoot such a violent fling that a pang of fear shot through him, +lest he had broken the Shawanoe's neck; but though he shot headlong out +of the grasp of the Irish lad, the Shawanoe landed lightly on his feet +and instantly leaped back and closed with Terry again. + +"I'll fetch ye this time," he muttered between his compressed lips; "ye +shan't git out of me hands till ye's down flat on yer back and mesilf +layin' a-straddle of ye. There's a difference between boxin' and +sparrin' and I shall taich ye the same, as me grandmither--" + +Both went down that instant, but the Shawanoe was on top. His +antagonist could not have fallen flatter had he been dropped from the +roof of a house. + +"Mark the first fall for Deerfut," called out Terry, hastily clambering +to his feet, the Shawanoe extending his hand to help. + +This result weakened the confidence of the Irish lad in himself, that +is, so far as concerned his opponent. He reflected that many of the +Indians are skillful wrestlers, and while Deerfoot had had no training +in boxing, he had in the other art. Such a cool headed athlete would be +sure to learn fast. Terry recognized the peculiar flirt by which he had +been turned off his feet as the very trick he had played successfully on +his playmates at home, but which he never dreamed was known to Deerfoot. + +The Irish lad tried every possible lock, twist and turn upon his rival, +but he could not get him off his feet. It seemed to Terry that he +whirled in the air when almost on the ground, and that if he had been +dropped head downwards from the height of a rod, he would alight on his +feet. + +Fred saw Deerfoot, who was carefully watching his antagonist, smile, +and he knew what was coming. So deftly that, for the life of him, the +spectator could not see how it was done, Terry went over again as "flat +as a flounder." Not only that, but to the astonishment of the victim as +well as of the witness, the Shawanoe remained erect, so that he +literally flung his antagonist to the ground and looked smilingly down +upon him. + +"Ye can baat the baaters," exclaimed Terry, rising to his feet, and +shaking hands with his victor. "I niver met any one who could down me in +that sthyle. I don't know how ye did the same, but I haven't any doubts +that ye done it, as me great uncle remarked whin the cannon ball took +off his head." + +With the same shadowy smile Deerfoot looked inquiringly at Fred Linden. + +"Deerfoot thinks maybe his brother would be glad to lay him on the +ground?" + +"I'll be hanged if I don't try it," laughed Fred, springing to his feet, +and instantly but cautiously closing arms with the graceful warrior. + +"My brother can not throw Deerfoot," said the latter; "but the heart of +Deerfoot would be glad if he would tell him how he would like to +fall--on his shoulders, or side, or back." + +"I wouldn't like to fall at all; but if you think you can get me on my +shoulders, just try it; that's all." + +"It shall be as my brother wishes." + +The words seemed yet in the mouth of Deerfoot when Fred felt himself +sailing through space, and the next instant he landed on his shoulders +with a shock that Terry declared made the ground shake. + +As before, Deerfoot himself did not fall, but looked smilingly down on +his prostrate friend as he began climbing to his feet again. + +"Now, if my brother wishes to fall on his back, it shall be so." + +"I've little doubt that you will not do just as you say you will; I only +ask that you wait till I say I am ready; you did the last before I had +time to prepare." + +"Ye bitter not ax him to wait," said Terry, who rolled over on the +ground in the exuberance of his mirth, at the sight of his big friend +going down before the lithe, willowy Shawanoe; "for since he's bound to +do what he says, the sooner ye are out of yer suspinse, the sooner ye'll +be out of it." + +"Be kind enough to attend to your own affairs," said Fred stiffly; +"Deerfoot and I are running this show." + +"It looks as if Deerfut had charge of the whole of it," was the comment +of Terry, who broke into laughter again; "and whin he is done ye'll +agraa with me." + +Once more the arms passed over each other's neck. Fred resolved that +whatever came, he would not be taken by surprise this time. He was +stronger than Terry and he had thrown him more than once. He could not +understand, therefore, why he should not at least give the Shawanoe a +struggle. He braced his feet, with every muscle strained, and every +faculty on the alert. + +"I am ready," said he; "do your best." + +"On which side shall Deerfoot throw his brother?" + +"On my right side, and as hard as you can." + +Now, you will see the difficulty of the task, for Fred had his right arm +tightly locked over the neck of Deerfoot, so that that side was guarded +by the body of the warrior himself. It would seem, that if Fred should +fall on either side it could only be on the left. Manifestly if it +should be the right, the Shawanoe could not go down with him. He must +bring him to the ground and escape from beneath him before he fell. + +He did it. For a second or two the contestants stood motionless. Then, +like a flash, Deerfoot slipped from the grasp of his friend, dropped +down in a stooping posture almost to the earth, holding the right hand +of Fred firmly with his left (this was to prevent him using that hand to +save himself), and then by a quick dart to the left, he carried both +feet of his opponent off the ground, and Fred fell squarely on his right +side, his conqueror straightening up as he went down. + +"I would be obleeged," said Terry, throwing back his head with laughter, +"if yees will be koind enough to till me who is runnin' the show about +this time." + +Fred was chagrined at the ease with which Deerfoot had overthrown him, +and it was not lessened by the honest compliment which the young warrior +gave to his skill. Both Fred and Terry had been pretty well jarred, for +they were downed with such amazing suddenness that it could not be +otherwise; but neither referred to it and they could only praise the +wonderful ability of their friend. + +"I tell you," said Fred, seating himself on the ground beside the other +two, after the flurry was over, "all this proves that skill is worth +more than strength. I am quite sure that I am as strong as you, +Deerfoot, but I don't believe that Terry and I together could lay you on +your back. When I had my arm around your neck, I suspected you would try +to slip out, and I squeezed you pretty hard. You slid out so quickly +that at the moment you were down at my heels, I thought I had you fast." + +"I'm thinkin' that the nixt thing we should try is a race; Fred can +outrun me and I'll agraa that he will outrun Deerfut, that is, if ye'll +allow me to make the conditions." + +"What would they be?" asked Deerfoot, Looking gravely down upon his +friends. + +"The race should be for a hundred yards, and Deerfut must give Fred +ninety-five yards start, though to make it sure enough, maybe it ought +to be ninety-six or siven." + +"Then you would require about ninety-nine, according to the same +calculation," said Fred. + +"Ye's are right," replied Terry, to whom it seemed that no athletic feat +was impossible for the Shawanoe; "nayther yersilf nor mesilf have a +right to be mintioned in the same day with him." + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVII. + +THE LAST CAMP-FIRE. + + +It seemed to strike all three of the friends at the same moment that +they had shown a strange forgetfulness of the occasion. A sudden impulse +had led them into a test of skill, that had continued fully a quarter of +an hour, during which there was no thought on the part of any one of the +gravity of their situation. + +But a little while before, both Fred Linden and Terry Clark were in +distress on account of their friends, while their own position +(believing as they did that there were Winnebagos in front as well as in +the rear), ought to have driven away all inclination for sport or +amusement. One of their strongest desires was the presence of Deerfoot, +that they might have his counsel and help. Here he was, and no reference +had been made to the subjects uppermost in their minds. Now that he took +his seat near them by the camp-fire, as if to invite their confidence, +they quickly returned to the all important business. + +First of all, they asked for his experience since their separation the +night before. He gave only a part of it. He told nothing about his +conflict with the Wolf and his companion, which resulted in the death of +both, but said that he had kept watch of the Winnebagos until morning, +when he saw them start for the camp in the mountains. He learned from +their signaling that they had other warriors in the neighborhood, and +there could be no doubt that an attack was intended upon the Hunters of +the Ozark. Nevertheless the Shawanoe kept in their vicinity, until they +approached the open prairie of which mention has been make. Then he +decided to pass them and join his young friends. + +Feeling no doubt that the latter were following the right trail (several +examinations which he made satisfied him that they were doing so), he +left it altogether, and took a shorter route across the country. He was +so familiar with it that he could easily do this. His intention was to +strike the main path again at the crossing, where they had such a narrow +escape from the cyclone; but he calculated that by nightfall they would +be a considerable distance beyond, and he wished to test their +watchfulness when left to themselves. So he came back to the trail about +half way between that point and the creek which they had crossed by +means of the canoe. He saw from an examination of the ground that he was +ahead of them, so he sauntered forward, firing off his gun where a turn +in the path made it seem to come from one side instead of in front of +them. He did this as he explained with a view of warning them to keep +their eyes open. It soon began growing dark and he kept on until he +reached the stream, where he decided to wait and see what they would do. + +He was as surprised as they when they brought forth the little canoe and +pushed themselves across by means of the pole which Fred Linden himself +cut. He followed them, easily wading the stream. After that he indulged +in a little diversion with which you are familiar. + +"Wasn't it strange, Deerfoot," said Fred, "that we should have found +that canoe?" + +He nodded his head to signify that he thought it was. + +"Have you any idea how it got there?" + +"He who owned the boat hid it under the bushes." + +"But there are no Indian villages within a great many miles of this +place--is that not so?" + +He gave another affirmative nod. + +"Have you any idea of who the owner can be?" + +A third affirmative nod followed. + +"Who is he?" asked Fred in astonishment. + +"Deerfoot." + +"What! Does that little canoe belong to _you_?" + +"Deerfoot made it and hid it under the bushes: why did not my brothers +use the paddle?" + +"We hunted all round, but could not find it." + +"It was within reach of my brother's hands; it was covered with leaves." + +"And so the boat is yer own?" repeated Terry; "why that looks as if ye +lived somewhere in this neighborhood; is such the case, owld boy?" + +The question did not seem to please the Shawanoe. He was sitting +directly in front of his young friends, who looked earnestly in his +face. He made no answer to Terry's question, but continued looking among +the coals, as if he was pondering some other matter that had thus been +brought to mind. Fred shook his head at Terry as a warning that he +should not repeat his query, and the latter was wise enough not to do +so; but the friends concluded from that moment that the wandering young +Shawanoe made his home at no great distance from where all three were at +that moment sitting in the wilderness. And they were right. + +A minute later, Deerfoot raised his head and signified that he wished to +know in turn what had befallen them since they parted company +twenty-four hours before. You will admit that each had a stirring story +to tell and he told it. The Shawanoe first listened to Terry's account +of his ride on the back of the wounded buffalo, and, when it was +finished, he quietly remarked to his young friend that he had done well. + +Though he showed no emotion, it was clear to both boys that he felt the +most concern in the experience of Fred Linden. He said nothing until the +narrator was through, including the account of the cyclone. Deerfoot had +heard the noise made by the latter, but he was so far removed from its +path that he saw none of its fearful effects, and in fact cared little +about it, for he had seen the same thing more than once before. + +But that which interested him was the account of Fred Linden's meeting +with the Winnebago horse thieves. This was the first knowledge he +received that any of their enemies were mounted on animals. Deerfoot had +turned off the main trail so early in the day that he missed them +altogether. When he came back to the path, near where the three were in +camp at that moment, and he examined the ground for signs of the +footprints of the boys, there were none that had been made by the hoofs +of horses. They had struck the trail further to the north, taking a +different course from the camp where they had stolen the animals. + +Fred blushed under the warm compliments of Deerfoot on his coolness, +bravery and skill in the presence of the three Winnebagos. You will +agree that it was a daring exploit indeed, which would have done credit +to a veteran frontiersman. It could not have been otherwise to draw such +warm praise from the Shawanoe. + +But the compliments could well be deferred to some other season. The +fact that three Indians had stolen the same number of horses from the +Hunters of the Ozark, and then had ridden leisurely away to meet their +friends, showed that they had great confidence in themselves, doubtless +caused by the belief that they were safe against any attempt to recover +the property. + +"Deerfoot," said Fred, after there had been a full exchange of +experiences; "we stopped here only because we could not keep to the +trail in the darkness. Don't you think it best that we should now go on, +since you will not have the same trouble that we did?" + +He shook his head in the negative. + +"It is not far to the camp of my brothers; the Winnebagos are a long +ways back on the trail; they will not come up with us; my brothers have +a chance to sleep; they may have no chance when they reach the cabin; +let them sleep now." + +The natural inference from this remark was that he believed nothing more +was to be apprehended from the Winnebagos, so long as our three friends +were on their way to the cabin of the Hunters of the Ozark. The danger +would now be transferred to that point. + +"Is it not likely that some of the red men are between us and our +friends?" asked Fred, as though their guide had not thought of every +contingency. + +"There is none," was the quiet answer, and then he added the +explanation. The Winnebagos, as soon as they had captured the horses, +had mounted them and ridden off to meet Black Bear and the rest, so as +to combine with them in the attack upon the cabin in the mountains. +Being so few in numbers, they did not dare stay in the neighborhood, +but were certain to come back with the others. + +The theft of the animals was no part of the original plan of the red +men, and was therefore what may be considered poor generalship, since it +was likely to draw attention to the presence of hostiles and to put the +Hunters of the Ozark on their guard. + +Deerfoot made no such remark at the time, but he afterward expressed his +regret that he had not joined Fred and Terry earlier in the day, so that +he could have been with them when they met the horse thieves. Had he +done so, there can be no doubt that they would have recaptured every one +of the animals, even if they had had to shoot each thief from the back +of his stolen steed. Such a result would have changed the whole course +of the events that followed. + +Since the Shawanoe advised them to stay where they were until morning, +the natural query of the lads was as to the degree of danger they ran. +They had thought there was little to be feared from Indians, but after +the fire was started, both had misgivings--afterward intensified no +doubt by the little trick played upon them by Deerfoot. + +He assured them that there was nothing to be feared from Indians. There +was and would be none near them through the night. They were at a safe +distance from the trail, so that if any one should pass back or forth he +could not possibly catch a glimpse of the camp. + +"I never dispute a man's sintimints," said Terry, "onless it happens to +disagraa with me own, so I'll say ye are right because we think the same +way; but it's within me own ricolliction that whin ye enj'yed the honor +of our coompany night before last, ye kipt guard all the night; +Frederick and mesilf will now return the coompliment and take charge of +the honors oursilves. If ye have any disputation that ye want to inter +into, we'll sittle it by maans of a wristling match." + +Deerfoot was inclined at first to act as sentinel, just as he had done +before, but he had already declared that there was nothing to be feared, +and his friends were so in earnest that he could not well refuse their +request. He would have preferred that they should gain all the sleep +they could, so as to lay up a stock, as may be said, against what was +likely to come at the cabin, but he yielded. He agreed to their wishes, +and in doing so, indulged in one of his smiles, the depth of whose +meaning neither of the youths fully comprehended. In fact it simply +meant that he understood their ability in that respect better than they +did themselves. + +And so, after reading his Bible, a portion of it aloud, he lay down upon +the blanket of Terry, as he did two nights before, and soon fell asleep. + +"I'm glad to obsarve the same," remarked Terry; "for the good lookin' +spalpeen must be in naad of slumber. I say, Fred, did ye iver saa the +loikes of him? We must git him to run a race and jump and swim and stand +on his head and show jist what he can do. I'm glad as I say to obsarve +that he is aslaap, for he must naad the same. I say, Fred, let's stay +awake till daylight, so as to fool him." + +"I am glad to do that in return for the watch he kept over us the other +night; but if you and I undertake to sit up at the same time we shall +fail. So I'll lie down and sleep awhile. When you find yourself getting +drowsy, wake me up and then I shall be able to keep my eyes open until +morning. In that way Deerfoot may have a whole night of rest." + +"I'm agraaable to the same." + +The plan was carried out, that is, a part of it, Fred Linden soon +dropped asleep, and, within an hour, Terry Clark did the same. When +Deerfoot threw his blanket off his face and assumed the sitting +position, he saw just what he expected to see and he allowed them to +slumber peacefully until daylight. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVIII. + +CONCLUSION. + + +The awaking of the boys was of the most pleasant character. The sky had +cleared and the sunlight penetrated between the branches from which the +autumn leaves were fast falling. The crispness which is felt at that +season of the year, stirred the young hearts and enlivened the spirits +in spite of the serious situation in which all three found themselves. + +The odor of broiling fish was snuffed by the lads, and nothing could +have been more delicious and appetizing. They were very hungry, and the +night before they supposed they would have to wait indefinitely for +their morning meal, but they opened their eyes to find that Deerfoot had +provided the most toothsome breakfast that could be imagined. + +In the early morning light, fully two hours before the sun appeared, +Deerfoot crossed the stream in his own canoe, and, taking the trail, +ran several miles at the highest speed. While he did not go far enough +to see the camp-fire of the main war party of Winnebagos, he did not +pause until certain that they had stayed in camp all night and would not +cross the stream where the boys lay asleep until the forenoon was half +gone. So the Shawanoe hastened back, and dropped a short distance down +stream in his canoe, having obtained his paddle, to an eddy where it +took but a few minutes for him to coax a half dozen fish from the cool, +clear depths, and these were just browning to a turn when the boys +opened their eyes. + +Fred and Terry looked in each other's faces and laughed. They knew what +an absurd failure they had made. They had promised to watch while +Deerfoot slept, and then left him to act as sentinel until morning. + +"It was your fault," whispered Fred, hunting in his pocket for the +package of salt and pepper which survived, despite the wetting it had +received; "why didn't you wake me up, as I told you to do?" + +"How could I wake ye up when I was aslaap mesilf?" was the pertinent +query of Terry; "I think I was only a half minute behind yersilf in +beginning me swate dreams." + +"Even if you had roused me," said Fred, "I suppose I would have dropped +to sleep the same as you; no one can keep awake (unless it is Deerfoot) +while sitting on the ground. Well, I am sure I shan't say any thing +about it if _he_ doesn't." + +"Let us shake on that," whispered Terry, stealthily extending his hand. + +Deerfoot acted as though unaware that any such lapse had occurred. The +browned fish were spread on the green leaves, and Fred sprinkled the +seasoning upon the portions to be eaten by himself and Terry; the +Shawanoe preferred none on his. + +"If nothing unexpected happens," said Fred, "we will arrive at the cabin +to-day." + +The Shawanoe inclined his head by way of answer. + +"When will the Winnebagos that are following us come to this stream?" + +Deerfoot pointed to a portion of the sky which the sun would reach in +about three hours from that time. + +"The Winnebagos are together; there may be a few coming from different +parts of the wood, but Black Bear has most of his warriors with him, and +he feels strong enough to destroy the cabin and our brothers who are +there." + +"There are three there now, and when we join them there will be six. If +father and the rest have fair notice of their coming, they ought to be +able to put every thing in good shape for a defense. It won't take them +long to gather enough food to last for weeks, but how about water?" + +"They have no water; our brothers know not why they should have it." + +The Shawanoe meant to say that the men, seeing no reason why they should +collect any store of water within their primitive structure, never did +so. It was at their door, and, when they wished to drink, they had but +to stoop down and drink. Believing no such emergency as now threatened +could arise, they failed to make any provision against it. + +"I've been thinkin'," said Terry, "that bein' as how we started from +Greville to j'in the Hunters of the Ozark, with the idaa of spindin' the +winter with the same, that from the time we started we were mimbers of +the same, but timporarily separated by a wide stritch of woods; what are +yer own idaas?" + +"I am not sure that I understand what you are trying to get at, but if +you mean to say that we may call ourselves two of the Hunters of the +Ozark, I see no objection if we are a few days behind the rest in +reaching the beaver runs." + +"Oblige me by tistifying to the same," said Terry, rather effusively, +shoving his hand toward his friend, who suspended operations with the +fish long enough to salute him. + +The breakfast was quickly finished, and the boys helped each other with +their knapsacks, caught up their guns and followed Deerfoot as he led +the way back to the trail. He did not hint any thing about their failure +to keep guard for him the night before, though they felt sure that they +would hear from him at some time not very far distant. + +When they found themselves following the path that had become so +familiar, they glanced furtively behind, half expecting to hear the +Winnebago war whoop and to see the warriors rushing after them; but not +a living soul beside themselves was in sight, and the quiet assurance of +their leader very nearly removed all such fear from them. + +"Are there any more streams to cross?" asked Fred, a moment after they +started along the trail. + +"There are none." + +"That is good, and since we are several hours in advance of the Indians, +we ought to be able to reach the cabin in time to give them warning, +that is, if they are in need of it." + +"How can they help being in need?" asked Terry. + +"The horses were turned loose to look after themselves, and though I +can't know for some time how it is, it seems to me that it could well +happen that they would not miss the animals for several days and +possibly not for a week or two." + +The best ground for doubting that the Hunters of the Ozark were aware of +the theft of the horses was the fact that there had been no pursuit. +Those men, it is safe to say, would not have stayed idle had they known +that three vagabond Indians were astride of their property and riding to +the northward. With the three fleeter animals at command, they would +have been after them in a twinkling: they would not have been obliged to +wait till they met Fred Linden before receiving some rifle shots. + +Fred was confirmed in this theory by Deerfoot, who declared that such +was his explanation of the failure of the hunters to pursue the thieves. + +For two hours the trail which they were following steadily ascended, +until they were considerably higher than when they left camp in the +morning. The undergrowth was abundant, and the wood in some places was +so dense that they could see only a short distance on either hand. The +trail was sinuous, winding in and out among the rocks in a way that +would have bewildered any one not used to such traveling. + +At last they reached the ridge of the elevation up which they had been +climbing, and found themselves on the margin of a plateau or rather +valley, beyond which rose the rugged, precipitous Ozarks. Since the +ground sloped away from them, in the direction of the mountains, their +view was extended over many square miles of forest, stream and natural +clearing, to the mountain walls beyond, looking dim and soft in the +distance, with the hazy air between. + +"Do my brothers see the gleam of the water yonder?" asked Deerfoot, +pointing to a winding stream, large enough to be called a river, though +it was half hidden by the woods. Its course was in the main at right +angles to the trail which the boys had been following, though, at times +it seemed to run straight toward and then away from them. + +The youths answered that they could not very well look in the direction +indicated by their friend, without seeing the stream to which he +directed their attention. + +The Shawanoe placed himself so that he stood in front of the two. + +"Now," said he, "let my brothers follow Deerfoot's finger and tell me +what they see." + +Pointing well to the right, he slowly swung his index finger toward the +left, until he had described about a quarter of a circle. + +Since it was not easy for the two to look exactly at the point meant, at +the same time, Terry Clark first tried it. Removing his cap, he closed +one eye and carefully peered along the extended arm of the Shawanoe as +though it was a rifle which he was about to aim and fire. + +"What is it?" asked Fred, a moment later, with some impatience over the +plodding deliberation of his companion. + +"I obsarve a big lot of traas, some rocks, some water and a claarin' +where ye could raise a big lot of praties, and--and--and--" + +"I see what you mean!" exclaimed Fred in some excitement; "right in the +middle of the clearing stands a large cabin made of logs." + +"It's mesilf that obsarves the same," added Terry, replacing his cap and +looking inquiringly at the Shawanoe, who let his extended arm fall as +he faced about and said: "That is the home of my brothers; that is the +cabin of the Hunters of the Ozark." + +"Hurrah!" called out Terry; "we're purty near there." + +"But we don't know how matters stand," said Fred; "even Deerfoot can not +tell whether they are all alive or dead." + +"I know bitter than that," remarked Terry, appealing straight to the +Shawanoe, who, without directly answering the question, notified them of +an interesting fact: a thin column of smoke was rising from the cabin. + +"That shows that some one is in there," said the Irish lad, "but whither +he is white or rid, I don't s'pose the Shawanoe, with all his smartness, +can tell even at this distance." + +"My brother speaks truth," said Deerfoot; "our brothers may be well and +they maybe dead and the Winnebagos may have built the fire to lure us to +them: we shall soon know." + + * * * * * + +Here for the present we must pause, for we have already filled the space +assigned to us; but we propose soon to tell you all about the +adventures of Deerfoot, Fred and Terry, and of their friends the Hunters +of the Ozark, whom they were trying to help. The story in which this +will be related will appear under the title of + +"THE CAMP IN THE MOUNTAINS." + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + + FAMOUS STANDARD JUVENILE LIBRARIES. + + ANY VOLUME SOLD SEPARATELY AT $1.00 PER VOLUME + + (Except the Sportsman's Club Series, Frank Nelson Series and Jack + Hazard Series.). + + Each Volume Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth. + + HORATIO ALGER, JR. + +The enormous sales of the books of Horatio Alger, Jr., show the +greatness of his popularity among the boys, and prove that he is one +of their most favored writers. I am told that more than half a million +copies altogether have been sold, and that all the large circulating +libraries in the country have several complete sets, of which only two +or three volumes are ever on the shelves at one time. If this is true, +what thousands and thousands of boys have read and are reading Mr. +Alger's books! His peculiar style of stories, often imitated but never +equaled, have taken a hold upon the young people, and, despite their +similarity, are eagerly read as soon as they appear. + +Mr. Alger became famous with the publication of that undying book, +"Ragged Dick, or Street Life in New York." It was his first book for +young people, and its success was so great that he immediately devoted +himself to that kind of writing. It was a new and fertile field for a +writer then, and Mr. Alger's treatment of it at once caught the fancy +of the boys. "Ragged Dick" first appeared in 1868, and ever since then +it has been selling steadily, until now it is estimated that about +200,000 copies of the series have been sold. + + --Pleasant Hours for Boys and Girls. + +A writer for boys should have an abundant sympathy with them. He +should be able to enter into their plans, hopes, and aspirations. He +should learn to look upon life as they do. Boys object to be written +down to. A boy's heart opens to the man or writer who understands him. + + --From Writing Stories for Boys, by Horatio Alger, Jr. + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +RAGGED DICK SERIES. +6 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $6.00 +Ragged Dick. Rough and Ready. +Fame and Fortune. Ben the Luggage Boy. +Mark the Match Boy. Rufus and Rose. + +TATTERED TOM SERIES--First Series. +4 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $4.00 +Tattered Tom. Phil the Fiddler. +Paul the Peddler. Slow and Sure. + +TATTERED TOM SERIES--Second Series. +4 vols. $4.00 +Julius. Sam's Chance. +The Young Outlaw. The Telegraph Boy. + +CAMPAIGN SERIES. +3 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $3.00 +Frank's Campaign. Charlie Codman's Cruise. +Paul Prescott's Charge. + +LUCK AND PLUCK SERIES--First Series. +4 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $4.00 +Luck and Pluck. Strong and Steady. +Sink or Swim. Strive and Succeed. + +LUCK AND PLUCK SERIES--Second Series. +4 vols. $4.00 +Try and Trust. Risen from the Ranks. +Bound to Rise. Herbert Carter's Legacy. + +BRAVE AND BOLD SERIES. +4 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $4.00 +Brave and Bold. Shifting for Himself. +Jack's Ward. Wait and Hope. + +NEW WORLD SERIES. +3 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $3.00 +Digging for Gold. Facing the World. +In a New World. + +VICTORY SERIES. +3 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $3.00 +Only an Irish Boy. Adrift in the City. +Victor Vane, or the Young Secretary. + +FRANK AND FEARLESS SERIES. +3 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $3.00 +Frank Hunter's Peril. Frank and Fearless. +The Young Salesman. + +GOOD FORTUNE LIBRARY. +3 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $3.00 +Walter Sherwood's Probation. A Boy's Fortune. +The Young Bank Messenger. + +RUPERT'S AMBITION. +1 vol. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $1.00 + +JED, THE POOR-HOUSE BOY. +1 vol. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $1.00 + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + + HARRY CASTLEMON. + + HOW I CAME TO WRITE MY FIRST BOOK. + +When I was sixteen years old I belonged to a composition class. It was +our custom to go on the recitation seat every day with clean slates, and +we were allowed ten minutes to write seventy words on any subject the +teacher thought suited to our capacity. One day he gave out "What a Man +Would See if He Went to Greenland." My heart was in the matter, and +before the ten minutes were up I had one side of my slate filled. The +teacher listened to the reading of our compositions, and when they were +all over he simply said: "Some of you will make your living by writing +one of these days." That gave me something to ponder upon. I did not say +so out loud, but I knew that my composition was as good as the best of +them. By the way, there was another thing that came in my way just then. +I was reading at that time one of Mayne Reid's works which I had drawn +from the library, and I pondered upon it as much as I did upon what the +teacher said to me. In introducing Swartboy to his readers he made use +of this expression: "No visible change was observable in Swartboy's +countenance." Now, it occurred to me that if a man of his education +could make such a blunder as that and still write a book, I ought to be +able to do it, too. I went home that very day and began a story, "The +Old Guide's Narrative," which was sent to the _New York Weekly_, and +came back, respectfully declined. It was written on both sides of the +sheets but I didn't know that this was against the rules. Nothing +abashed, I began another, and receiving some instruction, from a friend +of mine who was a clerk in a book store, I wrote it on only one side of +the paper. But mind you, he didn't know what I was doing. Nobody knew +it; but one day, after a hard Saturday's work--the other boys had been +out skating on the brick-pond--I shyly broached the subject to my +mother. I felt the need of some sympathy. She listened in amazement, and +then said: "Why, do you think you could write a book like that?" That +settled the matter, and from that day no one knew what I was up to until +I sent the first four volumes of Gunboat Series to my father. Was it +work? Well, yes; it was hard work, but each week I had the satisfaction +of seeing the manuscript grow until the "Young Naturalist" was all +complete. + + --Harry Castlemon in the Writer. + +GUNBOAT SERIES. +6 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $6.00 +Frank the Young Naturalist. Frank before Vicksburg. +Frank on a Gunboat. Frank on the Lower Mississippi. +Frank in the Woods. Frank on the Prairie. + +ROCKY MOUNTAIN SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +Frank Among the Rancheros. Frank in the Mountains. +Frank at Don Carlos' Rancho. + +SPORTSMAN'S CLUB SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.75 +The Sportsman's Club in the Saddle. +The Sportsman's Club The Sportsman's Club Afloat. +Among the Trappers. + +FRANK NELSON SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.75 +Snowed up. Frank in the Forecastle. The Boy Traders. + +BOY TRAPPER SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +The Buried Treasure. The Boy Trapper. +The Mail Carrier. + +ROUGHING IT SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +George in Camp. George at the Fort. +George at the Wheel. + +ROD AND GUN SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +Don Gordon's Shooting Box. The Young Wild Fowlers. +Rod and Gun Club. + +GO-AHEAD SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +Tom Newcombe. Go-Ahead. No Moss. + +WAR SERIES. +6 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $6.00 +True to His Colors. Marcy the Blockade-Runner. +Rodney the Partisan. Marcy the Refugee. +Rodney the Overseer. Sailor Jack the Trader. + +HOUSEBOAT SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +The Houseboat Boys. The Mystery of Lost River Cañon. +The Young Game Warden. + +AFLOAT AND ASHORE SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +Rebellion in Dixie. A Sailor in Spite of Himself. +The Ten-Ton Cutter. + +THE PONY EXPRESS SERIES. +3 vol. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +The Pony Express Rider. The White Beaver. +Carl, The Trailer. + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Hunters of the Ozark, by Edward S. 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Ellis. + </title> + <style type="text/css"> + /*<![CDATA[ XML blockout */ + <!-- + p {margin-top: 0.5em; text-align: justify; margin-bottom: 0.5em;} + body {margin-left: 11%; margin-right: 10%;} + table {margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; clear: both;} + table.adv {border-spacing: 10px 0px;} + h2 {text-align: center; margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 2em; clear: both;} + h3 {text-align: center; margin-top: 2em; font-weight: normal; clear: both;} + a {text-decoration: none;} + .smcap {font-variant: small-caps;} + .blockquot {margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%;} + table p {text-align: center; margin-top: 0; margin-bottom: 0;} + h2.toc {margin-top: 1em;} + .caption {font-size: 80%;} + .figcenter {margin: auto; text-align: center;} + .center {text-align:center;} + .pagenum {display: inline; font-size: x-small; text-align: right; + position: absolute; right: 2%; border:1px solid silver; + padding: 1px 3px; font-style: normal; + font-variant:normal; font-weight:normal; text-decoration: none; + color: #444; background-color: inherit;} + a.pagenum:after {border: 1px solid silver; padding: 1px 3px; content: attr(title);} + h1 {text-align: center; clear: both;} + hr.minor {width: 20%; margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;} + hr.major {width: 65%; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em;} + hr.full {width: 90%; margin-top: 2em; margin-bottom: 2em;} + hr.dashed {width: 80%; margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em; border:none; border-bottom:1px dashed;} + .adtitle {text-align:center; font-weight:bold; margin-top:1.5em;} + .adsubtitle {text-align:center;} + // --> + /* XML end ]]>*/ + </style> + </head> +<body> + + +<pre> + +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hunters of the Ozark, by Edward S. Ellis + +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: The Hunters of the Ozark + +Author: Edward S. Ellis + +Release Date: September 17, 2007 [EBook #22646] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HUNTERS OF THE OZARK *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<div class="figcenter" style='width:350px'> +<a name="illus-000" id="illus-000"></a> +<img src="images/ozark-fpc.jpg" alt=""Terry heard distinctly the footsteps of the warrior."" title="" width="350" /><br /> +<span class="caption">"Terry heard distinctly the footsteps of the warrior."</span> +</div> + +<hr class='dashed' /> + +<table style="margin: auto; border: black 1px solid; width:25em" summary=""><tr><td> +<p style=" font-size:1em; margin-top:3em; margin-bottom:1.2em;">THE</p> +<p style=" font-size:1.6em; margin-bottom:5em;">HUNTERS OF THE OZARK.</p> +<p style=" font-size:0.7em;">BY</p> +<p style=" font-size:1.2em;">EDWARD S. ELLIS,</p> +<p style=" font-size:0.7em;">AUTHOR OF "YOUNG PIONEER SERIES," "LOG CABIN SERIES,"</p> +<p style=" font-size:0.7em; margin-bottom:15em;">"GREAT RIVER SERIES," ETC., ETC.</p> +<p style=" font-size:1em;">PHILADELPHIA:</p> +<p style=" font-size:1.2em; margin-bottom:2em;">HENRY T. COATES & CO.</p> +</td></tr></table> + +<hr class='dashed' /> + +<p class='center'> +Copyright, 1887,<br /> +by<br /> +PORTER & COATES. +</p> + +<hr class='dashed' /> + +<h2 class="toc"><a name="Contents" id="Contents"></a>Contents</h2> +<table border="0" width="500" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Contents" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto"> +<col style="width:15%;" /> +<col style="width:5%;" /> +<col style="width:70%;" /> +<col style="width:10%;" /> +<tr> + <td align='right'><span style='font-size:x-small'>CHAPTER</span></td> + <td></td> + <td></td> + <td align='right'><span style='font-size:x-small'>PAGE</span></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">I.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">An Estray.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#AN_ESTRAY_70">5</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">II.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">The Tinkle of a Bell.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#THE_TINKLE_OF_A_BELL_247">15</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">III.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">An Aboriginal Plot.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#AN_ABORIGINAL_PLOT_460">25</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">IV.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">A Party of the Third Part.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#A_PARTY_OF_THE_THIRD_PART_641">34</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">V.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">A Friend in Need.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#A_FRIEND_IN_NEED_825">44</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">VI.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">Fred Linden Receives a Message From the Ozark Camp.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#FRED_LINDEN_RECEIVES_A_MESSAGE_FROM_THE_OZARK_CAMP_1028">54</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">VII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">The Hunters of Ozark.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#THE_HUNTERS_OF_OZARK_1223">64</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">VIII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">A Welcome Acquaintance.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#A_WELCOME_ACQUAINTANCE_1411">74</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">IX.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">A Mishap.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#A_MISHAP_1618">84</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">X.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">A Struggle For Life.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#A_STRUGGLE_FOR_LIFE_1819">94</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XI.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">Tramping Southward.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#TRAMPING_SOUTHWARD_2013">104</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">A Strange Animal.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#A_STRANGE_ANIMAL_2207">114</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XIII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">A Troublesome Visitor.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#A_TROUBLESOME_VISITOR_2404">124</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XIV.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">A Welcome Ally.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#A_WELCOME_ALLY_2609">134</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XV.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">"Deerfoot Will Be Sentinel to-Night."</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#DEERFOOT_WILL_BE_SENTINEL_TONIGHT_2805">144</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XVI.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">Around the Camp-Fire.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#AROUND_THE_CAMPFIRE_3002">154</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XVII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">A Suspicious Sound.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#A_SUSPICIOUS_SOUND_3200">164</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XVIII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">Like a Thief in the Night.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#LIKE_A_THIEF_IN_THE_NIGHT_3394">174</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XIX.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">Shawanoe And Winnebago.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#SHAWANOE_AND_WINNEBAGO_3593">185</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XX.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">Another Night Visitor.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#ANOTHER_NIGHT_VISITOR_3795">195</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXI.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">The Camp of the Winnebagos.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#THE_CAMP_OF_THE_WINNEBAGOS_3997">205</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">"Keep to the Trail"</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#KEEP_TO_THE_TRAIL_4181">215</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXIII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">An Infuriate Shawanoe.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#AN_INFURIATE_SHAWANOE_4372">225</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXIV.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">The Defiance.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#THE_DEFIANCE_4578">236</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXV.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">The Signal Fire.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#THE_SIGNAL_FIRE_4770">245</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXVI.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">On the Edge of the Prairie.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#ON_THE_EDGE_OF_THE_PRAIRIE_5003">257</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXVII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">A Morning Meal.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#A_MORNING_MEAL_5251">269</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXVIII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">A Strange Ride.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#A_STRANGE_RIDE_5490">281</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXIX.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">A Young Hunter's Strategy.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#A_YOUNG_HUNTERS_STRATEGY_5725">293</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXX.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">Terry Finishes His Ride.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#TERRY_FINISHES_HIS_RIDE_5961">305</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXXI.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">The Devil's Punch Bowl.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#THE_DEVILS_PUNCH_BOWL_6180">316</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXXII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">The Terror in the Air.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#THE_TERROR_IN_THE_AIR_6444">328</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXXIII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">Fred Linden Awakens to an Alarming Fact.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#FRED_LINDEN_AWAKENS_TO_AN_ALARMING_FACT_6696">341</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXXIV.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">The Canoe.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#THE_CANOE_6937">352</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXXV.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">America Versus Ireland.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#AMERICA_VERSUS_IRELAND_7177">364</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXXVI.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">America Versus America.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#AMERICA_VERSUS_AMERICA_7414">376</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXXVII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">The Last Camp-Fire.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#THE_LAST_CAMPFIRE_7663">388</a></td> +</tr> +<tr> + <td align="right">XXXVIII.</td> + <td></td> + <td align="left">Conclusion.</td> + <td align="right"><a href="#CONCLUSION_7897">400</a></td> +</tr> +</table> + +<hr class='full' /> + +<div> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p5" id="p5">5</a></span> +<h1>THE HUNTERS OF THE OZARK.</h1> +</div> + +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<a name="AN_ESTRAY_70" id="AN_ESTRAY_70"></a> + +<h2>CHAPTER I.</h2> +<h3>AN ESTRAY.</h3> +</div> + +<p>One day in the autumn Terence Clark came to the house of Frederick +Linden and urged him to join in a hunt for a cow that had been missing +since the night before. The latter got the consent of his mother and the +two lads started on a search that proved to be the most eventful one +they had ever known.</p> + +<p>A few words in the way of explanation must be given at this point. The +date of the events I have set out to tell was toward the close of the +last century, and the scene the south-western part of the present State +of Missouri, but which was then a part of the vast territory known as +Louisiana. Though the town of St. Louis had<span class="pagenum"><a name="p6" id="p6">6</a></span> been settled a good many +years before, there were only a few pioneers scattered through the +almost limitless region that stretched in every direction from the +Mississippi. Here and there the hunters and trappers were often absent +from their homes for months at a time, during which they suffered much +exposure and hardship. They slept for weeks in the open woods, or when +the severity of the weather would not allow this, they found refuge in +caves or hollow trees. Then, when enough skins had been gathered to load +their pack-horses they started on the long tramps to the French trading +post on the Mississippi. They followed faintly marked paths or trails +that converged from a score or hundred different points until they +reached the Father of Waters, where the peltries were soon sold and the +proceeds, too often, squandered within the succeeding few hours.</p> + +<p>At the date of which I am speaking, a small settlement known as Greville +stood in the south-western section of the large State of Missouri, as it +is now known. The first cabins were put up only a few years before, and +the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p7" id="p7">7</a></span> settlers, including men, women and children, numbered about two +hundred. Near the center of the straggling settlement stood a rude but +strong blockhouse to be used for refuge in the event of an attack by +Indians. As yet this emergency had not arisen, for the red men in that +section were far less warlike and hostile than those in Ohio and +Kentucky.</p> + +<p>The father of Fred Linden was one of the hunters and trappers who made +regular visits to the wild section near the Ozark Mountains for the +purpose of gathering furs. He never had less than two companions, and +sometimes the number was half a dozen. As you are well aware, the furs +of all animals are in the finest condition in wintry weather, since +nature does her best to guard their bodies from the effects of cold. +Thus it came about that the party of hunters, of whom I shall have more +to say further on, left Greville in the autumn of the year, and as a +rule were not seen again until spring. Since they entered a fine, +fur-bearing country, these trips generally paid well. One convenience +was that the hunters were not obliged to go to St. Louis to sell them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p8" id="p8">8</a></span> +An agent of the great fur company that made its headquarters at that +post, came regularly to Greville with his pack-horses and gave the same +price for the peltries that he would have given had they been brought to +the factory, hundreds of miles away. He was glad to do this, for the +furs that George Linden and his brother hunters brought in were not +surpassed in glossiness and fineness by any of the thousands gathered +from the four points of the compass.</p> + +<p>Among the daring little band that made these regular visits to the Ozark +region was an Irishman named Michael Clark, who had had considerable +experience in gathering furs along the Mississippi. It was at his +suggestion that Greville was founded, and one-half of their periodical +journeys thus cut off. On the year following, Clark was shot and killed +by a prowling Indian. Since his wife had been dead a long time, the only +child, Terence, was thus left an orphan. The lad was a bright, +good-natured fellow, liked by every one, and he made his home with the +family of one of the other hunters named Rufus MacClaskey. The boy was +fifteen years old on the very day that<span class="pagenum"><a name="p9" id="p9">9</a></span> he walked over to the cabin of +Fred Linden and asked him to help him hunt for the missing cow.</p> + +<p>The family of George Linden, while he was away, consisted of his wife, +his daughter Edith, fourteen, and his son Fred, sixteen years old. All +were ruddy cheeked, strong and vigorous, and among the best to do of the +thirty-odd families that made up the population of Greville.</p> + +<p>"Has the cow ever been lost before?" asked Fred, as he and the Irish lad +swung along beside each other, neither thinking it worth while to burden +himself with a rifle.</p> + +<p>"Niver that I knows of, and I would know the same if she had been lost; +we're onaisy about the cow, for you see that if this kaaps on and she +doesn't come back I'll have to live on something else than bread and +milk and praties."</p> + +<p>"Our cow came back just at sunset last night."</p> + +<p>"And so did them all, exciptin' our own, which makes me more onwillin' +to accipt any excuse she may have to give."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p10" id="p10">10</a></span></p> + +<p>"Let me see, Terry; Brindle wore a bell round her neck, didn't she?"</p> + +<p>"That she did, and she seemed quite proud of the same."</p> + +<p>"Did you make hunt for her last night?"</p> + +<p>"I hunted as long as I could see to hunt; she wasn't missed, that is +till after they got home. Whin I found that I didn't find her I started +to find her; but I hadn't time to hunt very long whin it got dark and I +had to give it up."</p> + +<p>"And didn't you hear any thing of the bell?"</p> + +<p>"Do ye think that if I heard the bell I wouldn't have found the cow? Why +was the bell put round her neck if it wasn't to guide friends? I +listened many a time after it got dark, but niver a tinkle did I hear."</p> + +<p>"That is queer," said Fred half to himself; "for, when no wind is +blowing and it is calm, you can hear that bell a long ways; father has +caught the sound in the woods, when the Brindle was all of a mile off. I +wonder whether she could have lost the bell."</p> + +<p>"I've thought of that, and said to meself that it might be also that she +had become lost herself in trying to find it."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p11" id="p11">11</a></span></p> + +<p>Fred laughed.</p> + +<p>"She hardly knows enough for <i>that</i>; and, if she found the bell she +wouldn't know what to do with it; but if that leathern string around her +neck had broken, it may be that she is close by. A cow after losing one +milking is apt to feel so uncomfortable that she hurries home to be +relieved; but what's the use of talking?" added Fred, throwing up his +head and stepping off at a more lively pace; "we've started out to find +her and that's all we have to do."</p> + +<p>Perhaps a dozen acres had been cleared around the little town of +Greville. This had been planted with corn, potatoes and grain, though +scores of unsightly stumps were left and interfered with the cultivation +of the soil. Beyond this clearing or open space extended the immense +forests which at one time covered almost the entire face of our country. +On the south side of the town and distant a furlong wound a creek, which +after many shiftings and turnings found its way into the Mississippi and +so at last into the Gulf of Mexico. The course of this stream was so +winding that<span class="pagenum"><a name="p12" id="p12">12</a></span> it extended on two sides of the town and ran in a westerly +direction, exactly the opposite of that it finally had to take in order +to reach its outlet.</p> + +<p>As a rule, it was about twenty feet wide with a depth of from one or two +to six feet. It was subject to tremendous overflows which sometimes +tripled its volume and increased its width to that of a river. At such +times a series of enormous rocks through which the creek at "low tide" +lazily wound its way, lashed the turbid current into a fury somewhat +like that seen in the "whirlpool" below Niagara. Could you have stood on +the shore and looked at the furiously struggling waters, you would have +been sure that even if a man were headed up in a barrel, he could not +have lived to pass through the hundred yards of rapids, though there was +reason to believe that more than one Indian had shot them in his canoe.</p> + +<p>Terry Clark told his friend that his search of the night before and of +the morning following had been to the north and west of the settlement, +so that it was hardly worth while to continue the hunt in that +direction. The cows<span class="pagenum"><a name="p13" id="p13">13</a></span> sometimes stood in the water, where so much +switching of their tails was not needed to keep away the flies, and, +though there was quite a growth of succulent grass on the clearing, the +animals often crossed the creek and browsed through the woods and +undergrowth on the other side.</p> + +<p>The boys were inclined to think that the brindle had taken that course +during the afternoon and had actually gone astray,—something which a +quadruped is less likely to do than a biped, though the former will +sometimes make the blunder. There was nothing unreasonable in the theory +that the bell had fallen from her neck and that the owner therefore +might be not far away.</p> + +<p>At intervals, Terry shouted "<i>Bos! bos! bos!</i>" the Latin call which the +cow sometimes recognized, though she generally paid no attention to it. +It was the same now, possibly due to the fact that she did not hear the +call.</p> + +<p>Reaching the edge of the stream, the boys began walking along the bank +toward the left and scrutinizing the spongy earth close to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p14" id="p14">14</a></span> water. +If the missing animal had crossed the creek she could not have failed to +leave distinct footprints.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p15" id="p15">15</a></span> +<a name="THE_TINKLE_OF_A_BELL_247" id="THE_TINKLE_OF_A_BELL_247"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER II.</h2> +<h3>THE TINKLE OF A BELL.</h3> +</div> + +<p>The examination of the shore of the creek had lasted but a few minutes, +when Terry Clark, pointing to the moist earth at their feet, called out +in some excitement:</p> + +<p>"Do ye mind that now?"</p> + +<p>There, sure enough, were the footprints of a cow that had entered the +stream from the same side on which the boys stood. The impressions could +be seen for some distance in the clear water, which in the middle of the +stream was no more than a yard deep, and they were plainly observed +where the animal had emerged on the other side.</p> + +<p>"I don't suppose there is any difference in the tracks of cows, but I +guess, Terry, that we are safe in making up our minds we are on the +trail of Brindle."</p> + +<p>"I'm thinking the same," replied the other,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p16" id="p16">16</a></span> who was not only looking +across the creek, but into the woods beyond, as though he expected to +catch sight of the cow herself; "though it may be the one that crossed +there isn't the one that we're after."</p> + +<p>Fred Linden was asking himself whether there was not some way in which +they could reach the other side without going to the trouble of removing +their shoes and leggins, and hunting a shallow portion, or allowing +their garments to become saturated. He exclaimed: "Why didn't I think of +it? There's our canoe!"</p> + +<p>A number of these frail craft were owned in Greville, and Fred had a +fine one himself, which was only a short distance off. Three minutes +later the two reached it.</p> + +<p>The barken structure was moored by means of a long rope to a tree a +considerable distance from the water, so that in case of one of those +sudden rises that sometimes took place, it would not be carried away by +the freshet. The boat was quickly launched, and a few strokes of the +paddle carried the two to the opposite bank of the stream.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p17" id="p17">17</a></span></p> + +<p>"I wonder whether there is any danger of a rise," remarked Fred, as he +carried the rope to a tree twenty feet distant and made it fast to a +limb; "there was a good deal of thunder and lightning last night off to +the east."</p> + +<p>"But the creek doesn't come from that way," said the surprised Terry; +"so what is the odds, as me father said he used to ask when the Injins +was on all sides of him, and a panther in the tree he wanted to climb, +and he found himself standing on the head of a rattlesnake."</p> + +<p>"The creek winds through every point of the compass, so it doesn't make +much difference, as you say, where it rains, since it is sure to make a +rise; the only question is whether the rain was enough to affect the +creek so that it will trouble us."</p> + +<p>"If it was goin' to do that, wouldn't it have done so before this?" was +the natural question of his companion.</p> + +<p>"That depends on how far away the rain was."</p> + +<p>The boys were not idle while talking. The canoe was soon made fast, and +then they<span class="pagenum"><a name="p18" id="p18">18</a></span> resumed their hunt for the estray. They were not skillful +enough in woodcraft to trace the animal through the forest by the means +that an Indian would have used, but they were hopeful that by taking a +general direction they would soon find her. If she still had the bell +tied around her neck, there was no reason why they should not be +successful.</p> + +<p>But while walking forward, Fred Linden asked a question of himself that +he did not repeat aloud.</p> + +<p>"Has she been stolen?"</p> + +<p>This query was naturally followed by others. It certainly was +unreasonable to think that a cow would leave her companions and +deliberately wander off, at the time she was milked twice daily. She +would speedily suffer such distress that she would come bellowing +homeward for relief. If she really was an estray, she had missed two +milkings—that of the previous night and the morning that succeeded.</p> + +<p>It was certain, therefore, that if she was stolen, the thief had +attended to her milking. But who could the thief be? That was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p19" id="p19">19</a></span> +important question that Fred confessed himself unable to answer.</p> + +<p>There had been occasional instances of white men who had stolen horses +from the frontier settlements, but the lad could recall nothing of the +kind that had taken place in that neighborhood; all of which might be +the case without affecting the present loss, since it was evident that +there must be a first theft of that nature.</p> + +<p>But, somehow or other, Fred could not help suspecting that the red men +had to do with the disappearance of the animal. I have intimated in +another place that Greville had never been harmed by the Indians, who +were scattered here and there through the country, for there was no +comparison between them and the fierce Shawanoes, Wyandottes, +Pottawatomies and other tribes, whose deeds gave to Kentucky its +impressive title of the Dark and Bloody Ground; but among the different +bands of red men who roamed through the great wilderness west of the +Mississippi, were those who were capable of as atrocious cruelties as +were ever committed by the fierce warriors further east.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p20" id="p20">20</a></span></p> + +<p>What more likely, therefore, than that a party of these had stolen the +cow and driven her away?</p> + +<p>There were many facts that were in favor of and against the theory; the +chief one against it was that if a party of Indians had driven off one +cow, they would have taken more. Then, too, the soft earth that had +revealed the hoof tracks ought to have shown the imprint of moccasins.</p> + +<p>You will see, therefore, that Fred could speculate for hours on the +question without satisfying himself. He was sorry that he and Terry had +not brought their guns with them, and was half inclined to go back. It +was not yet noon, and they had plenty of time in which to do so.</p> + +<p>"Terry," said Fred, turning suddenly about and addressing his friend, +who was walking behind him, "we made a mistake in not bringing our +guns."</p> + +<p>The Irish lad was about to answer when he raised his hand in a warning +way and said:</p> + +<p>"Hist!"</p> + +<p>Both stood as motionless as the tree trunks<span class="pagenum"><a name="p21" id="p21">21</a></span> about them, all their +faculties centered in the one of hearing.</p> + +<p>There was the low, deep roar which is always heard in a vast wood, made +by the soft wind stealing among the multitudinous branches, and which is +like the voice of silence itself. They were so far from the creek that +its soft ripple failed to reach them.</p> + +<p>"I don't hear any thing," said Fred at the end of a full minute.</p> + +<p>"Nor do I," said Terry.</p> + +<p>"Why then did you ask me to listen?"</p> + +<p>"I was thinkin' be that token that we might hear something."</p> + +<p>"What made you think so?"</p> + +<p>"The tinkle of a bell."</p> + +<p>"What!" exclaimed the amazed Fred, "are you sure?"</p> + +<p>"That I am; just as I was about to speak, I caught the faint sound—just +as we've both heard hundreds of times."</p> + +<p>"From what point did it seem to come?"</p> + +<p>His friend pointed due south.</p> + +<p>"Strange it is that ye didn't catch the same."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p22" id="p22">22</a></span></p> + +<p>"So I think; it may be, Terry, that you are mistaken, and you wanted to +hear the bell so much that the sound was in your fancy."</p> + +<p>The lad, however, would not admit this. He was sure there had been no +mistake. Fred was about to argue further when all doubt was set at rest +by the sound of a cow-bell that came faintly but clearly through the +forest.</p> + +<p>"You are right," said Fred, his face brightening up; "we are on the +track of old Brindle sure enough. It's mighty strange though how she +came to wander so far from home."</p> + +<p>"She got lost I s'pose," replied Terry, repeating the theory that had +been hit upon some time before.</p> + +<p>"It may be, but it is the first instance I ever heard of, where an +animal lost its way so easily."</p> + +<p>The boys were in too high spirits, however, to try to explain that which +puzzled them. The cow was a valuable creature, being the only one that +belonged to the family with whom Terence lived, and who therefore could +ill afford her loss.</p> + +<p>The friends had pushed perhaps a couple<span class="pagenum"><a name="p23" id="p23">23</a></span> hundred yards further when +Terry called to Fred that he was not following the right course.</p> + +<p>"Ye're bearing too much to the lift; so much so indaad that if ye kaap +on ye'll find yersilf lift."</p> + +<p>"Why, I was about to turn a little more in that direction," replied the +astonished Fred; "you are altogether wrong."</p> + +<p>But the other sturdily insisted that he was right, and he was so +positive that he stopped short, and refused to go another step in the +direction that his friend was following. The latter was just as certain +that Terry was amiss, and it looked as if they had come to a deadlock.</p> + +<p>"There's only one way to settle it," said Fred, "and that is for each of +us to follow the route he thinks right. The cow can't be far off and we +shall soon find out who is wrong. The first one that finds Brindle shall +call to the other, and he'll own up what a stupid blunder he has made."</p> + +<p>"Ye are speakin' me own sentiments," replied Terry, who kept looking +about him and<span class="pagenum"><a name="p24" id="p24">24</a></span> listening as if he expected every moment that the cow +herself would solve the question. Fred Linden read the meaning of his +action, and he, too, wondered why it was that when both had plainly +caught the tinkle of the telltale bell, they should hear it no more. +Strange that when it had spoken so clearly it should become silent, but +such was the fact.</p> + +<p>Little did either suspect the cause.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p25" id="p25">25</a></span> +<a name="AN_ABORIGINAL_PLOT_460" id="AN_ABORIGINAL_PLOT_460"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER III.</h2> +<h3>AN ABORIGINAL PLOT.</h3> +</div> + +<p>The boys tried the plan of Fred Linden; he swerved slightly to the left, +while Terry Clark made a sharp angle to the right. They never thought of +getting beyond hearing of each other, and, but for the plentiful +undergrowth they would have kept in sight. They had taken but a few +steps when Fred looked around and found that he was alone. He could hear +his young friend pushing his way among the trees, and once or twice he +caught snatches of a tune that he was whistling—that being a favorite +pastime of the lad when by himself.</p> + +<p>"It's curious how he could make such a blunder," thought Fred, with a +smile to himself; "he will go tramping around the woods only to find +that he was nowhere in the neighborhood of the cow. Ah, the storm is not +yet over."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p26" id="p26">26</a></span></p> + +<p>He was looking to the eastward, where the sky, as he caught a glimpse of +it among the treetops and branches, was as black as if overcast with one +huge thunder cloud.</p> + +<p>"It was there it raged so violently last night, and the rain is falling +in torrents again. We shall find the creek a river when we go back."</p> + +<p>The sturdy youth pressed on fully two hundred yards more, when the old +suspicion came back to him. There was something wrong. When he could not +explain some things he was satisfied that it was because there was an +element of evil in those things—something that boded ill to both him +and his friend.</p> + +<p>"I have traveled far enough since hearing that bell to pass a long ways +beyond it," he said, compressing his lips and shaking his head; "and if +that was Brindle that rang it the first time, she would have done it the +second time."</p> + +<p>Twice before Fred fancied he heard something moving among the +undergrowth a short distance in advance, and a little to one side. The +noise was now so distinct that he could no<span class="pagenum"><a name="p27" id="p27">27</a></span> longer deceive himself; +there was some specific cause for it.</p> + +<p>"I guess Terry has worked over this way, finding what a mistake he has +made—no! by gracious! it isn't Terry!"</p> + +<p>Fred started in alarm, confident that it was an Indian that was moving +through the wood. It will be admitted that there was cause for his fear, +if such should prove to be the case, for he was without any firearms +with which to defend himself; but while he stood meditating whether he +should turn and take to his heels, he caught enough of a glimpse of the +object to make out that it was a quadruped instead of a biped.</p> + +<p>This was a great relief, though it did not remove all fear, for he was +not in form to meet any of the wild beasts that one was liable to run +against at any time. The next minute, he broke into a hearty laugh, for +that which he saw was the lost cow, quietly browsing on the tender +herbs, as though just turned loose by her owner.</p> + +<p>"Well, that is funny," said the youth, walking hastily toward her; "this +proves that<span class="pagenum"><a name="p28" id="p28">28</a></span> I was right. You are a pretty one, old Brindle, to lead us +on such a chase!"</p> + +<p>The cow, hearing the voice and footsteps, stopped cropping, and with her +motionless jaws dripping with leaves and buds, started at Fred as if she +wasn't sure of his identity. She knew enough, however, to see that he +was a friend, and so resumed her feeding.</p> + +<p>Assuring himself that she was the estray, Fred looked at her bag to see +the condition of that. It was only moderately full, proving that she had +been milked later even than the preceding night.</p> + +<p>Fred Linden had approached close enough to place his hand on the +handsome creature, when he noticed—what indeed he knew before—the bell +was not fastened to her neck; that explained why, after hearing the +sound, it was heard no more.</p> + +<p>"The cord has broken just after the tinkle, and let the bell fall to the +ground; no wonder that it was not heard again. Some one has been kind +enough to give Brindle a milking."</p> + +<p>The words were yet in the mouth of Fred when he received a shock that +for a moment<span class="pagenum"><a name="p29" id="p29">29</a></span> held him speechless; a long distance to the right he +caught the sound of the cow-bell!</p> + +<p>It was precisely the same that he and his friend had noticed, and since +the bell of Brindle was gone, there could be but one meaning to the +signal; it was made by some one for the purpose of drawing the boys into +a trap.</p> + +<p>Without pausing to think over the dozen questions that came with this +conclusion, Fred set off at the most hurried pace possible to warn his +friend of his peril.</p> + +<p>"He has no suspicion of any thing wrong, and is sure to do the very +thing that he ought not to do."</p> + +<p>Fred Linden was right in this conclusion. It can be readily understood, +why no thought of peril should enter the brain of the Irish lad, who was +never so sure that he was right and Fred wrong when the two parted to +take different routes in search of the cow.</p> + +<p>"It's a bright lad—is Fred," said Terry, "but there isn't any law that +I knows of by which he is to be right ivery time and Mr. Terence Clark +wrong. I'm going straight for the point where the tinkle of the bell +came from."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p30" id="p30">30</a></span></p> + +<p>The same thought puzzled him that puzzled Fred Linden; after walking +more than the whole distance that first intervened, the cow was still +invisible. There was nothing in the fact that when she had strayed so +far from home, she should keep on in the same direction.</p> + +<p>"It may be that she has heard something about the Pacific Ocean, and has +set out to see for herself whither the reports are correct," was the +quaint thought of the Irish lad, as he pushed vigorously through the +undergrowth, which was dense enough to turn him aside more than once and +compel him to keep his wits about him to prevent going astray +altogether.</p> + +<p>Now and then he paused, naturally expecting (as did Fred), that he would +hear more of the bell; but it is not necessary to say that, like his +companion, he was disappointed. He had fixed the point whence came the +noise so firmly in his mind, that he could not go wrong, though a boy of +less experience in the woods would have been sure to do so.</p> + +<p>Now, if any of you lads have ever driven<span class="pagenum"><a name="p31" id="p31">31</a></span> cows or sheep, around whose +necks bells were hung, you have noticed the natural fact that they have +a sound peculiar to themselves. Referring particularly to cows, you may +have observed the <i>jangle</i>, <i>jangle</i>, made by the motion of the head in +cropping the grass, varied now and then by the confused jumble caused by +the animal flinging her head over the back of her neck or fore part of +the body to drive away the insects plaguing her. There is a certain +regularity in all this which will continue for hours, and that may be +said to be produced by the natural action of the animal, and which is +altogether different from that made by the swaying motion of the hand.</p> + +<p>But Terry Clark inherited a sharpness of wits from his parents, and, +while pushing forward among the trees and undergrowth, it struck him +that there were several curious features about the matter.</p> + +<p>"It was a mistake, as Fred said," he thought more than once, "that we +did not bring our guns with us."</p> + +<p>Then the second sound of the cow-bell fell upon the ear of Fred Linden; +Terry was within<span class="pagenum"><a name="p32" id="p32">32</a></span> a hundred feet of the point whence it came, and he +could not have heard it more distinctly had he been standing on the spot +himself. The noise was so peculiar that a flood of misgiving overwhelmed +him. The <i>tinkle</i>, <i>tinkle</i>, <i>tinkle</i>, was so regular that nothing was +plainer than that no living quadruped could have made the sound.</p> + +<p>"That was not the cow," whispered the startled Terry; "she has more +sinse than to do any thing of the kind, as me uncle used to obsarve whin +he was accused of kaapin' sober; but I'll find out by the same token +what it all means."</p> + +<p>Since he had no firearms with which to defend himself, and since he was +sure he was threatened by danger, he ought to have hastened homeward; +but his curiosity would not permit him to do so.</p> + +<p>He advanced with all the caution possible, parting the obstructing +bushes in front and stepping as lightly on the carpet of leaves as +though he were a scout entering the camp of an enemy. He often stopped, +listened and peered, not only in front and the sides, but to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p33" id="p33">33</a></span> rear. +Whatever might take place, he did not intend to be surprised.</p> + +<p>He had advanced a couple of rods in this manner, when a faint sound from +the bell caught his ear, but was instantly suppressed, as though some +one had stopped at the instant he started to sway it. Faint as was the +tinkle, however, he was able to locate the precise point whence it came, +and after a little hesitation he moved toward it.</p> + +<p>All at once he caught sight of a figure in a crouching position, +stepping softly among the trees and undergrowth. He stood still, and a +moment later was able to distinguish the figure of an Indian warrior, +bending slightly forward, advancing inch by inch and holding the cow-bell +in his hand.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p34" id="p34">34</a></span> +<a name="A_PARTY_OF_THE_THIRD_PART_641" id="A_PARTY_OF_THE_THIRD_PART_641"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2> +<h3>A PARTY OF THE THIRD PART.</h3> +</div> + +<p>The Indian warrior whom Terry Clark saw advancing stealthily through the +undergrowth, cow-bell in hand, was a frightful object. His head and +shoulders were bent forward, and he was stepping slowly and silently, +while he glanced from right to left, as if searching for some object, or +awaiting the occurrence of an expected event. His face was daubed with +black and red paint, his long hair, as coarse as that of a horse's tail, +dangled about his shoulders and alongside his neck, so that his eyes, +when staring through it, seemed to be blazing among so much tangled +brush. The ordinary hunting shirt, fringed in front, inclosed his chest, +and was gathered at the waist by a sash or belt into which were thrust +his hunting knife and tomahawk. The usual breechcloth, leggins and +moccasins completed his dress.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p35" id="p35">35</a></span></p> + +<p>He carried a fine rifle in his left hand, in a trailing position, while +a powder horn and bullet pouch were supported by a string passing over +his shoulder. He was what may be called a thoroughly equipped warrior, +without taking into account the cow-bell, which was suspended by the +thumb and fingers of the right hand. It was thus he must have grasped +the implement when he caused it to give out the sound that caught the +ear of Fred Linden and Terry Clark. But at the moment the Irish lad saw +him, and for some minutes after, he held the bell in such careful poise +that it gave no sound at all.</p> + +<p>The Indian probably suspected his imitation of the action of the animal +was so poor that it was likely to cause distrust, and therefore he was +sparing in resorting to the stratagem.</p> + +<p>Now, nothing can be clearer than that if the warrior was in such a plain +view of Terry Clark, the latter was equally exposed to his eye. The +Indian was moving in his guarded fashion over a course at right angles +to that followed by the lad, who was quick to realize his peril. He knew +that every second he<span class="pagenum"><a name="p36" id="p36">36</a></span> remained thus exposed he was likely to be seen. He +had hardly taken a glance of his enemy, when he stooped so that his +knees almost touched the ground, and moved as noiselessly and quickly as +he could to the nearest tree, behind which he took shelter.</p> + +<p>This tree was an oak, large enough to hide two such boys, standing side +by side, so that the youth felt secure for the time.</p> + +<p>"Ah, if I only had me gun," was the regret that naturally came to him; +"I would quickly settle with the spalpeen that stole old Brindle, and +now wants to run away wid me."</p> + +<p>It will be admitted that the situation of Terry was peculiar, for he was +quite close to the warrior, who, there was every reason to believe, was +hunting for him, and who was so nigh that there was imminent danger of +discovery. It might be asked why the redskin should have taken this +course, for in some respects it had more than one absurd feature. If he +wanted to kill a white person, all this maneuvering with a cow-bell was +ridiculous, while his conduct from first to last was in some respects +unreasonable. The best explanation<span class="pagenum"><a name="p37" id="p37">37</a></span> was that which was made sometime +afterward by a person, who as yet has not been introduced to the reader, +but who, when he does appear, will be admitted to be the best judge. I +allude to Deerfoot the Shawanoe.</p> + +<p>The Indian with the cow-bell was a Winnebago warrior, whose home was a +long ways to the northward, but who had gone thither in company with +several others on what may be called a tour of investigation. The +driving off of the cow was probably an inspiration of the moment. The +Indians kept her until they had got all the milk they wanted, first +removing the bell so that her friends could not recover her until they +were through. The stratagem which I have been describing was an +afterthought. None of the Winnebagos except the one who tried the plan +would have any thing to do with it, though they were willing enough that +every white person in the settlement of Greville should perish, if the +same could be brought about without risk to them.</p> + +<p>Left to himself, the Winnebago decided to make a prisoner of whomsoever +should be sent to find the cow. He had reason to believe that<span class="pagenum"><a name="p38" id="p38">38</a></span> this +person would be a youth, and since every thing was so quiet in that +section, he was not likely to be armed. Hence, it would be an easy +matter to decoy him a goodly distance from the settlement, when the +warrior could pounce upon, make him a prisoner and compel him to go with +him. After the couple were far enough from the settlement the lad could +be put to death, if his captor or the party to which the captor +belonged, should so elect.</p> + +<p>Terry Clark had stood behind the sheltering tree for perhaps five +minutes, when he became aware of an alarming fact: the warrior with the +bell was slowly approaching him. The faint tinkle that it gave out once +or twice told this, and when finally the lad ventured to peep around the +side of the tree, the sight was a startling one. The Indian had risen +almost to the upright posture, and holding the gun and bell as +described, was moving directly toward the oak behind which the boy +stood. Moreover at the moment the latter took the cautious look, the +visage of the Indian showed that he was looking straight at the tree.</p> + +<p>"By the powers!" gasped Terry, "but the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p39" id="p39">39</a></span> spalpeen observed me, and I'm +thinkin' that he saw me before I did him."</p> + +<p>It was not at all unlikely that such was the case. The Indian may have +felt sure of his victim, and so he indulged in a little by-play, as a +cat often does with a mouse. Such a cruel proceeding was characteristic +of his race.</p> + +<p>The belief that this was the case placed Terry Clark in a most trying +position. He was without the means with which to defend himself, and in +fact was hopeless. It was useless to try to run away, for if the warrior +could not overtake him at once, he could bring him down with his rifle.</p> + +<p>You know how rare a thing it is for an Irishman to submit meekly, even +when there is no hope in resistance. Terry muttered:</p> + +<p>"If he lays hands on me, there's going to be a fight; I wish Fred was +near, that he could see that I git fair play."</p> + +<p>No person could have been more in earnest than was the Irish lad.</p> + +<p>"I'll wait till his head comes round the corner of that tree and then +I'll give him a whack that'll tumble him over on his back,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p40" id="p40">40</a></span> afore he +knows what's the matter wid him; then I'll amuse myself wid hammerin' +him after he is down till I git tired and then I'll take his gun and +knife and tomahawk and the bell and make him walk before me to the +sittlement."</p> + +<p>The lad had just gone over in his mind this roseate programme, when a +soft tinkle told him that the Winnebago was within a few steps of the +tree; and at the same moment that the youth made this interesting +discovery, another still more astonishing one broke upon him.</p> + +<p>Just fifty feet away and behind a trunk very similar to the one that +sheltered the lad, stood a second Indian warrior. His position was such +that he was in plain view of Terry, though the Winnebago could not see +him except when the latter should approach quite close to the shelter of +the boy. The strange Indian was closely watching the hostile one, and, +with that remarkable intuition that sometimes comes to a person in grave +crises, Terry was convinced that he was an enemy of the Winnebago, +though whether a friend of the youth was not so certain.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p41" id="p41">41</a></span></p> + +<p>In his amazement, the lad for the moment forgot his own danger and gave +his attention to the stranger, who was the most striking looking warrior +he had ever seen. He seemed to be about eighteen or twenty years of age, +and was the picture of manly grace and beauty.</p> + +<p>He had long, luxuriant black hair which hung about his shoulders, being +gathered by a loose band at the neck, so as to keep it from getting in +front of his eyes. In the crown of this natural covering were thrust +three stained eagle feathers, while there were two rows of colored beads +around the neck. The fringed hunting shirt which reached almost to his +knees was of a dull, yellow color and the sash or belt around the waist +was of a dark red. A small but handsome bracelet encircled his left +wrist, and the fringes of his leggins were of varied and brilliant hues, +as were the beaded moccasins that incased his shapely feet. A tomahawk +and knife were in his girdle, while he held a finely ornamented rifle in +his right hand, the manner in which he manipulated the weapon showing +that he was left-handed.</p> + +<p>The face was strikingly fine, the nose being<span class="pagenum"><a name="p42" id="p42">42</a></span> slightly aquiline, the +cheek bones less prominent, and the whole contour more symmetrical than +is generally the case with his race. There was something in the +situation that evidently amused him, for Terry saw him smile so +unmistakably that he noticed his small and regular white teeth.</p> + +<p>It was plain that he was watching the movements of the Winnebago, though +he said nothing, and made no gesture to the lad, whose wondering look he +must have understood. Be that as it may, the sight of the strange +Indian, and the belief that he was an enemy of the other with the +cow-bell, inspired the Irish lad with a courage that he would not have +known had the other warrior been absent.</p> + +<p>"He's waiting to see how I condooct mesilf when the spalpeen lays hands +on me," thought Terence; "he won't have to wait long."</p> + +<p>The youth was right. The crouching Winnebago, doubtless feeling that he +had no immediate use for the bell that had served him so well, dropped +it to the ground beside him, and holding only his rifle in hand, stepped +forward with the same cat-like tread that had marked<span class="pagenum"><a name="p43" id="p43">43</a></span> his advance from +the first. He knew that his victim was shrinking behind the trunk of the +oak, and he was having his own peculiar sport with him.</p> + +<p>So intense was the attention of Terry that he heard distinctly the +footsteps of the warrior, who a moment later was close enough to touch +the tree with his hand, had he been so minded.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p44" id="p44">44</a></span> +<a name="A_FRIEND_IN_NEED_825" id="A_FRIEND_IN_NEED_825"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER V.</h2> +<h3>A FRIEND IN NEED.</h3> +</div> + +<p>Terry Clark, the Irish lad, placed his right foot behind the left, his +weight equally supported on both, and stood as rigid as iron, with both +fists clinched and half raised, in the attitude of one holding himself +ready to use nature's weapons to his utmost ability.</p> + +<p>He heard the soft moccasin press the layer of brown autumn leaves, and +the next moment the point of a knobby, painted nose came slowly in sight +around the side of the trunk, followed by the sloping forehead, the +hideous face and the shoulders of the warrior, whose right hand was held +so far to the rear with the gun that it was the last to come into view.</p> + +<p>As the Winnebago caught sight of the white-faced boy, his countenance +was disfigured by a grin that made it more repulsive than before.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p45" id="p45">45</a></span></p> + +<p>"Oogh! brudder!—oogh!—Yenghese—"</p> + +<p>Just then Terry Clark let fly. He was a lusty lad, and he landed both +fists, one after another, squarely in the painted face, with such force +that the warrior was knocked completely off his feet. He went over +backward as though from the kick of a horse; but, contrary to the hopes +of his assailant, he did not let go of his gun. Had he done so, the +youth would have caught it up and shot him before he could regain his +feet.</p> + +<p>The blow was most presumptuous, and would have insured the death of the +one who gave it but for the intervention of the second Indian, who +seemed to take but a couple of bounds from the tree near which he was +standing when he landed on the spot. The infuriated Winnebago was in the +act of clambering to his feet, when he caught sight of the lithe, +graceful warrior, standing only a couple of steps away, with loaded +rifle pointed at him.</p> + +<p>"Dog of a Winnebago," he said in a voice slightly above an ordinary +tone; "if he harms the pale face, he shall die!"</p> + +<p>There are some expressions so forcible that<span class="pagenum"><a name="p46" id="p46">46</a></span> they can not be made more +so. The young Indian spoke in the lingo of the Winnebago, whose totem he +had recognized, but his posture, erect on his feet, with his cocked +rifle in such a position that he had only to pull the trigger to send +the bullet through the bronzed skull before him;—all this required no +words of explanation. The Winnebago grasped the situation, and, to use +the homely expression common at this day, he saw that the other "had the +drop" on him.</p> + +<p>The Indian, though larger, older, heavier and stronger, was taken at +such disadvantage that he ceased his effort to rise, and looked up at +his conqueror with a helplessness so grotesque that under other +circumstances it would have caused a smile. Indeed, Terry Clark did +indulge in a slight laugh, for he saw that it was safe to do so; the +Winnebago was on the ground before his master.</p> + +<p>"If ye want me to ring the old coow-bell, I'll be glad to obleege, for +the performance looks as if a little moosic would give tone to the same. +Howsumever, I'll step back and let this good looking young gintleman run +the show."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p47" id="p47">47</a></span></p> + +<p>Thereupon Terry withdrew several paces and watched the proceedings with +a depth of interest that can be fully understood.</p> + +<p>The look of the Winnebago, who was half reclining on his side, +supporting his body with the hand that grasped his gun, plainly +indicated the question that came from his lips.</p> + +<p>"Why does my brother look with evil eyes on the Wolf, who has come from +the lodges of the Winnebagos? Are not all red men brothers?"</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot is a Shawanoe, whose warriors have consorted with those of the +Winnebagos; but Deerfoot has left his lodge beyond the Mississippi and +lives alone in the woods. He will not hurt the brave Winnebago who +fights men, but he slays the Wolf that bites the children of the pale +faces, that have never harmed him."</p> + +<p>Possibly the Wolf was inclined to argue the matter with the Shawanoe, +who had caught him at such disadvantage; but the manner and words of +Deerfoot showed that he was in no mood for discussion.</p> + +<p>"What does my brother want?" asked the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p48" id="p48">48</a></span> Winnebago, in a voice that +proved all fight had left him. The most, indeed, that he ventured to do +was gently to rub his forehead and nose, where the fists of the sturdy +Terry Clark had landed.</p> + +<p>"Let the Wolf rise to his feet, but when he does so, his gun must lie on +the ground."</p> + +<p>This was a harsh order, but there was no help for it; the Indian +hesitated a moment, and then, black and scowling, he slowly assumed the +upright posture, and, folding his arms across his chest, looked in the +face of the bright-eyed Deerfoot, to signify that he was awaiting his +next command.</p> + +<p>"The Wolf shall now turn his face away from Deerfoot."</p> + +<p>The Winnebago obeyed the order as promptly as if he were a soldier +undergoing drill.</p> + +<p>"Let my brother now raise his eyes, until he sees the beech with the +white trunk," said Deerfoot, using the word "brother" for the first +time.</p> + +<p>The object to which he alluded was perhaps fifty yards distant, the +light color of the bark showing only here and there among the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p49" id="p49">49</a></span> branches +and undergrowth that happened to be less frequent than in other +directions. The Wolf signified that he recognized the tree to which his +conqueror referred.</p> + +<p>"Now let my brother run; when he reaches the beech he can leap behind +it, and it will shield his body; if my brother is slow Deerfoot may fire +his gun and Wolf will never bite again."</p> + +<p>The Winnebago wanted no explanation of this threat. It was hard for him +to depart, leaving his rifle, but it was harder for him to lose his +life, and he did not hesitate as to the choice. He made one tremendous +bound that carried him a dozen feet, and then sped through the wood like +a frightened deer. When he had passed half of the intervening distance, +he seemed to fancy that he was not making satisfactory time for the +Shawanoe, who, he doubtless imagined, was standing with leveled gun, +finger on the trigger. He therefore began leaping from side to side, so +as to disconcert the aim of the dreaded Deerfoot. In the hope also of +further confusing him, he emitted several frenzied whoops, which added +such grotesqueness<span class="pagenum"><a name="p50" id="p50">50</a></span> to the scene that Terry Clark threw back his head +and made the woods ring with laughter.</p> + +<p>"I never saw a frog hop about like that, which beats any show."</p> + +<p>Deerfoot did not have his rifle cocked or in position. The moment the +Wolf started, he saw how great his fright was, and, lowering the flint +of the weapon, he rested the stock on the ground and watched the antics +of the fugitive. The Shawanoe, unlike most of his race, had a vein of +humor in his composition. When Terry broke into mirth, he too laughed, +but it was simply a smile, accompanied by a sparkle of his bright eyes +which showed how much he enjoyed the scene.</p> + +<p>The moment the Wolf arrived at the beech, he darted behind it, and for +the first time looked over his shoulder. The sight could not have been +reassuring, for he continued his frenzied flight until the keen ear of +the Shawanoe could no longer hear him threshing through the wood.</p> + +<p>By this time Terry Clark had made up his mind that whoever the new +arrival might be, he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="p51" id="p51">51</a></span> a friend. The Irish lad had not been able to +understand any of the words that passed between the two, though their +actions were eloquent enough to render much explanation unnecessary. But +a person who treated the Winnebago in such style could not feel +otherwise than friendly toward the one in whose behalf the interference +was made. Terry blushed a little as he walked forward and reached out +his honest hand.</p> + +<p>"If it's all the same to ye, I'll be glad to give that purty hand of +yours an owld-fashioned shake, such as a fellow sometimes gits when he +catches the chills an' faver."</p> + +<p>Deerfoot looked at the jolly lad with an odd expression, as he gave him +his hand, which, I need not say, was shaken with enthusiasm. The young +Shawanoe smiled in his own shadowy way and returned the pressure warmly.</p> + +<p>"My brother is happy," said he when the salute was finished; "it makes +the heart of Deerfoot glad that he could be his friend."</p> + +<p>"Ye were a friend indade, though ye'll admit,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p52" id="p52">52</a></span> Deerfut, that I toppled +over the spalpeen in foine style, now didn't I?"</p> + +<p>"The Wolf who is a Winnebago, fell as though the lightning struck him."</p> + +<p>"How is it," asked Terry with no little curiosity, "that ye, who are as +full-blooded an Injin as the Winnebago, can talk the English with almost +as foine an accint as meself?"</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot has lived among the pale faces; when he was a small child he +went with the Shawanoes to harm the white men, but they took him +prisoner; they treated him kindly, and told him about God, who loves all +His children, whether they be white or red, or the color of the night; +they showed him how to read books, and to make his name and words on +paper, so that others might read."</p> + +<p>"Can ye read and write?" asked the astonished Terry.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot smiled and nodded his head.</p> + +<p>"Well, well, that bates ivery thing!" said Terry, who instantly repeated +the absurd belief of many of his race, by adding, "I didn't s'pose that +an Injin could learn."</p> + +<p>Without replying to the last remark, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p53" id="p53">53</a></span> Shawanoe, looking the lad +steadily in the eye, said, "Deerfoot has a message for Fred Linden; does +my brother know him?"</p> + +<p>"Do I know him?" repeated Terry; "I know the same better than I know +mesilf; he started wid me to hunt the coow, and I rickons that he can't +be very fur away."</p> + +<p>"He's coming," quietly said Deerfoot, looking off to the left of Terry, +as if about to salute a new arrival. The Irish lad wheeled in his quick +way, but his sharp eyes caught no glimpse of his approaching friend.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p54" id="p54">54</a></span> +<a name="FRED_LINDEN_RECEIVES_A_MESSAGE_FROM_THE_OZARK_CAMP_1028" id="FRED_LINDEN_RECEIVES_A_MESSAGE_FROM_THE_OZARK_CAMP_1028"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2> +<h3>FRED LINDEN RECEIVES A MESSAGE FROM THE OZARK CAMP.</h3> +</div> + +<p>As soon as Fred Linden discovered the deception respecting the cow-bell, +he made all haste toward the point whence came the sound, in the hope of +warning Terry in time to save him from treachery. You will understand +how quickly events passed when told that, although he came almost +directly to the spot, he did not reach it until Deerfoot the Shawanoe +asked for him. This wonderful Indian, of whom I shall have considerably +more to tell, heard the coming of the lad whom he had never seen, before +either the eye or ear of Terry Clark could detect his approach.</p> + +<p>As may well be supposed, Fred Linden was amazed at what met his eyes. +The sight of Terry in friendly converse with a strange Indian was the +opposite of what he expected<span class="pagenum"><a name="p55" id="p55">55</a></span> to see. He slackened his hurried walk and +looked inquiringly at Terry. The latter could talk fast when he chose, +and the few sentences he rattled off as his companion came up made the +matter tolerably clear.</p> + +<p>While the questioning and talk were going on, Deerfoot stood leaning on +his long gun and gazing with a certain natural dignity at the two +friends. He said nothing nor did he appear to show any special +curiosity, though had any one studied his countenance, he would have +seen that he was watching Fred Linden. He had said that he carried a +message to him, and it was no more than natural that he should wish to +know something about him.</p> + +<p>As for Fred himself he did not try to hide his profound interest in the +remarkable warrior who had appeared at such an opportune time, but of +whom he had never before heard a word. He knew that the settlers along +the frontier often found valuable allies in the friendly Indians, and he +concluded that this red man was one of those who, having been maltreated +by his own people or kindly used by the whites, had given his loyalty to +the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p56" id="p56">56</a></span> latter; for in the brief narrative of Terry Clark, he had time only +to tell the leading facts about the rescue of himself. Just then, +therefore, the Irish lad knew more about Deerfoot than did the American.</p> + +<p>But it takes only a little time for such a group to become acquainted +with each other. A general handshaking followed, and it happened more +than once that all three were talking at the same moment. Had any one +been able to translate the expression of Deerfoot's countenance, he +would have seen that he was pleased with both the lads whom he now met +for the first time. There was a rollicking good nature, a cheery courage +and ever bubbling hopefulness about Terry that were contagious, and like +so much sunshine that went with him wherever he went.</p> + +<p>Fred Linden was of that manly mold and rugged appearance that he would +have drawn favorable attention wherever he might be.</p> + +<p>Such a lad in these days would have been picked out as a born athlete, +one who was capable, with proper training, to become a first-class ball +player, oarsman or boxer. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="p57" id="p57">57</a></span> was a swift runner, a strong leaper, an +expert rifle shot, and his rugged frame and rough, outdoor life gave +him an endurance that few men could surpass. He was as tall as Deerfoot, +with broad shoulders, muscular arms and legs, clear, keen eyes, a fine +chest and a symmetrical frame.</p> + +<p>The clothes of the two boys, it is hardly necessary to say, were of +homespun, for a hundred years ago it would have been hard for them to +procure any other kind of goods. The short coat was somewhat like those +used to-day by bicyclists, reaching only a short distance below the +waist, where the girdle was fastened in front. The trowsers, of the same +material, reached to the knees, below which were the hunting leggins, +common along the border. Then came the warm, woolen stockings and thick, +heavy shoes, while the head was surmounted by a woolen cap, made by the +deft fingers at home, and without any pattern. It was soft, and having +no forepiece, sat on the head in whichever position it happened to be +first placed. In this respect it resembled the valuable sealskins of the +present day. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="p58" id="p58">58</a></span> coats of the lads were open in front, and within were +the pockets, which they used as required, the trowsers also being +provided with a couple of these prime necessities.</p> + +<p>When the rattling conversation had gone on for several minutes, Terry +ran a few steps and picked up the bell that the Indian had placed on the +ground. The string which had held it about the neck of the animal was +missing, having probably been cut by the knife of the impatient Wolf.</p> + +<p>"I'll take the same back home wid me and put it on Brindle if I iver +maat her; I shouldn't be so 'stonished that I couldn't spake if I should +find that the spalpeen had killed her."</p> + +<p>"No," said Fred, "she isn't harmed; I found her off yonder, cropping the +buds and leaves, as innocently as though she hadn't done any thing wrong +in leading us on this long chase. I started her toward home, and if she +keeps up the gait she must be pretty near there by this time."</p> + +<p>This was good news to Terry, for the loss of the animal would have been +serious to the family of Mr. MacClaskey, her owner. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="p59" id="p59">59</a></span> Irish lad had +hardly picked up the bell when Deerfoot pointed to the gun lying on the +ground, where it had been left by the Wolf.</p> + +<p>"That belongs to my brother."</p> + +<p>The delighted Terry could hardly believe what was told him, and he stood +looking doubtfully at Deerfoot, as if suspecting he had heard him amiss.</p> + +<p>"It was you who captured the gun, Deerfoot, and so, if it belongs to any +one, ye are the spalpeen."</p> + +<p>The Shawanoe looked down at his own handsome weapon and shook his head. +He had no need of any other weapon. Besides, this singular youth could +not have conscientiously taken it. He did not feel justified in keeping +it for his own use, no matter if in sore need of such a weapon; but, +since the Winnebago had made his demonstration against Terry Clark, and +was compelled to leave the gun behind, when he was permitted to go, it +seemed proper that the prize should fall into the hands of the Irish +lad.</p> + +<p>What gave special propriety to the act was the fact that, although Fred +Linden was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p60" id="p60">60</a></span> owner of a fine gun, Terry had none. When his father +lost his life, his rifle was never recovered, and though there was one +in the family of MacClaskey, the youth had no claim upon it. He longed +for such a weapon, with a longing that it would be hard to understand. +The prize, therefore, was appreciated to its full value. He picked it up +with an embarrassed grin, which quickly became natural when he turned it +over in his hands and saw what an excellent piece it was.</p> + +<p>"More than likely it belonged to a white man in the first place," said +Fred; "so it is right enough that it should come back to one of his own +race."</p> + +<p>"It's loaded," said Terry, slightly raising the hammer and noticing the +powder in the pan. Then he brought the gun to his shoulder and pointing +it at the white trunk of the beech, which partly showed through the +intervening branches and undergrowth, he said:</p> + +<p>"If the spalpeen should peep out from behind that tree, I'm thinkin' I +could hit him a harder blow than when I landed me two fists on his +mug."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p61" id="p61">61</a></span></p> + +<p>"The Winnebago is a long ways off," said Deerfoot, with a shake of his +head; "he may meet my brother some day, but it will not be in this +place."</p> + +<p>The young Shawanoe having learned all that was to be learned about his +young friends, now reached his hand in the breast of his hunting shirt +and drew out a small, closely-printed Bible, from between the leaves of +which he took a piece of paper that had been folded several times. He +glanced at the superscription, as if to make sure it was right, and then +handed it to Fred, who, as may be supposed, took it with astonishment. +He recognized the penciled writing as that of his father.</p> + +<p>Parting the folds, he read the following:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">My Dear Fred</span>: **</p> + +<p>You know that when we left home there were three of us, Hardin, +Bowlby and myself. There are three of us still, but Bowlby +considers himself of no account for some weeks to come, because of +a hurt to his foot which will prevent his getting around for a long +time. Such being the case, I have concluded, now that I have the +chance, to send for you to join us. You are old enough and strong +enough to make a full hand, and you can give us good help. Since we +have all the animals, you will come afoot, but you will find no +trouble in keeping<span class="pagenum"><a name="p62" id="p62">62</a></span> to the trail, which has been traveled often +enough to make it plain. It is no more than a hundred miles from +Greville to our camp at the foot of the Ozark Mountains, so you +ought to have no difficulty in reaching here in the course of three +or four days. Love to your mother and Edith.</p> + +<p>I send this by a young Shawanoe warrior, called Deerfoot. He is the +most remarkable Indian I ever knew. I shall have a good deal to +tell you about him when you reach here.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">Your Father</span>. </p></div> + +<p>"Deerfoot bids his brothers good-by," said the young Indian, offering +his hand, when he saw Fred had finished reading his letter; "he hopes +that he shall see them again."</p> + +<p>"It won't be our fault if he doesn't," was the cordial response of Fred +Linden, in which Terry heartily joined him. After a few more pleasant +words they parted, Deerfoot following in the footsteps of the fleeing +Winnebago, while the others moved to the northward in the direction of +the creek. They turned aside a little from the direct course so as to +hunt for Brindle, that Fred had seen, but she was not found. To their +delight, however, they saw her footprints on the edge of the creek, +proving that she had gone home with the directness of one who felt +remorse for wandering from<span class="pagenum"><a name="p63" id="p63">63</a></span> the straight path. She had swum the stream, +and was doubtless before the MacClaskey cabin at that moment.</p> + +<p>But standing close to the edge of the creek, the boys became aware of a +hard fact: it had not only risen with great rapidity during the last +half hour, so as to become a rushing torrent, but it was still rising so +fast that it was extremely dangerous for the boys to try to cross it in +the canoe. Indeed, they hesitated to make the attempt, but finally +concluded to do so.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p64" id="p64">64</a></span> +<a name="THE_HUNTERS_OF_OZARK_1223" id="THE_HUNTERS_OF_OZARK_1223"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2> +<h3>THE HUNTERS OF OZARK.</h3> +</div> + +<p>I must tell you how it was that Deerfoot the Shawanoe came to bring the +important letter of George Linden to his son Frederick.</p> + +<p>It has already been stated that it was the custom of a party of hunters +and trappers to leave the settlement of Greville in the autumn of each +year and spend most of the cold weather among the streams at the foot of +a certain part of the Ozark Mountains. At that period, the fur bearing +animals abounded in the section, as they were found in hundreds of other +portions of the vast area known under the general name of the Louisiana +Territory. You must bear in mind that there were thousands of square +miles that had not been trodden by a white man, and so sparse were the +Indian villages that large portions of the country remained to be +visited even by them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p65" id="p65">65</a></span></p> + +<p>Beaver, otter, foxes, bears, and buffaloes were the chief animals that +were afterward driven west by the advancing tide of civilization, until +the agents of the Missouri and Western Fur Companies were forced to do +most of their work in the far west and north-west, where they came in +collision with that vast monopoly known as the Hudson Bay Company, +which, until recent years, not only trapped and hunted throughout +Oregon, but along the Pacific coast as far south as California.</p> + +<p>George Linden, Rufus Hardin and James Bowlby composed the party who, in +the autumn of the year of which I am writing, rode each a horse a +hundred miles to the south of the frontier settlement of Greville, and +pitched their tent at the foot of the Ozark range. Beside the animals +ridden, each hunter took a pack-horse to help bring back the peltries +that were to be gathered during the cold weather. As a matter of course, +they were provided with guns and plenty of munitions, and indeed with +every necessity for their limited wants. They had spent several winters +there and knew what was before them. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="p66" id="p66">66</a></span> had hunted and trapped for +years in other parts of the great west, and more than once had made the +long journey to the post of St. Louis to dispose of their furs, a +necessity that, as I have explained, was removed by the annual visit of +the agents with their long train of pack-horses to gather up the +peltries.</p> + +<p>And so, without giving any of the interesting particulars of the ride +southward from Greville, let us take a look at the little party gathered +at their primitive camp in the wild Ozark region.</p> + +<p>The six horses had been relieved of their burdens on reaching the place, +and were turned loose to crop the grass that was plentiful in many +places. Although there was snow now and then through the winter, there +was hardly enough to cause any suffering on the part of the animals. +When the storms, however, were violent or prolonged, the hardy beasts +were provided with some of the stores of dried grass that was kept in +stock, as may be said. In case that gave out they could make shift with +the cottonwood and other trees, whose bark was not lacking in succulent +qualities.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p67" id="p67">67</a></span></p> + +<p>Although a tolerable shelter could have been found in any one of the +numerous caves within reach, the hunters preferred to erect a rough +cabin, that was almost strong enough to withstand a cyclone. The keen +axes enabled them to trim off the interfering limbs, and they were +joined at the corners so well that very little, if any, rain or snow +could force its way through. Other logs and branches were laid across +the top and ends fastened to the logs beneath by means of withes, so +that the roof was not likely to be carried away unless the cabin itself +went with it.</p> + +<p>On the top of the roof was a thick layer of branches and leaves, packed +so closely that little moisture could find its way through. There were +no windows, for none was needed. The single door in front was large +enough to allow free egress and ingress. At night, when there was a +possibility that some curious wild animal might come snuffing around, +the door was closed by means of a framework of thick limbs, also +fastened together with withes, swinging on leathern hinges, and made +secure by a brace leaning against it from the inside.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p68" id="p68">68</a></span></p> + +<p>Within this structure were stored their supplies, and the blankets on +which they slept were spread upon the bare ground. Their slumber was +sweeter, too, than it would have been had they stretched themselves on +"downy beds of ease," for health and weariness are two soporifics which +art can never supplant.</p> + +<p>The traps and appurtenances used in their toil were never taken away +from the place, for there was no call to do so. Such repairs as were +needed from time to time were made in the cabin or on the spot, as the +necessity arose. The rifles, of course, furnished the food needed, while +an abundance of fish could be taken at any time from the streams in the +neighborhood.</p> + +<p>A diet solely of flesh and fish is not acceptable to any one. Therefore, +among the supplies annually brought to the cabin, were a quantity of +coarse flour, meal, sugar, coffee, salt and tea. It may be said, that in +one respect they were like modern campers out, except that they took the +wrong season of the year for what so many boys consider the acme of +enjoyment.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p69" id="p69">69</a></span></p> + +<p>There was little in the appearance of the three men to call for special +description. All were in middle life, strong, rugged, and inured to +hardship. Linden was rather tall, his face covered by a heavy beard in +which not a gray hair had yet appeared. Hardin was fully as tall, with +shoulders somewhat bent, and his scant, dark beard was plentifully +sprinkled with gray. Bowlby was short and stocky in appearance. When in +the woods he allowed his black beard to grow all over his face, but at +home he was always smooth-shaven. He was of a swarthy complexion, +inclined to be silent, and often moody, but like his companions he was +brave, industrious and patient, holding a strong dislike of all Indians, +though not inclined to go to any unjustifiable length in his feelings.</p> + +<p>The dress of the three men was similar to that of Fred and Terry, which +has already been described. No one of them knew any thing about the +modern overcoat or cloak. If there should come a spell of unusually +severe weather, they had only to wrap a blanket or buffalo robe about +the shoulders when compelled<span class="pagenum"><a name="p70" id="p70">70</a></span> to visit the traps or remain long +outdoors. Should it become necessary to kindle a fire within the cabin +for the sake of warmth, a broad, flat stone was removed from an opening +in the roof directly over the blaze, and the smoke, if so inclined, +found its way to the clear air outside. The cooking was done under the +adjoining trees. Of course it was of the most primitive character, but +it suited, and that is all that is necessary.</p> + +<p>The hunters reached their cabin about the middle of the forenoon of an +autumn day. They had eaten their regular morning meal, and they got to +work without delay. The horses were unloaded and turned adrift, the +stores safely housed, the blankets spread on the floor of simple earth +in the cabin, and then the men scattered to look after their traps. This +was a large job, for the implements had to be examined and many of them +slightly repaired, after which they must be carried long distances and +set.</p> + +<p>These traps were of the ordinary pattern, such as have been in general +use for hundreds of years. The iron jaws was forced wide apart<span class="pagenum"><a name="p71" id="p71">71</a></span> and kept +in place by a catch, which was sprung by a slight pressure on the broad, +flat portion in the middle. The trap being carefully hidden from sight, +the unsuspecting animal had hardly time to rest one paw on this plate, +when the fierce jaws, impelled by steel springs of prodigious strength, +came together with the suddenness of lightning, and the animal, whatever +he be, was in a grip from which there was no escape.</p> + +<p>You can understand the care required to set these traps so that they +would do their work. The beaver is highly intelligent, and quick to +detect the signs of man's presence. Nothing can tempt him to venture +where he sees that his worst enemy has been before him. The fox is the +synonym of cunning, and will often outwit the shrewdest trapper. He will +walk around the trap and stealthily secure the bait without harm to +himself. One of those animals has been known to reach forward and spring +the implement, jerking back his paw quickly enough to escape the sharp +teeth. A fox, too, when caught in a steel trap will sometimes gnaw off +the leg just above where it is<span class="pagenum"><a name="p72" id="p72">72</a></span> imprisoned, and afterward go through +life with little inconvenience on three legs. You may be sure that he is +never caught again in that fashion.</p> + +<p>It was easy to see where the sagacious beavers were in the habit of +leaving the water and climbing the bank. The trap was carefully placed +below the surface out of sight, and often it had no bait at all, for it +would seem that the bait itself was liable to awaken the suspicion of +the beavers. Occasionally, however, when it was desirable to attract +them to the spot, an oily odoriferous substance obtained from the animal +itself was smeared over the ground near the bank.</p> + +<p>The otters were scarcer than the beavers, but were hunted much in the +same manner. For foxes and fur-bearing animals that roamed the the +woods, the steel trap was baited with such food as they were fond of +(which was about every thing), and they were so numerous through that +part of the territory that the hunters had little difficulty in securing +what was wanted.</p> + +<p>At the end of the second day all the traps<span class="pagenum"><a name="p73" id="p73">73</a></span> were in position, and the +three friends were grouped on the outside of the cabin smoking their +pipes and talking over the outlook for the winter, which all agreed was +favorable.</p> + +<p>The bison or buffaloes, of which mention has been made, were found in +the open spaces or prairies where there was plenty of grass. No such +multitudinous herds were seen as have been gathered in later years on +the western prairies, but there were enough to make very lively hunting +for the trio, who had shot and skinned several while on their way to the +beaver runs.</p> + +<p>Within a half hour's walk of the camp was a beaver dam fully half a mile +wide, built with astonishing skill and strength. The backwater flooded +the country for many square miles, and gave the remarkable animals just +the place they wanted for their curious huts, of which I shall have +something to tell you further on.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p74" id="p74">74</a></span> +<a name="A_WELCOME_ACQUAINTANCE_1411" id="A_WELCOME_ACQUAINTANCE_1411"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2> +<h3>A WELCOME ACQUAINTANCE.</h3> +</div> + +<p>On the fourth day after the arrival of the hunters at their cabin, the +accident of which Mr. Linden made mention befell Bowlby. It was early in +the morning, when the three were making their round of visits to the +traps. Since no two inspected the same ones, they were quite widely +separated from each other. Bowlby was walking over a rocky stretch of +land alongside the creek when a loose stone turned under his foot, +giving his ankle such a wrench that when he tried to stand he found he +could not bear the least weight on it. It was one of those hurts that +are more painful and troublesome than a fractured limb.</p> + +<p>"Here's a pretty go," he growled, as he sat down on the ground, his face +contorted with pain; "it'll be a long time before I'll be able to stand, +and the boys will have to bring one<span class="pagenum"><a name="p75" id="p75">75</a></span> of the hosses here or else carry me +home. <i>Hello!</i>"</p> + +<p>He shouted at the top of his voice, feeling no alarm, for he knew that +his friends would come to his relief before long, even if they did not +hear his voice; but then he reflected, as he sat on the ground beside +the two beavers that he had killed and was carrying to his home, that he +was in bad form if a wild animal should assail him, or there should +happen to be a hostile Indian prowling in the vicinity. He had left his +gun at the cabin, as was his practice, since he needed all his strength +to bring in the products of the traps.</p> + +<p>He was startled, therefore, after his third shout; an Indian warrior, +fully armed, walked out of the wood and came toward him; but his signs +of peace, and more than all, the words he uttered, removed his fears.</p> + +<p>"My brother suffers; Deerfoot will help him to his cabin."</p> + +<p>"If that's so," said the greatly relieved Bowlby, "you're just the chap +I'm waiting for. We'll leave these beavers here for the others to come +after, and if you'll let me lean<span class="pagenum"><a name="p76" id="p76">76</a></span> on your shoulder I guess I can hobble +back; but I'll have to lean heavy," he added, looking doubtfully at the +Indian, "and you ain't much more than a likely lad."</p> + +<p>"Let my brother try me," said Deerfoot, with a smile.</p> + +<p>The disabled hunter did try him, often compelled, as he was, to bear to +such an extent upon his new friend that it may be said the latter +sustained half his weight. The progress was slow, and when they reached +a small stream of water, Bowlby sat down and allowed the young Shawanoe +to bathe the inflamed limb. Great relief was felt.</p> + +<p>During this labored walk homeward, the two naturally talked a good deal +together and learned much about each other. Deerfoot said that he had +often hunted through the surrounding country, and he told why it was he +had found it necessary to leave his tribe on the other side of the +Mississippi. He said that he had spent more than one night in the +deserted cabin of Bowlby and his friends during the summer months, when +he found himself belated in the vicinity, and he once shot a<span class="pagenum"><a name="p77" id="p77">77</a></span> wolf that +was resolved on entering against his protest. It was his intention to +make a call upon the hunters, and if they needed his aid, he was glad to +give it in the way of helping trap or shoot game. You need not be told +that though James Bowlby felt an innate dislike of the American race, +there was now one exception: henceforth he was the sworn friend of +Deerfoot the Shawanoe.</p> + +<p>Linden and Hardin had got back from making their rounds, and were +wondering what could have delayed their friend, when they saw him +limping painfully on one foot, and supported by a fine looking young +Indian warrior. Their astonishment was great, for they could not +understand what it meant. Linden hastened to the help of Bowlby, but he +waved him aside and said no one could do as well as Deerfoot.</p> + +<p>While Hardin went out to bring in the two beavers that had been taken +from the traps by Bowlby, the latter was assisted to a seat on the log +in front of the cabin. Then Deerfoot insisted on giving attention to the +injured limb. It had swollen a great deal since he<span class="pagenum"><a name="p78" id="p78">78</a></span> bathed it. There was +nothing in the cabin in the way of ointment or liniment, but Deerfoot +hastened into the wood and soon came back with the leaves of some plant +whose virtues seemed to be well known to him. These were wrapped in a +piece of linen, which the establishment managed to afford, and pounded +to a pulp, and then the poultice was gently applied to the inflamed +ankle. Bowlby declared that it felt better at once, but his face +lengthened when Deerfoot told him that it would be a moon, or several +weeks, before he would fully recover the use of his limb.</p> + +<p>"That will make us short-handed, and we need every one," said Mr. +Linden; "I wish Fred was here to give us help."</p> + +<p>"I think I can ride my hoss to Greville," said Bowlby, "and bring him +back with me."</p> + +<p>"That is hardly worth while."</p> + +<p>"Where is the home of my brother?" gently asked Deerfoot.</p> + +<p>"At the settlement of Greville, about a hundred miles to the north."</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot knows where it is," he replied;<span class="pagenum"><a name="p79" id="p79">79</a></span> "he will take a message for +his brother, for his footsteps lead him that way."</p> + +<p>"You're a mighty clever Indian; I will be ever so much obliged to you," +said Linden; "I will write a few lines to my boy, which will explain our +trouble, though I have no doubt you could take the message just as well; +but it is such an unexpected one that the boy might doubt it unless it +was in my own writing. See?"</p> + +<p>The Shawanoe nodded his head to signify that it was all clear to him. +Linden passed within the cabin, where he hurriedly wrote the few lines +that are already known to the reader, folded the paper, and wrote on the +outside:</p> + +<p> +"FREDERICK LINDEN, **ususual<br /> +Grevil."<br /> +</p> + +<p>He then handed it to Deerfoot, saying:</p> + +<p>"There is no special hurry, and if you are in the neighborhood of +Greville, and can make it convenient to leave that at my house, it will +be a great kindness to me."</p> + +<p>"If the Great Spirit does not will different it shall be in his hands +before the setting of three more suns, but," added Deerfoot, looking<span class="pagenum"><a name="p80" id="p80">80</a></span> at +the superscription on the back of the paper, "has not my brother made a +mistake?"</p> + +<p>"What do you mean?"</p> + +<p>"When Deerfoot writes the word 'Greville,' he adds two letters more than +does my brother; perhaps, though, Deerfoot is wrong."</p> + +<p>No pen can describe the amazement that appeared on the faces of Linden +and Bowlby. Here was a young Indian teaching a white man old enough to +be his father how to spell in the English language! Was the like ever +known?</p> + +<p>For a full minute neither of the hunters spoke. They were sitting on the +log, while Deerfoot was standing in front of them. He held his rifle in +his right hand and the folded piece of paper in his left, while he +looked inquiringly down in the faces of the two men, whose mouths and +eyes were open, as though they could not believe the evidence of their +own senses. Finally, with a deep sigh, Linden slowly rose to his feet—</p> + +<p>"Well, by gracious! if that don't beat every thing! Do you mean to say +that you can read <i>writing</i>? Impossible!"</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style='width:350px'> +<a name="illus-001" id="illus-001"></a> +<img src="images/ozark-080.jpg" alt=""For a full minute neither of the hunters spoke."" title="" width="350" /><br /> +<span class="caption">"For a full minute neither of the hunters spoke."</span> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="p81" id="p81">81</a></span>Then, as if still in doubt, he reached out and took the paper. Drawing a +stump of a lead pencil from his pocket he completed the word properly, +opened the paper, and handing it back to the Indian, said:</p> + +<p>"Let's hear you read <i>that</i>."</p> + +<p>"My brother writes so that any one can read his words," observed the +young Shawanoe by way of introduction, and then in a low, soft voice he +read the brief note from beginning to end.</p> + +<p>Bowlby, who had not yet spoken, seemed unable to express his emotions. +Unable himself to read, the attainment of the Indian was almost past +belief. As the best thing, therefore, that he could do, he solemnly +reached out his hand to Linden and shook it with great earnestness. +Settling painfully back on the log, he nodded his head several times as +if he was almost overcome, as indeed was the case.</p> + +<p>I should state at this point that although Linden had not seen fit to +make it known, he had heard of Deerfoot the Shawanoe long before. He +knew of some of his exploits in Kentucky, as well as those of later +years on<span class="pagenum"><a name="p82" id="p82">82</a></span> the western bank of the Mississippi (which are told in the +"Young Pioneer" and the "Log Cabin Series"), but he had never met the +youth, nor had he ever heard or suspected that he knew how to read and +write. Taking hold of his arm, he asked:</p> + +<p>"Where in the name of all that is wonderful did you learn that? When I +wrote to Fred that I would tell him some things about you I did not know +of the most extraordinary of all—that which I have just seen. Sit right +down here, between me and Jim, and let us know all about it."</p> + +<p>Deerfoot held back, but yielded, and finally answered in his modest way +the numerous questions with which he was plied. Bowlby had managed to +find his tongue, and his queries were about twice as numerous as those +of his companion. By the time that Deerfoot had time to rest, Hardin +came back, and there was little left to tell.</p> + +<p>The Shawanoe had captured the Hunters of the Ozark. They insisted that +he should stay to dinner with them, and he did so. Then he was badgered +to enter into a shooting match.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p83" id="p83">83</a></span> All were fine marksmen, and Linden was +the best shot in Greville. Using his own rifle, Deerfoot beat every one +of them. Then he exchanged weapons and allowed the crippled Bowlby to +rest his piece, and the Shawanoe beat all three just as badly as before. +They were delighted, and slapping him on the back, asked him to spend a +week with them, but he shook his head.</p> + +<p>The sun was already beyond the meridian, and there were reasons for his +departure which he could not explain. They liked him too well to insist, +though they made him promise that on the first chance he would make them +a visit. Then Deerfoot gravely pressed hands with all and quickly +disappeared in the woods, taking the trail that led toward Greville. You +have already learned about his meeting with Terry Clark and Fred +Linden.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p84" id="p84">84</a></span> +<a name="A_MISHAP_1618" id="A_MISHAP_1618"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2> +<h3>A MISHAP.</h3> +</div> + +<p>Fred Linden and Terry Clark were alarmed when, on their way home, they +came to the creek across which they had paddled only a short time +before. It was then the comparatively shallow stream that was scarcely +an obstacle in their path; now it was a rushing torrent, whose volume +was increasing with great rapidity. The sinuosities of the creek had +caused it to gather in a large part of the rain that had fallen some +miles away, and its usual boundaries were overflowed.</p> + +<p>It was well that Fred had tied his canoe to the tree that was quite a +distance from the stream, for had he not done so it would have been +swept away like an egg shell. As it was, the water had reached the base +of the tree, while the boat was bobbing up and down almost in a straight +line with the course of<span class="pagenum"><a name="p85" id="p85">85</a></span> the creek, as though it was tugging to get +loose.</p> + +<p>"My gracious, Terry!" said Fred, "this is a little worse than I +expected; it is going to be hard work to get across."</p> + +<p>"Ye are right for once," added the other, gravely shaking his head; +"them rapids are a little closer than I loike."</p> + +<p>"It seems to me," added Fred, who was unwilling to admit that he was +afraid to try the task, "that I have gone over the creek when it was +just as high and rapid, and have crossed at this place, too."</p> + +<p>"Who swung the paddle?"</p> + +<p>"Father did once and Mr. Bowlby at another time."</p> + +<p>"Did ye iver manage the paddle yersilf when the creek got onto one of +its tears?"</p> + +<p>"I don't remember that I have, but that has been only because the need +did not arise; I am not afraid to try it, even if you are."</p> + +<p>"Who said I was afraid?" demanded Terry; "I'm riddy to hop into the boat +and sway the paddle mesilf, and I'll do it, too."</p> + +<p>He stepped into the water, which was up to<span class="pagenum"><a name="p86" id="p86">86</a></span> his shoe tops, and began +drawing in the rawhide rope which held the frail boat from breaking +away. His companion laughed and said nothing until the canoe was at +their feet and drawn up on the land away from the rushing current.</p> + +<p>"Don't be quite so touchy, Terry; that boat belongs to me and I can +handle the paddle better than you; anyway I shall try to take us to the +other side, and all that you have to do is to keep those limbs and trees +from capsizing us."</p> + +<p>The time occupied in pulling the boat to the spot had given the Irish +lad a chance to regain his usual good nature, and he made no protest +against the decision of his companion, though Terry was no unskillful +handler of the paddle himself.</p> + +<p>The creek was probably over a hundred feet wide, and the roiled current +abounded with limbs and trees that swung up and down, sometimes out of +sight and then popping up again, as though they were frolicking in the +swift waters. It would require a strong arm and a cool head to force the +birchen craft through<span class="pagenum"><a name="p87" id="p87">87</a></span> these obstacles to the shore on the other side. +It must be admitted, too, that it was a piece of imprudence on the part +of the lads, who would have been wiser had they quietly waited where +they were until the overflow exhausted itself. A stream that rises so +fast subsides with the same quickness, and long before nightfall the +creek would shrink to proportions that would take away all peril to any +one in paddling across.</p> + +<p>They would have been compelled to go a long distance up stream before +finding a place where the crossing was easier, and it would have been +almost impossible to drag the canoe thither. They would have held fast +to one end of the rope and allowed it to dance through the rapids, so as +to allow them to make the passage below, where the great peril was +removed, had they not known that the chances were ten to one that it +would be snatched from their grasp, thus shutting them out altogether.</p> + +<p>Looking up and across the sloping clearing, the cabins forming the +settlement of Greville could be seen at no great distance. From several +of the stone chimneys the smoke was curling<span class="pagenum"><a name="p88" id="p88">88</a></span> lazily upward, and now and +then glimpses could be caught of persons moving hither and thither, but +no one appeared to be looking in the direction of the creek, or if any +one was doing so, he saw nothing of the two boys standing on the further +shore and debating with themselves the best course to follow. At any +rate no one would think they were unable to take care of themselves.</p> + +<p>Both Fred and Terry knew that there was but one prudent plan to follow; +that was quietly to wait where they were until near night, by which time +all danger would be gone. But neither proposed the course nor made +mention of it. It is natural for youth to be rash, and there was a +semblance of timidity in such a shrinking back that was repellent to +American and Irish lad alike. And so you will understand how it was that +each showed an eagerness to enter into the contest with the angry +current.</p> + +<p>You will see, too, how foolish they were, when I tell you that during +the few minutes they stood by the tree to which the rope had been tied +discussing the situation, they saw<span class="pagenum"><a name="p89" id="p89">89</a></span> the proof that the creek was +subsiding. There was a perceptible lowering of the surface, as was shown +by the soiled line against the trunk of the tree. Even Terry, when he +looked down, observed that he was not standing in quite as deep water as +he was a few minutes before. No danger, however, of his making mention +of it.</p> + +<p>It took but a minute or so to untie the long thong that was wrapped +about the limb, and then, as Fred was on the point of flinging the coil +into the bottom of the boat, the end of which was drawn up on the bank, +and to take up the paddle and push off, Terry, with some excitement, +caught his arm and said:</p> + +<p>"Plase wait a minute, will ye?"</p> + +<p>"What for?"</p> + +<p>"I'll not be gone long; howld the boat only for a twinkling."</p> + +<p>He ran a dozen steps or so from shore to where was the stump of a tree +that had probably been splintered by a thunder-bolt, and around which +sprouted a number of bushes that were dense enough to hide a large +object within. Carefully parting these, Terry laid<span class="pagenum"><a name="p90" id="p90">90</a></span> down his rifle and +the bell, and then as carefully smoothed the undergrowth in place. Then +he hurried back.</p> + +<p>"There are plinty of lads about me own size," said he, "but there's only +one gun that belongs to me, and if the canoe should upsit and both of us +get drowned I want to be sure and save me gun."</p> + +<p>Fred smiled at this Irish-like explanation, but he was glad that Terry +had left the gun on shore. It was safely hidden until he should wish to +get it again, while its presence in the canoe would be the worst kind of +encumbrance. The new owner was so charmed with his prize that he would +think more of saving that than of saving the boat. It was clear that the +task of Terry in fighting off the rushing timber would be almost as +difficult as that of guiding it across the swift stream.</p> + +<p>"In with you!" said Fred to Terry, who carefully seated himself near the +bow of the canoe and took up the long pole that lay in the bottom and +projected some distance over the end of the boat. Fred Linden gave it a +vigorous shove, landed in the stern, caught<span class="pagenum"><a name="p91" id="p91">91</a></span> up the paddle, and +instantly began his struggle.</p> + +<p>You will see the difficulty and danger of his task, and must therefore +join with me in condemning the lack of judgment showed by both. They had +to paddle more than a hundred feet across a furious torrent in which +were scores of uprooted trees, wrenched-off limbs, and craggy stumps, +all speeding downward with great swiftness and force. The course of the +boat being at right angles to these objects, must bring it in collision +with some of them, at the great risk of overturning or shattering the +canoe, that was not calculated to withstand any such blows.</p> + +<p>And yet, though the task was a hard one, there was little doubt that the +two lads could make their way across, provided they were given enough +time in which to do so; but there were the rapids, so near that their +roar was plainly heard. In case of an overturn or accident, the two +would be swept among them. It was the same, on a smaller scale, as if a +person should start to row across Niagara River, just above the falls, +where by vigorous work he<span class="pagenum"><a name="p92" id="p92">92</a></span> could make the passage, provided he did not +drop a stroke on the way. You will say that any one making such an +attempt placed little value on his own life.</p> + +<p>Fred Linden used his paddle after the manner of an Indian—that is, he +dipped the broad end first on one side of the boat and then on the +other. The paddle was not widened at each end, as is sometimes the case, +the one who wields it using the sides alternately and with great +rapidity. In calm water such a light structure as an Indian canoe can be +driven with great speed, and I have no doubt that the youths would have +made a speedy passage had it not been for the interference of the +floating objects to which I have referred.</p> + +<p>Ten feet from land Fred was forced to back water suddenly to avoid a +jagged stump that danced in front like a bull getting ready to charge, +and finally did strike the bow with a thump that startled both the +occupants.</p> + +<p>"Me pole slipped off the side of that," Terry explained, as he +brandished the stick in front on the lookout for the threatening +waste-wood;<span class="pagenum"><a name="p93" id="p93">93</a></span> "have a care that ye don't drive the boat agin something +that is stronger than the boat itsilf."</p> + +<p>By coolness, alertness and strength, Fred fought his way in safety until +probably one-third of the distance was passed. Then he saw the great +blunder he had made in trying to cross while the current was so high. +The constant fighting with the floating stumps and trees caused them to +lose so much ground—or rather water—that they were drifting +frightfully close to the rapids, whose roar grew plainer every moment. +But he had gone so far that it was as safe to keep on as to turn back, +and so he dipped the paddle and swung it with renewed vigor.</p> + +<p>"Look out!" he called to Terry, who in parrying the rush of a stump a +couple of yards in advance, did not notice one that was coming broadside +on, its presence betrayed by a tiny branch that protruded a few inches +above the surface like the fin of a shark. Fred did his utmost to avoid +it, but he was too slow, and a second later the pointed log not only +struck the side of the canoe, but capsized it.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p94" id="p94">94</a></span> +<a name="A_STRUGGLE_FOR_LIFE_1819" id="A_STRUGGLE_FOR_LIFE_1819"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER X.</h2> +<h3>A STRUGGLE FOR LIFE.</h3> +</div> + +<p>The partly sunken log crashed into the side of the canoe with such +suddenness that the craft was overturned and ruined, and the occupants +struggling in the water, before either had time to utter more than a +single exclamation.</p> + +<p>But they were powerful swimmers, and, but for the nearness of the +rapids, they could have afforded to laugh at their mishap. As it was, +Terry Clark shouted, as he blew the muddy water from his mouth:</p> + +<p>"What a sinsible young gintleman I was to lave me gun on the other +side."</p> + +<p>"We both would have been much more sensible had we left ourselves +there," rejoined Fred, who was struggling with might and main for the +land in front; "there's no time, Terry, to waste in talk; we've got to +swim<span class="pagenum"><a name="p95" id="p95">95</a></span> as never before, for nothing else will save us."</p> + +<p>The other seemed to rouse to his peril, for he made the only wise +response he could—which was putting forth every atom of strength and +skill that he possessed in the effort to breast the furious torrent.</p> + +<p>It is singular how often the slightest advantage turns the scale for +life or death. At the moment the canoe was smashed and capsized Terry +Clark was seated some six or eight feet nearer the shore toward which +they were paddling than was Fred Linden, and this difference remained +when the two went into the water and began swimming. The Irish lad was +fully as skillful as the other, and he did not lose an inch of the gain +thus given him.</p> + +<p>They were near the middle of the stream when the catastrophe took place. +Of course they would have done better had they been without any +clothing, but there was no time to remove any of that, and beyond +question the two made the most gallant kind of a fight for life.</p> + +<p>Fully aroused to his peril, Terry swam with<span class="pagenum"><a name="p96" id="p96">96</a></span> amazing power, his lips +compressed and his eyes fixed on the land in front, which seemed quite +near, and yet was never so hard to reach. The lad had proven by repeated +tests that he could swim faster on his left side then in any other +position. He quickly flung himself over and used his arms and legs like +one who knew fully the stake for which he was contending.</p> + +<p>By this recourse he actually gained on Fred, who continued to breast the +water with all the strength at his command. Terry was hopeful, and now +that he was fully roused, he did not waste his strength in shouting to +his companion. As he advanced in his crab-like fashion, he frequently +flirted his face around so as to look in front, and thus to keep aware +of his progress.</p> + +<p>"I'm doing well, and will make it," was his thought; "I hope Fred will +be as fortynate as mesilf."</p> + +<p>An important point was gained by swimming on his left side; his face was +turned up stream, and he caught sight of the floating timber quicker +than when advancing with his face toward the land. Thus it came about +that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="p97" id="p97">97</a></span> saw a plunging tree, or log, similar to that which had +destroyed the canoe, and when it was fully as close to him.</p> + +<p>Like a flash, Terry dove, intending to pass clean under it. He could not +know any thing about the portion beneath the surface, and was a little +startled when he found himself among leaves and a lot of small branches; +but he swam with the same vigor and skill when below as when above the +surface, and quickly fought his way through, rising on the other side a +considerable distance nearer land.</p> + +<p>But he gasped with terror, for during the brief period he lost a great +deal more than he gained. A furtive glance to the left showed him the +mist and spray flying high in air, as the muddy waters were tossed to +and fro by the rocks below: he was fearfully close to them.</p> + +<p>But he was also close to land, and he saw his chance; indeed, his only +one. A tree growing out toward the creek curved downward so that the +lower part of the trunk was within a few inches of the water. A short +time before the current had washed against it, but was now falling away +from it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p98" id="p98">98</a></span></p> + +<p>The portion which inclined downward like a bow was several feet from +shore, and some distance below him. It will be seen, therefore, that the +thing for him to do was to bend all his efforts toward reaching that. If +he could advance far enough to allow the current to sweep him beneath, +or quite close to the tree, he could grasp it and save himself.</p> + +<p>"That's what's got to be done," was his conclusion the instant he saw +the crooked tree; "or it's good-by to Terry Clark and his rifle."</p> + +<p>He would succeed; he saw it the next moment. The curving tree seemed to +be sweeping up stream with frightful swiftness, but at the right second +Terry, by a supreme effort, threw himself partly out of the water, and +flinging both arms around the trunk, which was no more than six inches +in diameter, he held fast.</p> + +<p>The strain was great, and he felt his fingers slipping over the shaggy +bark, but he held on like grim death, and by a skillful upward hitch of +his body, locked his fingers above the trunk, and was safe; he was then +able to hold double his own weight.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p99" id="p99">99</a></span></p> + +<p>His next move was to throw his feet around the trunk, when it was an +easy matter for him to twist himself over on top, where he was as secure +as lying on his own trundle bed in the cabin at home.</p> + +<p>The instant his own safety was secured his whole soul was stirred by +anxiety for Fred Linden, who, he knew, was placed at more disadvantage +than he. Since he was further from shore than was he, and since the +latter had been able to save himself only by a hair's breadth, it was +clearly beyond the power of Fred to escape in the same manner—though it +might be that there was some other remote chance for him.</p> + +<p>The first glance that Terry cast over the muddy waters showed him his +friend, swimming manfully for shore, but so far out in the stream that +it was impossible for him to reach it before passing into the grip of +the rapids.</p> + +<p>"It's no use," called out Fred, in a voice in which there was no tremor +or shrinking; "I'm bound for the rapids, and here goes."</p> + +<p>And deliberately facing about, he swam coolly in the direction of the +boiling waters as though he were bathing in a still lake.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p100" id="p100">100</a></span></p> + +<p>"Be the powers, but he is plucky," muttered Terence, thrilled by the +sight; "if he can get through there alive, I'll be proud of him!"</p> + +<p>The rapids, of which I have made mention several times, were caused by a +series of irregular rocks, extending a hundred yards, in the space of +which the stream made a descent of a dozen or twenty feet. At ordinary +times the creek wound languidly around these obstructions, forming many +deep, clear pools of water, that afforded the best kind of fishing. +There was so much room for the current that there was no call for it to +make haste.</p> + +<p>But you can understand how different it was when the creek was swollen +by violent rains. It then dashed against the rocks, was thrown back, +plunged against others, whirled about and charged upon still others, by +which time it was a mass of seething foam, with the spray flying high in +air, and a faint rainbow showing through the mist when the sun was +shining. After fighting its way between and around and over these +obstructions, the current emerged at the bottom one mass of boiling foam +and dancing<span class="pagenum"><a name="p101" id="p101">101</a></span> bubbles, which continued for several hundred feet before +the effects of the savage churning that the water had received could be +shaken off.</p> + +<p>Now, it would be idle to say that these rapids were as dangerous as the +famous whirlpool below Niagara Falls; for it would not only be untrue, +but it would shut me out from taking Fred Linden safely through them: +for I am bound to do that, since he is too good a fellow to sacrifice at +this early stage of my story, and you would not forgive me for doing so.</p> + +<p>But all the same the danger was great, and was enough to cause the +bravest man to shrink from attempting the passage. Fred would have been +glad to shrink from going through, but since that was beyond his power +he did the wisest course—faced about and kept his wits with him.</p> + +<p>There was one consolation—the suspense could last but a few moments; he +was sure to emerge from the lower falls within the space of a minute, +whether alive or dead.</p> + +<p>The first object that caught his eye was his broken canoe. Naturally it +was but a short<span class="pagenum"><a name="p102" id="p102">102</a></span> distance below him, though it had gained a little while +he was struggling so hard to make land. It was turned on its side, +spinning sometimes one way and then whirling the other, according to the +whim of the current; then sea-sawing up and down, until all at once it +shot upward like a huge sturgeon, which sometimes flings its whole +length out of the water.</p> + +<p>Another point must be named that was gained by this facing about of Fred +Linden. Since he was going with the current he kept pace with every +thing else that was afloat, and he was therefore in no danger from the +trees and branches that had caused him so much, and, in fact, nearly all +his trouble.</p> + +<p>At the moment he was about to enter the boiling rapids he found himself +partly entangled in the branches of a large uprooted tree that was +dancing about in a crazy fashion.</p> + +<p>"This may help to shield me from being dashed against the rocks," was +his thought, as he seized hold of a thick limb close to the point where +it put out from the trunk; "at any rate I don't see that it can make +matters any worse."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p103" id="p103">103</a></span></p> + +<p>The act of Fred Linden in grasping the limb saved his life. The next +moment he was whirled hither and thither, half strangled with foam, head +now in air, now beneath the surface, his body grazing the jagged rocks +by the closest possible shave, and all the time shooting forward with +dizzying rapidity, until at last he emerged into the calmer water below +as well and hearty as he ever was in all his life.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p104" id="p104">104</a></span> +<a name="TRAMPING_SOUTHWARD_2013" id="TRAMPING_SOUTHWARD_2013"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XI.</h2> +<h3>TRAMPING SOUTHWARD.</h3> +</div> + +<p>An ejaculation of thankfulness escaped Fred Linden when he found himself +floating in the comparatively still water below the rapids, and he knew +that although he was pretty well bruised, none of his bones was broken. +He let go of the limb of the tree that had served him so well, and +flirting the water from his eyes, struck out with his old time vigor for +the shore, toward which he had started in the canoe.</p> + +<p>When Terry Clark saw his friend go spinning into the whirlpool, he +scrambled back from the trunk of the tree, on which he had found refuge, +and ran at full speed down the bank. Fast as he went, he was just in +time to see Fred swimming through the foaming waters toward the land.</p> + +<p>"Give me yer hand!" called out the delighted<span class="pagenum"><a name="p105" id="p105">105</a></span> youngster; "there isn't +any body in the wide wurruld that could bate that onless it is mesilf, +and I couldn't do it."</p> + +<p>"Whew!" exclaimed Fred, as he laboriously clambered up the steep bank; +"that was the biggest lot of swimming and diving crowded into the space +of a minute or two that I ever knew; I wouldn't like to take such a trip +each day."</p> + +<p>"And I'm thinkin' that it'll be a few days after this whin we try it +agin," added Terry, delighted to see his loved comrade before him +unharmed; "I jist give up when I seen you plunge in among the rocks, and +was wonderin' how your father and mother and sister Edith would faal +when I should be luggin' your dead body home."</p> + +<p>"I'm thankful that you haven't <i>that</i> to do," said Fred with an +earnestness that could not be mistaken; "but come, the clothes of us +both are dripping, and we can't get away any too soon."</p> + +<p>It was not far to walk, and a few minutes later they reached the other +side of the clearing, where the cluster of cabins stood. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="p106" id="p106">106</a></span> first +living object on which their eyes rested was Brindle, lying on the +ground and chewing her cud with an air of contentment which belongs +exclusively to her kind, or rather kine.</p> + +<p>The boys laughed and Terry said:</p> + +<p>"If she had such a thing as conscience she wouldn't be takin' things in +that aisy style, after givin' us a duckin' that come nigh bein' our last +one."</p> + +<p>"You are right, Terry, but what did you do with that bell that Deerfoot +took away from the Winnebago?"</p> + +<p>"I lift it wid my gun on the other side of the creek; I didn't want it +tollin' our funeral knell all the time we was goin' through the rapids +and splittin' the rocks to pieces by bangin' our heads agin them."</p> + +<p>"It is just as well, for the creek will be so low that there will be no +danger in crossing it to-morrow, and you can get the bell again; well, +here we are at home."</p> + +<p>The boys separated, and at the same moment, each entered the cabin where +he lived. They were only a short distance apart. Several men and a +number of the lads, some older and some<span class="pagenum"><a name="p107" id="p107">107</a></span> younger than the two in whom we +are interested, were moving about, and looked curiously at the dripping +figures. A couple asked an explanation of Fred, but he laughingly +answered that he would tell them after he had got dry, and immediately +disappeared in his own house.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Linden and Edith, her daughter, who was two years younger than +Fred, looked up in surprise when they saw the state of the lad.</p> + +<p>"Terry and I started to paddle across the creek, that is higher than +usual, and were overturned by a tree that stove in the side of the boat +and gave us a ducking."</p> + +<p>Having heard this explanation his folks seemed to feel no more curiosity +about it. The lad passed into his room, he being one of those fortunate +ones who had two complete suits of clothing, with the exception of cap +and shoes. It took him but a short time to effect the change, when he +reappeared, placing his foot and head gear near the fire, where they +would soon dry.</p> + +<p>The home of Fred Linden may be taken as a type of the best that were +found on the frontier. As a matter of course, it was made of logs, with +a stone chimney so huge that it projected like<span class="pagenum"><a name="p108" id="p108">108</a></span> an irregular bay window +from the rear. The fire-place took up the greater part of one side of +the house, where the immense blocks of oak and hickory not only diffused +a cheery warmth through the lower portion, but sent fully one-half the +heat up the enormous throat of the chimney.</p> + +<p>The large room, which served for parlor, sitting and dining room, was +furnished simply, but comfortably, with plain chairs, a bench, +spinning-wheel, a rocking-chair, table, a few cheap pictures and the +indispensable cooking utensils. There was no stove, every thing being +prepared in the fire-place. At that day, as you well know, no one had +ever dreamed of using coal as an article of fuel, and the old-fashioned +stoves were exceedingly few in number. Carpets, of course, were not +thought of, though the rough floor was kept clean enough to serve as a +table for food.</p> + +<p>A rifle rested on two deer prongs over the mantel-piece, and there +seemed to be any number of knick-knacks about the room, though it would +have been found that nearly every one had a distinct use in the +household.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p109" id="p109">109</a></span></p> + +<p>Two rooms were connected on the same floor with the larger apartment. +One of these served as the sleeping quarters for the parents when Mr. +Linden was at home, and the other for Edith, while Fred occupied the +loft, which had the rafters for a ceiling, and extended over half the +lower floor. During the absence of the father, Edith and her mother used +one room, while Fred had the other.</p> + +<p>Noon had passed when the son came home, and his substantial dinner of +venison—procured some days before by Fred himself—brown bread, +potatoes, butter and milk, were awaiting him. Taking his place at the +table, he ate as only a rugged, growing boy of sixteen can eat.</p> + +<p>He made no further mention of the dangerous adventure that had just +befallen him, but gave the full particulars of Terry Clark's encounter +with the Winnebago Indian, who stole the bell from the cow, and tried to +have a little sport at the expense of the boy. It was an interesting +story, and mother and daughter listened with rapt attention. Edith, who +was a bright girl, and very fond of her brother, asked many<span class="pagenum"><a name="p110" id="p110">110</a></span> questions +as to how the Winnebago looked, what he said, and whether he really +meant to kill poor Terry. Then her interest suddenly transferred itself +to Deerfoot, and she plied Fred with all sorts of queries, until he +laughingly told her that she was asking them two and three times over, +and really he had nothing more to tell.</p> + +<p>Then Fred drew out the moist and soiled bit of paper that he had taken +from his other clothes, and which contained the message of his father. +This, of course, caused a sensation, for it made known the fact that the +son was to join his parent for several months. It would be supposed that +this would cause some inconvenience, but in such a primitive community +all were neighbors, and the chores and work that would have been done by +Fred Linden would be cheerfully attended to by others. It was not until +many years afterward, when the settlements became towns, that the social +distinctions between families were formed.</p> + +<p>During all the conversation, after it had been agreed that Fred should +start alone on a hundred mile journey through the wild forest,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p111" id="p111">111</a></span> nothing +was said about such a thing as the personal danger attending it. And +that, too, directly on the heels of the Winnebago's attempt on Terry +Clark. The habit of self-reliance was taught to the children of the +pioneers at such an early age, that their parents felt no solicitude, +where in these times they would have been tortured by anxiety, and, no +doubt, with abundant reason.</p> + +<p>Mrs. Bowlby was told of the mishap that had befallen her absent lord, +when she was asked by Edith to come over in the evening, but she was +assured that there was no cause for alarm, and so she felt none. She +wrote a letter to her husband, as did the wife of Hardin, and Fred's own +mother. These constituted all the extra luggage that he was to take, for +it would have been oppressive to load him with any thing in the nature +of a burden when the hunters had been absent only a few days.</p> + +<p>The decision was that Fred should make his start at early dawn the next +day. It was his purpose to reach camp on the fourth day; that would be +only an ordinary tramp for a rugged<span class="pagenum"><a name="p112" id="p112">112</a></span> youngster like him, and he was +confident that he would have no trouble in keeping to the trail that had +been ridden over so recently by his friends.</p> + +<p>The little personal articles, as they may be called, which the lad would +require, were mostly the same as those of his father, and could be +utilized by the son. Such, as from the nature of things, could not +answer for both were tied into a compact package with his linen and +strapped over his shoulders with a thick blanket. His powder horn and +bullet pouch were not forgotten. An extra flint for his rifle was placed +in his pocket, and the weapon, which belonged to the lad himself, was +slung over his shoulder after the manner of a professional hunter. Then +making sure that nothing had been left behind, Fred gave his sister and +mother a warm hug and kiss apiece, called to them a jaunty good-by, and +set his face toward the Ozark mountains.</p> + +<p>It had become known that he was to start on quite a lengthy journey, and +those who were astir at that early hour called their hearty good wishes +to the lad, who was popular with<span class="pagenum"><a name="p113" id="p113">113</a></span> all. Fred looked for Terry, and seeing +nothing of him, shouted his name as he passed by his door, but receiving +no response, concluded that he was still asleep.</p> + +<p>The heart of the boy was light as he strode at a rapid pace across the +clearing. He felt no inconvenience from the bruises received the day +before, during the passage of the rapids, and his natural buoyancy +caused him to look upon the tramp through the woods as a school boy +views his long expected vacation. There was no fear of any peril in the +stretch of unbroken forest that opened before him. It was fortunate +indeed for his peace of mind that he did not know what was awaiting him +in the dark arches and labyrinths of the almost interminable +wilderness.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p114" id="p114">114</a></span> +<a name="A_STRANGE_ANIMAL_2207" id="A_STRANGE_ANIMAL_2207"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2> +<h3>A STRANGE ANIMAL.</h3> +</div> + +<p>When Fred Linden reached the creek where he had met with his stirring +adventure the day before, he could not help smiling. It had shrunk to +its usual volume, and was winding along as lazily as usual, the only +sign of the violent freshet being the <i>débris</i> left along the bank and +the slightly roiled appearance of the current.</p> + +<p>The pioneers had so many occasions to cross this stream of water that +they had made several attempts to put up a rude but strong bridge; but +no matter what pains they took, they could never erect a structure +strong enough to withstand the furious freshets which, as you can well +understand, were often resistless.</p> + +<p>The result, therefore, was a reliance upon the canoes, some of which lay +on one side of the stream and some on the other; but a surprise<span class="pagenum"><a name="p115" id="p115">115</a></span> awaited +young Linden. Seeing no boat in sight, he walked along the shore in +quest of one, for he was resolved to keep out of the water as long as he +could, though a lad on the frontier makes far less ado about dripping +garments than you or I.</p> + +<p>That which surprised him was the sight of a long, uprooted tree which, +coming down the creek, when the water was rapidly falling, had swung +around in such position that the roots caught fast in the clayey soil on +the bank, and the limbs were imbedded in the sand and mud on the other +shore. The result was as good a bridge as a foot traveler could want.</p> + +<p>"That will do until there comes another rise," he said, as he carefully +stepped upon the limbs, using them to reach the trunk, along which he +walked across the water, leaping to the ground on the other side.</p> + +<p>He stepped off with his elastic gait, keeping so close to the path that +he and Terry had taken the day before that he caught sight of the bushes +around the splintered trunk of the tree where the rifle captured from +the Winnebago had been hidden.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p116" id="p116">116</a></span></p> + +<p>"He'll be over early to get his prize," thought Fred; "for it is beyond +all worth to him. If it wouldn't make him feel so bad I would plague him +a little by hiding it."</p> + +<p>He parted the bushes and peered within. The first object on which his +eye fell was the battered old cow-bell that had played such a curious +part the day before, but he saw nothing of the gun itself; a brief but +hurried search convinced him that it was gone.</p> + +<p>"That will break Terry's heart," said he to himself; "he never owned a +gun, and now, to lose such a handsome one when it has been in his +possession only a brief while, will grieve him as much as the loss of a +dear friend."</p> + +<p>Just then young Linden caught the faint but clear notes of some one +whistling. He had but to listen a second or two, when he recognized it, +as he did the hearty laugh that followed. Looking to his right, he saw +Terry himself standing but a few paces away, and, so to speak, in his +"war paint." Bullet pouch, powder-horn, bundle on his back, and, more +than all, the splendid rifle was there. The round, chubby face, clear +eyes, and pug nose<span class="pagenum"><a name="p117" id="p117">117</a></span> of the Irish lad seemed to radiate delight as he +made an elaborate salute to his friend, and, with mock gravity, doffed +his hat and scraped his foot along the ground. "Why, Terry," said the +delighted Fred, asking the useless question, "what is the meaning of +this?"</p> + +<p>"I'm going wid ye to the camp in the Ozark Mountains; do ye think I +could rist aisy, knowin' that ye had to travel such a long distance wid +no one to take care of ye?"</p> + +<p>"Well, now, that just pleases me more than I can tell you," said the +overjoyed Fred, slapping him on the shoulder; "there isn't any one in +the wide world whose company I want as bad as yours; I lay awake half of +last night trying to get up some plan by which I could have you with me, +but I couldn't think of any, and had to give it up. Father sent only for +me, and I didn't suppose that Mr. MacClaskey would spare you. Tell me +how you managed it."</p> + +<p>A quizzical expression came upon the face of the Irish lad, who, leaning +on his rifle, took off his hat and scratched his head for a few seconds +before answering.</p> + +<p>"Wal, bein' it's yersilf, Fred, I don't mind<span class="pagenum"><a name="p118" id="p118">118</a></span> sayin' that it took some +strategy, as I suppose Deerfut would call it. Last night, after we had +eat our supper, and the chores were done wid, and Mr. MacClaskey had +took his seat by the fire and lit his pipe, and Mrs. MacClaskey had +started her spinning-wheel a-hummin', and the children had been packed +off to bed, I told the folks the whole story. I managed it in such a +style that the owld gentleman, who, you know, has spint two winters in +the mountains, said it would make the folks out there desprit short of +hands. I observed, in me careless way, that such was the case, and that +Mr. Linden had sent word to ye that he wanted ye to come, and, from +things that I knew, me own prisence would give great satisfaction to +sartin parties. Ye understand that I had yersilf in me eye, though I +didn't think there was nade of making it all plain how it was.</p> + +<p>"Wai, the owld gintleman wouldn't listen to me goin' away, but I managed +it so well that after awhile he kind of remarked that if the folks +wanted me, he'd no objection to me goin', as he belaved that I would +make more there than I would at home.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p119" id="p119">119</a></span></p> + +<p>"<i>That</i> was the p'int," added Terry, with a wink, as he replaced his +cap; "and there was where me genius showed itself; I spoke about the big +lot of furs that had to be gathered, and how much money the hunters +would make, and what a chance there was for a risin' young man of +industrious habits. The owld gintleman took it in, and at last said, +bein' as I had the new gun, why he didn't know but what I might give it +a trial.</p> + +<p>"Wal, that was all I wanted. I started to run over last night to tell +ye, but afore I got to yer house I thought of this 'cute plan of +s'prisin' ye. I got all ready last night, ate breakfast airly, and was +down here and had me gun just as I observed ye makin' yer way across the +clearin' toward this spot."</p> + +<p>And so it came about that on this beautiful sunshiny day in autumn, Fred +Linden and Terry Clark set out, each with ammunition and loaded rifle, +for a hundred mile tramp toward the wild region of the Ozark Mountains. +The air was crisp and cool, and every thing joined to give them a +buoyancy of spirits such as falls<span class="pagenum"><a name="p120" id="p120">120</a></span> to the lot only of rugged, growing +boys in bounding health.</p> + +<p>The two, however, had seen enough of life in the woods to know that the +sunshine and clear air would not last. They might continue until they +reached camp, but more than likely clouds, rain, chilly weather and +possibly a flurry of snow would overtake them. Winter was at hand, and +though, as I have shown, they were in quite a temperate clime, it was +subject to violent changes, as trying as those in a much more northern +latitude.</p> + +<p>Besides, the trail, although distinctly marked, did not lead over any +thing like even ground all the way. Long before they could reach the +vicinity of the camp the character of the country told of the wild, +rocky region, covering thousands of square miles, and known as the Ozark +Mountains. No route could lead to such a distance through an unsettled +country without crossing a number of streams, and passing through +regions that were any thing but attractive to the traveler.</p> + +<p>All this, however, gave just the element of danger and difficulty to the +enterprise that was<span class="pagenum"><a name="p121" id="p121">121</a></span> one of the most delightful features to the young +lads, who stepped off with swinging gait to the southward. Had the +journey been smooth and even, it would have lost the major part of its +charms.</p> + +<p>The boys carried enough with them to give them all they were likely to +need in the way of food for twenty-four hours. It would have been little +trouble to take enough to last through the four days; but there was +something unprofessional in such a course which caused their souls to +rebel. The magnificent forest contained plenty of game, and they would +have been poor sportsmen, indeed, had they confessed by their action +that they distrusted their ability to procure it.</p> + +<p>The trail over which the two walked, Fred slightly in advance, was +marked with such distinctness by the hoofs of the six horses that had +passed along it in Indian file but a short time before that it was no +trouble for the boys to recognize it, nor were they likely to have any +difficulty in keeping to it throughout the whole distance.</p> + +<p>It was a little past noon, when they reached<span class="pagenum"><a name="p122" id="p122">122</a></span> a small brook whose +current was so cold and clear that they took a long draught from it, and +then sat down and ate their simple lunch. They felt little fatigue, and +as a goodly number of miles remained to be traveled, according to the +schedule of Fred Linden, they leaped lightly across the waste and were +soon under way again.</p> + +<p>"Do you know," said Fred, later in the afternoon, "that I've been +thinking we have not paid enough attention to one or two important +matters."</p> + +<p>"What are they?"</p> + +<p>"I don't know what has become of Deerfoot, and we may not see him again; +but we know enough of him to understand that whatever he says is worth +remembering. Now, he told us yesterday that that Winnebago, from whom he +took that rifle, belonged to a party of those warriors, and it seems to +me that if they are anywhere, it is between us and the camp, and we are +likely to see more of them."</p> + +<p>"I'm of the same opinion with yersilf, but jest now there is somethin' +else that gives me concern."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p123" id="p123">123</a></span></p> + +<p>"What is that?" asked the surprised Fred, stopping and turning around.</p> + +<p>"Some person or animal has been followin' us for the last half hour. +I've heard it more than once, and it ain't fur off this very minute."</p> + +<p>The two boys stood still and looked over the trail along which they had +been traveling. Fred Linden's fear was that Terry had discovered the +presence of some of the very Winnebagos whom he dreaded, but he was +mistaken. That which they saw was not a person, but a strange animal of +such fierce mien and hostile intent that they instantly looked to their +rifles, knowing that a savage fight was inevitable.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p124" id="p124">124</a></span> +<a name="A_TROUBLESOME_VISITOR_2404" id="A_TROUBLESOME_VISITOR_2404"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2> +<h3>A TROUBLESOME VISITOR.</h3> +</div> + +<p>There is no reason to discredit the truth of the accounts given by +hunters in the west of wild beasts of prodigious activity, strength and +ferocity, and that, belonging to no distinct class of animals, are a +mixture of the fiercest. Trappers and explorers in the wild regions of +the Rocky Mountains, sometimes meet a beast to which they have given the +expressive name of "Indian devil," whose power and daring are such that +a party of veteran hunters have been known to withdraw from a section +frequented by him, simply to avoid a fight. While the stories about them +may be exaggerated at times, there is no doubt that such animals exist, +and there is good reason to hold them in dread.</p> + +<p>The beast that Fred Linden and Terry Clark saw in the path before them +resembled a panther more than any animal they could call to<span class="pagenum"><a name="p125" id="p125">125</a></span> mind. It +might have been described as a cross between a tiger and panther, had +that been possible. Fred had heard his father speak of those creatures +that were detested and feared, and he was sure that they were going to +have trouble with this one. How fortunate that each boy held a loaded +gun in his grasp!</p> + +<p>The action of the hybrid was as peculiar as his appearance. He seemed to +have been trotting quietly along the trail with his nose down, as though +following the scent, when he became aware that his game had stopped, and +were surveying him with some interest. The beast also came to an abrupt +halt and threw up his head, as though he was equally curious to learn +something about the party of the first part.</p> + +<p>Standing thus, with his nose quite high in the air, it struck both boys +that he showed a resemblance to a wolf as well as a panther. He was +larger than either, and there could be no doubt that he was amazingly +muscular, active and courageous.</p> + +<p>Thus stood the opposing parties, as they may be called, for a full +minute. Each looked<span class="pagenum"><a name="p126" id="p126">126</a></span> steadily at the other, the space between them being +no more than fifty yards. Had it been less, both boys would have fired +at him, but they were afraid that such wounds as they could inflict +would only rouse his fury. One of the most marked peculiarities of the +"Indian devil" is his toughness, some of the stories in this respect +being almost incredible.</p> + +<p>All at once the beast seemed to be overcome with disgust for the two +youngsters. He whisked squarely about and trotted away, showing a bushy +fox-like tail that almost swept the ground.</p> + +<p>"I call that an insoolt!" exclaimed Terence Clark, bringing his gun to +his shoulder, taking quick aim and letting fly, before his companion +could object. He insisted that he had hit the animal, but it is likely +he was mistaken, for it gave no sign of being touched, trotting with the +same even step until it passed from sight around a bend in the path.</p> + +<p>"I hit him hard," insisted Terry, who proceeded to reload his piece; +"there's no doubt of the same."</p> + +<p>"If you had done so, he would have given<span class="pagenum"><a name="p127" id="p127">127</a></span> some evidence of it, but there +was not the slightest."</p> + +<p>"Ye know that such creatures are tough," coolly remarked Terry; "and the +bullet has glanced off his side as from a rock."</p> + +<p>"If I could believe that," said the other, "I would hide somewhere until +he went away, for it would be only a waste of powder and ball to shoot +at him."</p> + +<p>"Hasn't he gone off? What are ye talking about?"</p> + +<p>"Gone away? Yes; for awhile, but we are not done with that beast yet; we +shall have trouble with him."</p> + +<p>"If we keep our guns loaded and our powder dry, we'll open on him, and +if we can't kill him we'll fill him with so much lead that he won't be +able to travel fast, and we'll bid him good-by and walk from him."</p> + +<p>The boys waited a few minutes, thinking possibly that the strange +creature would show himself again, but he did not appear, and they +turned about and resumed their journey.</p> + +<p>They were now on one of the best stretches of the trail. The ground was +even, there were<span class="pagenum"><a name="p128" id="p128">128</a></span> no bowlders or rocks in the path to make walking +difficult, and the undergrowth, which in some places was quite an +obstruction, did not interfere. By the middle of the afternoon, Fred was +confident they were twenty miles at least on the road, and he said that +if they came upon an inviting place, they would go into camp for the +night. The package which each carried on his back was wrapped in a +blanket that could be used to lie upon by the fire, or in severe +weather, though they would have cared little had they owned nothing of +the kind.</p> + +<p>Their good spirits continued, and they were walking at a leisurely pace, +when a rustling in the bushes on the left caused them to look in that +direction. There stood the strange beast, not fifty feet away, head +erect, and staring at them with the same inquiring look that he showed +some time before.</p> + +<p>"I wonder how he likes a side view of us," said Terry, partly amused, +but somewhat frightened; "I think he is close enough for us to fetch him +this time."</p> + +<p>Fred was inclined to give him a shot, but he felt some doubt, and while +he was considering<span class="pagenum"><a name="p129" id="p129">129</a></span> the question, the beast whisked about and vanished +like a flash.</p> + +<p>"He is a strange animal," said Fred, lowering his gun, which he was in +the act of raising; "and I am more satisfied now than ever that we shall +have trouble with him. The first time that we gain a fair shot, that is, +like we had just now, let's tumble him over. He may be as daring and +tough as the hunters say, but there isn't any animal tough enough to +withstand a couple of well-aimed bullets."</p> + +<p>"I agree wid ye—that is, after one was fired. That shot of mine was +well aimed and struck, but it takes somethin' more to bring him down, as +a colored friend of mine once said when a house tumbled over on his +head."</p> + +<p>"You saw how spry a creature he is, and if he should happen to drop down +upon us from the branch of a tree, those sharp claws of his would play +the mischief with us."</p> + +<p>Since there was no place in sight that suited for camping, Terry +reloaded, and they kept on. After the fright they had received, you may +be sure they maintained a close watch of the wood in every direction. As +yet they had<span class="pagenum"><a name="p130" id="p130">130</a></span> seen no game from which to procure food, but they wanted +to go into camp near a spring or stream of water. The latter is +generally looked upon as one of the indispensables by a party of +campers, and it was not likely that the youths would have to travel far +before finding what they wanted.</p> + +<p>The sun had not yet dropped below the horizon when they struck the very +spot. There were the bubbling brook, lined by mossy banks, the small +open space, the tall column-like trunks; and the heavy overhanging +boughs, which, late though it was in the season, would allow but few +drops of a shower to find their way through. The air was cool, but there +were no signs of a storm.</p> + +<p>"There couldn't be a better place," said Fred, when he had noted all the +points; "here is every thing that a party can want, except it be supper, +which they ought to bring with them."</p> + +<p>"And somebody has been here ahead of us," added Terry, kicking apart the +ashes at the base of a large tree; "there's where the fire was +kindled."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p131" id="p131">131</a></span></p> + +<p>"No doubt it is where father and the rest of them spent the first night +after leaving home: that shows that we have made good progress, and, if +no accident happens, we shall arrive on time."</p> + +<p>"There is no need of our hurryin', as I understood that a gintleman once +obsarved whin they were goin' to hang him; if we are two or three days +late in gettin' there, what's the odds?"</p> + +<p>"None—though this fine weather can not last long, and when it is over, +I should like to be at the end of our journey, where we shall have good +shelter. I wonder what has become of the wild beast?"</p> + +<p>"Be the powers! but there he comes!"</p> + +<p>The words had hardly passed the lips of the startled Terry Clark, when +the strange animal was seen in the path in front of them, in precisely +the same position as when first noticed. He had evidently passed around +to the front, as though determined to study the boys from every point of +view. He seemed to have been standing for some minutes before discovered +by the boys, and was now observed<span class="pagenum"><a name="p132" id="p132">132</a></span> approaching, as the Irish lad had +announced.</p> + +<p>He did not gallop or trot, but walked slowly, just as though having made +up his mind to take a select meal off the youngsters, he was going to do +so with the deliberation of an epicure that extracts the fullest +enjoyment from his delicacies.</p> + +<p>There was something unnerving in the sight of the frightful animal +approaching in this noiseless fashion, his jaws parted just enough to +show his long, white teeth, but giving utterance to no growl, or +threatening act, beyond the mere advance itself. His large, round eyes +had a phosphorescent glow, and the long, sinewy body and limbs were the +repository of a strength and activity that might well make a veteran +hunter timid about encountering him.</p> + +<p>"By gracious!" said Fred Linden; "we're in for it now; he doesn't mean +to wait for us to attack him, but is coming for us."</p> + +<p>"If I was called on to make a wager," said Terry, as cool as ever, "that +would be the view that I would take of the same."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p133" id="p133">133</a></span></p> + +<p>"You fire first and I will follow; take good aim, and send your bullet +right between the eyes."</p> + +<p>There was no time to spare, for the beast at that instant was within a +dozen yards. Terry Clark brought his rifle to his shoulder, sighted +quickly, and pulled the trigger.</p> + +<p>That he struck the creature was proven by his snarling growl and slight +upward leap; but instead of stopping, he broke into a gallop and came +straight on.</p> + +<p>Then Fred Linden aimed and fired, but he also failed to check the +advance of the animal.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p134" id="p134">134</a></span> +<a name="A_WELCOME_ALLY_2609" id="A_WELCOME_ALLY_2609"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2> +<h3>A WELCOME ALLY.</h3> +</div> + +<p>Fred Linden, like his companion, aimed directly between the eyes of the +strange beast, and, like him, he struck the mark; but both shots only +served to awake the irrestrainable ferocity of the animal, which, with +another rasping howl and parted jaws, bounded toward them. Since both +weapons were discharged, and they had no other firearms, the boys were +almost helpless, and it may be said their enemy was upon them.</p> + +<p>"Run!" called out Fred, wheeling about and leaping toward a tree, behind +which he took refuge; but sturdy Terry had no thought of turning away +from such a foe. Throwing one foot back so as to steady himself, he +seized his fine rifle with both hands, near to the muzzle, and held it +so as to use it as a club or shillaleh.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p135" id="p135">135</a></span></p> + +<p>The brute was so close that he had no more than time to gather his +strength, and swing the heavy stock with might and main, when the animal +bounded at him straight from the ground.</p> + +<p>There was a "dull thud," as it may be called, and the stock crashed +against the side of the beast's head, knocking him a couple of yards to +the left, and almost at the feet of Fred Linden; but in point of fact +the blow did no harm except to thwart the creature for a second or two.</p> + +<p>He was now snarling, and gave utterance to one or two peculiar barking +sounds like a dog or wolf. His eyes were ablaze, and there could be no +doubt that his fury was at white heat. Crouching for an instant, he made +a bound for Terry, before he had time to balance himself to deliver his +second blow with the same power as the first.</p> + +<p>Fred Linden could not stand still and see his companion torn to shreds +in that fashion. He leaped from behind the tree, with his gun also +clubbed, and hastened to strike with all his might; but he was too +late.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p136" id="p136">136</a></span></p> + +<p>It was a curious fact, not understood at the moment, that the savage +creature, although he leaped straight at Terry, passed fully two feet +over his head, and that, too, when the lad was standing erect, and +braced to deliver his second blow.</p> + +<p>Striking on his belly, several paces beyond, the beast rolled over and +over, clawing, snapping, snarling, and beating the air, with +lightning-like blows. The leaves and dust flew in all directions, and +the foam which he spat from his jaws was flecked with blood.</p> + +<p>He continued rolling and struggling until he was a rod distant, and then +suddenly stopped, stone dead.</p> + +<p>In the excitement and swirl of the moment both Fred and Terry were +conscious that their guns were not the only ones that were fired. At the +instant the brute was in the act of rising from the ground a second time +for his leap, the sharp report of another rifle was heard. The peril was +so imminent that the lads could give no attention just then to any thing +but the immediate business in hand; but now, seeing their fearful foe +was dead, they knew that it<span class="pagenum"><a name="p137" id="p137">137</a></span> was the third bullet that had done it, and +they glanced around to see who their friend was.</p> + +<p>No one was in sight, and they advanced to the carcass, which they were +somewhat timid about touching, even though convinced that it was beyond +the power of doing any more harm. They saw that both of their bullets +had struck the skull, though not at the precise points at which they +aimed. One had passed near the right eye of the nondescript, and must +have inflicted serious injury, but its toughness would have enabled it +to keep up the fight, and to have slain both of the boys before they +could have reloaded and fired a second time.</p> + +<p>A little search showed where the fatal wound had been given. Just in +front of the fore leg the lead had entered and gone through the heart. +No animal, so far as known, amounts to any thing after his heart has +been torn in twain, though he may live and move for a time.</p> + +<p>"I tell you, Terry, that I don't believe there is another beast in the +country that, after receiving two bullets in the head, like that, could +make such a fight."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p138" id="p138">138</a></span></p> + +<p>"I begs to corrict ye," said the other; "it was three shots, for do ye +not mind that I bored a hole through him when we first made his +acquaintance?"</p> + +<p>"So you claimed, but you haven't explained how it was that such a shot +could be made without leaving any wound?"</p> + +<p>"It may have healed up since then," suggested the Irish lad, who knew as +well as his companion that the first bullet did not touch the beast.</p> + +<p>"I hadn't thought of that," meekly observed Fred; "but there is one +thing certain, that if that last shot hadn't been fired, it would have +been the last of us: where could it have come from?" he asked, looking +around and finding the answer to his question in the sight of Deerfoot +the Shawanoe, who came from behind a clump of bushes on the other side +of the small stream.</p> + +<p>Fred uttered an exclamation of delight when he recognized the graceful +young warrior, who was holding the stock of his gun in his left hand, +with the barrel resting idly in the hollow of his right arm. Fred +jumped<span class="pagenum"><a name="p139" id="p139">139</a></span> across the brook, with hand extended to greet him.</p> + +<p>"I'd rather see you than any person in the world," was the truthful +exclamation of the youth: "when you gave me the letter yesterday I +thought what a splendid trip this would be if Terry would go with me, +and behold, he has come! I would have liked to have you too but I didn't +dare say so, for I didn't think it was possible: but ever since we +started I have felt that we only lacked <i>you</i> to make the party +complete. Now, ain't I glad to see you, and how are you, old fellow?"</p> + +<p>The lad in his boisterous way wrung the hand of Deerfoot and slapped him +on the shoulder; then laughed, and shook hands again with an enthusiasm +that left no doubt of the cordiality of his welcome.</p> + +<p>As for Deerfoot, he showed a gentle dignity that was never absent. His +faint smile lit up his handsome face, and he was pleased with the +pleasure of the others.</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot has seen the faces of his brothers not many times, but it +brings sunshine to his heart to meet them again."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p140" id="p140">140</a></span></p> + +<p>Then his countenance was crossed by an expression of gravity like an +eclipse passing over the face of the sun.</p> + +<p>"Is my brother ill, that he suffers so much?"</p> + +<p>This question referred to Terry Clark, Deerfoot looking over the +shoulder of Fred at the Irish lad behind him. Fred heard a curious +noise, and turned to learn what it meant. His friend had leaned his gun +against the nearest tree, so as to give his limbs free play, and was +flinging his arms aloft, and dancing a jig with a vigor that made it +look as if his legs were shot out, and back and forth, by some high +pressure engine. Now and then he flung his cap aloft, and, as it came +down, ducked his head under and dexterously caught it. His mouth was +puckered up most of the time, while he whistled with might and main, +though the energy of his general movements shut out all resemblance to a +tune. Occasionally he stopped whistling and broke into snatches of song +which, from the same cause, could not be identified.</p> + +<p>Fred Linden laughed. He was demonstrative,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p141" id="p141">141</a></span> but not so much so as Terry. +Looking sideways at Deerfoot, he saw his eyes sparkling and the corners +of his mouth twitching. Rarely had he been amused as much as he now was +by the extravagant manifestations of the Irish lad, for whom he had +formed a strong regard.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot and Fred having turned their glances toward Terry, the latter +appeared to catch sight of them for the first time. With a whoop he +flung his hat higher than ever in the air, caught it with right side up +on his crown as it came down, and then shouted:</p> + +<p>"How are yees, me friends?" and made a dash for them.</p> + +<p>In his enthusiasm he forgot the brook running through a small hollow +between them. His feet went down in the depression without any knowledge +on his part, and he sprawled headlong, his cap rolling at the feet of +Deerfoot, who pushed the toe of his moccasin under the edge, and flung +it to him as he rose to his feet.</p> + +<p>"It's all the same, and a part of the show," laughed Terry, "as the wife +of the bear-keeper<span class="pagenum"><a name="p142" id="p142">142</a></span> obsarved when the bear ate him up, and it's how are +ye, and how do ye ixpect to be, and what have ye to say for yersilf, and +why are ye so long answerin' me quistion?"</p> + +<p>Deerfoot simply smiled, and made no reply until Terry had replaced his +cap, and was done with his noisy greeting. Then he pointed to his gun +leaning against the tree, and said:</p> + +<p>"When my brother is in the woods, he should keep his gun within reach of +his arm."</p> + +<p>"Yer moral sentiments are corrict," remarked Terry, hurrying back—this +time without falling—to regain his piece. When he once more stood +beside the laughing Fred, the Shawanoe addressed both:</p> + +<p>"Are the guns of my brothers loaded?"</p> + +<p>Both felt the rebuke; they had violated one of the elementary rules of +the hunter's life, which is that the first thing to be done after +discharging a weapon is to reload it. Fred flushed, for he did not +remember that he had ever forgotten it before.</p> + +<p>"It was a piece of forgetfulness of which Terry and I ought to be +ashamed, but it was the first time we had ever had a fight with<span class="pagenum"><a name="p143" id="p143">143</a></span> such a +beast as that: what do you call it, Deerfoot?"</p> + +<p>The Shawanoe shook his head to signify that he knew of no distinct name +for the animal, but he explained to the boys, what they already knew, +that it was a cross of some kind, concentrating in itself, as it seemed, +all the power, activity, daring and ferocity of the most dreaded animals +of the woods. Deerfoot could not deny that his shot had saved the boys +from being torn to shreds by the brute. Had it been a few seconds later, +or differently aimed, nothing could have saved them from its fury.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p144" id="p144">144</a></span> +<a name="DEERFOOT_WILL_BE_SENTINEL_TONIGHT_2805" id="DEERFOOT_WILL_BE_SENTINEL_TONIGHT_2805"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2> +<h3>"DEERFOOT WILL BE SENTINEL TO-NIGHT."</h3> +</div> + +<p>"We are on our way to the camp in the Ozarks," said Fred Linden; "and am +I mistaken in believing that you will go with us all the way?"</p> + +<p>"Such is the wish of Deerfoot," replied the Shawanoe, whereat Terry +Clark gave signs of breaking out again; but at a warning look from Fred +he restrained himself.</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot loves the Hunters of the Ozark; he has promised to make them a +visit; he will do so with his friends that he has found in the woods, +and who forget to keep their guns loaded."</p> + +<p>"No use!" exclaimed Terry, bounding in the air, striking his heels +together, and flinging his hat aloft with a loud whoop; "I must give +gintle exprission to me emotions, even though it makes a war with +England."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p145" id="p145">145</a></span></p> + +<p>The others showed no objection to this harmless ebullition, and he +speedily became quiet again.</p> + +<p>Had Fred Linden been intimately acquainted with Deerfoot, he would have +noticed that he was not entirely at ease. Now and then he darted glances +about him, as though he half expected the appearance of some unwelcome +person. The glances were so quick and furtive that neither Fred nor +Terry noticed them.</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot," said Fred, the three still standing; "we have concluded that +there isn't a better place along the trail for a camp."</p> + +<p>To the surprise of the boys, he shook his head in dissent.</p> + +<p>"Why, this is where father and the rest spent the night when they last +went this way."</p> + +<p>He nodded to signify that he agreed with them.</p> + +<p>"There were three of them, and they had their horses, that could not be +well hid; when my brothers go into camp for the night, they should take +a place where all who went by would not see them."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p146" id="p146">146</a></span></p> + +<p>It struck the others as curious that the Shawanoe should talk in that +fashion, when they could not see any cause for alarm; but they had +enough faith in him to accept his judgment on such an important matter. +He added:</p> + +<p>"Come with Deerfoot and he will show his brothers where they may slumber +in peace."</p> + +<p>Without any more explanation the Shawanoe moved down the bank of the +brook, following a course parallel to the flow of the water, the other +two keeping at his heels. He did not look around until he had gone more +than a hundred yards. Then it was that the little party found itself in +a rocky section, with a rough cavern on their right—that is, the +bowlders and rocks were jumbled together in such a fashion that there +was some resemblance to a cave. The chief merit of the place, however, +was the privacy that it afforded, rather than the strength as a means of +defense against an enemy.</p> + +<p>"This suits very well," said Fred, taking in all the points at a glance; +"here is a rocky bed on which we can start a fire, and the other<span class="pagenum"><a name="p147" id="p147">147</a></span> rocks +and bowlders will keep off the wind, if there happens to be any; the +water is handy, if we should need it, and it is certain that we are not +as likely to be seen here as where we first selected."</p> + +<p>"Deerfut," said Terry, who was nosing about, "I obsarve ashes here, as +though somebody had been ahead of us."</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot built a fire but a few moons ago, and staid over night."</p> + +<p>"If it was good enough for ye, I can stand it," said Terry, "which is +the remark me uncle made when the Duke of Argyle asked him to stay to +dinner."</p> + +<p>The boys unfastened the bundles from their backs and prepared to spend +the night where they were. The blankets were spread on the flinty floor, +and Deerfoot, setting down his gun beside theirs, helped to gather the +wood with which to keep a fire burning. The three were so active that it +took but a short time to collect all that was needed. This was thrown +into one pile, from which it could be withdrawn as wanted.</p> + +<p>I must give you a better idea of the spot<span class="pagenum"><a name="p148" id="p148">148</a></span> where the three decided to +spend their first night in the woods together. They had walked northward +from the trail, and, so far as they could see, the country was of the +most broken nature, though the abundance of trees and undergrowth did +not permit an extended view. Two masses of stone rose to the height of a +dozen feet, and were separated by about the same distance. These rough +walls extended back to a distance of three or four yards, where they +came against a similar formation. Thus, as may be said, there were three +sides to an inclosure, that part facing the brook being entirely open. +On top of these supports were tumbled an irregular mass of bowlders and +rocks which formed the roof. The latter had so many openings that it was +as well ventilated as the roof of the house about which the Arkansas +Traveler tells us.</p> + +<p>The rear part of the cavern, if it may be allowed that name, was stone, +while the front was earth. Near the center, Deerfoot had kindled his +fire when he staid there, the smoke finding ready escape through the +openings above. Such a fire might give some<span class="pagenum"><a name="p149" id="p149">149</a></span> warmth were it needed, but +the blaze was so well hidden by the surrounding walls that it was not +likely to be seen by any one passing no nigher than fifty feet: therein +lay the reason why it was selected by Deerfoot.</p> + +<p>After piling up the fuel for the night, the youths threw some branches +on the ground, near the rear of the cavern, and then spread their +blankets over them. The Shawanoe carried no blanket with him, so it was +expected that he would share the couch of his friends.</p> + +<p>While the three were busying themselves in this manner, Fred Linden was +disturbed by a suspicion that had been growing from the moment Deerfoot +expressed dissatisfaction with the spot selected for their camp. This +suspicion was that the young Indian had a fear of something to which, as +yet, he had made no reference.</p> + +<p>I have already shown that it was not generally considered a dangerous +business in which the hunters of Ozark engaged. The rough, outdoor life +sometimes brought with it hardships, and occasionally sufferings, but +chief among the dangers was not that from Indians.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p150" id="p150">150</a></span> It was known that +now and then the red men fired spiteful shots at the invaders of their +hunting grounds (as was the case with Michael Clark, the father of +Terence), but in this section of the west that particular peril was +deemed less than that which threatened from wild beasts. There was no +instance of the hunters having been molested on their way to and from +the trapping regions: why then this special caution of Deerfoot?</p> + +<p>Fred Linden, while turning these thoughts over in his mind, gave but the +one answer—<i>the Winnebago</i>. He was an intruder in that part of +Louisiana, and he had shown by his acts how ready he was to shed the +blood of innocent white persons. It was not a supposition merely that +this fierce warrior had companions. The keen eyes of Deerfoot had +discovered the proofs that there were a half dozen, at least, with him, +and from whom he separated for a short time while he entered into the +"side speculation" with Brindle and her bell; so it will be seen that +Fred Linden was not only right in his suspicion that the Wolf had to do +with the unrest of Deerfoot, but that<span class="pagenum"><a name="p151" id="p151">151</a></span> the latter possessed good cause +for his misgiving.</p> + +<p>The Winnebagos, having drifted so far away from their own hunting +grounds into this part of the world, were either going further from +home, or were on their way back. Had the Wolf behaved himself, the band +would have gone and come without the knowledge of any of the pioneers, +unless there was a chance meeting in the wood, when it is not likely +that any harm would have resulted.</p> + +<p>But one of the Winnebagos was struck in the face by a white boy, while a +young Indian, a friend of the latter, having "got the drop" on the Wolf, +had taken his gun from him. In other words, the crime of assault and +robbery had been committed.</p> + +<p>Would the rest of the Winnebagos pocket the outrage and meekly withdraw +from the country?</p> + +<p>That, it would be seen, was the all important question, upon which great +events, as affecting the friends in whom we are interested, hinged.</p> + +<p>It was in violation of the nature of the American race that any member +thereof should<span class="pagenum"><a name="p152" id="p152">152</a></span> refuse to resent an indignity, when there was a chance +of doing so. The Winnebagos had the best of reasons for believing that, +by prowling around the settlement, or along the trail leading thereto, +they would soon gain an opportunity to wipe out the disgrace put upon +the Wolf, and, if not able to get back the gun that had been taken from +him, would be able to procure another.</p> + +<p>The fact that this valuable weapon was carried in the hands of a boy, +who had started to tramp through the woods to a point a hundred miles +off, and that it was not at all impossible that the Winnebagos found, or +would find it out, gave emphasis to the cause of Deerfoot's uneasiness.</p> + +<p>It is worthy of note that, while Terry Clark never once took this view +of the situation, it occurred to his friend Fred, who waited for the +Shawanoe to make some reference to it.</p> + +<p>"He knows best, and if he doesn't choose to say any thing about it, +there is no call for me to do so."</p> + +<p>The shadows of night were creeping through the wood when the fire was +started, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p153" id="p153">153</a></span> smoke began stealing upward through the openings in +the rocky roof.</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot," said Fred, when the fire crackled brightly, "the rule is, +that a party in camp like this, must have some one on guard while the +others sleep. I don't know as there is any need now, but if you think +so, let Terry and me do it, for we are not in need of sleep."</p> + +<p>The Shawanoe looked at him intently for a moment as though he would read +his thoughts, and then quietly said:</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot will be sentinel to-night!"</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p154" id="p154">154</a></span> +<a name="AROUND_THE_CAMPFIRE_3002" id="AROUND_THE_CAMPFIRE_3002"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XVI.</h2> +<h3>AROUND THE CAMP-FIRE.</h3> +</div> + +<p>Inasmuch as Terry and Fred had enough lunch left to furnish all that was +wanted, Deerfoot decided not to hunt for any thing else. At that hour, +when it was growing dark, it would have been hard to find any game; but +he told them that at no great distance above, the tiny brook issued from +a small lake, where he could easily get all the fish he wanted.</p> + +<p>Accordingly, the fire having been started at the rear of the cavern, +where the smoke found free vent, the three sat within a circle of light, +and partook of the coarse bread and cold venison. The latter was tough, +but it could not withstand the teeth of the two youths, whose appetites +were such as wait on high health.</p> + +<p>It was noticeable that the young Shawanoe ate no more than half as much +as each of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p155" id="p155">155</a></span> others. Then saying that he wished to view the camp from +the outside, he went out in front of the cavern. He remarked that he +would be gone only a few minutes, but he took his gun with him.</p> + +<p>When Deerfoot emerged from the rude shelter it was fully dark. There was +a moon in the sky, but the density of the surrounding forest kept out +the rays, so that the gloom could not be penetrated to any distance.</p> + +<p>He stood still and listened. His sense of hearing, like that of sight, +was trained to a wonderfully fine point, as you have learned in the +incidents previously related, so that faint noises, such as you or I +could not have detected, would have told their full story to him.</p> + +<p>But nothing more than what may be called the natural sounds of the wood +fell on his ear. Then the young Indian leaped lightly across the small +brook in front of the cavern and walked some two rods beyond, where he +paused and listened again. After this he made a complete circuit of the +cavern. This compelled him to cross the little stream once<span class="pagenum"><a name="p156" id="p156">156</a></span> more, +brought him back to the mouth of the retreat, and caused him also to +climb over a great deal of broken ground, but a shadow could not have +made the circuit more noiselessly. He stopped several times and listened +with the same profound attention, occasionally looking toward the cavern +within which his friends were eating their supper and talking together +in low, guarded tones. He caught the murmur of their voices, which would +have been audible to no one else beyond a dozen feet. Just above the +large opening in the cavern, through which most of the smoke found its +way, a faint, dull glow showed that the camp-fire was burning below.</p> + +<p>The inspection made by Deerfoot was satisfactory; he had discovered no +sign of any prowling enemy, and the party could not have found a place +where there was less likelihood of disturbance by any foes who were in +the neighborhood. It would seem indeed that nothing short of a most +exceptional mishap could bring any danger near. So he once more entered +the cavern, and seated himself by the fire, upon which Fred Linden had +just<span class="pagenum"><a name="p157" id="p157">157</a></span> thrown a bundle of sticks that filled the cavern with a light like +that of noonday.</p> + +<p>Terry insisted that Deerfoot should take his blanket, because the +Shawanoe had none, and the one belonging to Fred Linden was enough for +the others. Deerfoot at first declined, but his young friend persevered, +so the half-dozen yards of heavy stuff were spread on the rock and earth +floor of the cabin, and then Deerfoot disposed of himself in a lolling +attitude, reclining on his left elbow, while he looked across and +through the blaze at his two friends, who were stretched out in almost a +similar attitude. It will be borne in mind that he was nearer the mouth +of the cavern than were the others: in fact he was about half-way +between where they were stretched and the open air. Fred and Terry did +not notice this, or, if they did, they supposed it was accidental, +though it was done with forethought by the sagacious young Shawanoe.</p> + +<p>The evening was yet young, and the circumstances were such as to make +the boys talk at a rate that almost overwhelmed Deerfoot, who always +showed a deliberation in his speech, as if<span class="pagenum"><a name="p158" id="p158">158</a></span> he weighed each word before +allowing it to fall from his lips.</p> + +<p>Fred and Terry had formed a strong liking for the young Shawanoe, and +since he seemed to be in fine spirits, they plied him with questions +until they learned the chief facts in his history. When the long +conversation ended they knew that Deerfoot was the son of a Shawanoe +chief, and that he was born in the Dark and Bloody Ground. When but a +small boy he was like a spitting wildcat in his hatred of the white +people, and it was not until he was wounded and nearly beaten to death, +that he could be taken prisoner on one of the excursions of his people +against the white settlements.</p> + +<p>He fell into goods hands and was nursed back to strength. Not only that, +but those that had him in direct charge told him about God, who made the +world, who loved His creatures, and who sorrowed to see them trying to +harm each other, and who had sent His only Son to die for His lost +children. It was a wonderful story to which Deerfoot listened with rapt +attention, and all in time (as you have<span class="pagenum"><a name="p159" id="p159">159</a></span> been told in another place), +the extraordinary young Shawanoe became a devout follower of the meek +and lowly One. He felt that he could never repay the whites for showing +him the way to eternal life. Thenceforward he became their friend, and +devoted his life to protecting them against the enmity of the red men.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot told Fred and Terry something about his stirring experiences +with Ned Preston and Wildblossom Brown, and afterward with Jack Carleton +and Otto Relstaub, but did not hint at one-tenth the services he had +rendered the white people. Of all the fierce tribes that made portions +of Ohio and Kentucky like sheol on earth, the Shawanoes were the worst: +they were the Apaches of the last century. Deerfoot had fallen into +their hands and many of his most desperate encounters were with them. +Finally the efforts to take him prisoner became so far reaching that he +saw that his usefulness as a friend of the settlements was at end. The +rage of the Shawanoes was such that it may be said that some of their +campaigns were planned with the sole purpose of capturing the young +renegade, whom they hated<span class="pagenum"><a name="p160" id="p160">160</a></span> with a hatred like that of the tigers of the +jungle.</p> + +<p>You will see, therefore, that not only was the usefulness of Deerfoot as +an ally of the whites ended, but he became even an element of danger to +them. He had been urged to make his home with those who held him in such +high regard, but he could not do so. He quietly withdrew from the +country and crossed the Mississippi into the vast Louisiana Territory. +There he had lived for a couple of years, and there he expected to end +his days.</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot," said Fred Linden, when his remarkable narration had ended, +"Terry and I are not new hands in the woods, and we would be much better +satisfied if you would allow us to share the night in watching with +you."</p> + +<p>"Why does my brother think of danger?"</p> + +<p>"Because <i>you</i> do; I know it by your actions."</p> + +<p>The quickness of this reply struck Deerfoot favorably. He did not think +that his conduct had been noticed, and he was gratified that his friend +was so observant. That there should be no mistake about his suspicions, +Fred added:<span class="pagenum"><a name="p161" id="p161">161</a></span></p> + +<p>"I don't know whether you have seen that Winnebago or not since you +started him on the run yesterday; he may be still running, but I am +quite sure, from the way you have behaved, that you suspect that he and +the rest of his companions are prowling through the woods, on the +lookout for a chance to revenge themselves."</p> + +<p>Deerfoot's face glowed. Fred Linden had hit the nail on the head.</p> + +<p>"My brother speaks the words of truth; his thoughts are the thoughts of +Deerfoot."</p> + +<p>Terry Clark looked at his companion in astonishment.</p> + +<p>"How come ye to know all that, Fred?"</p> + +<p>"I see nothing remarkable about it; all I had to do was to observe the +actions of Deerfoot since he joined us to-day. In the first place, he +wouldn't have made us change our camping place if he hadn't had some +misgiving, and then the way he has been mousing around the outside, and +his decision to keep watch to-night: why what could tell the story more +plainly?"</p> + +<p>"Begorrah," said the admiring Terry, "ye<span class="pagenum"><a name="p162" id="p162">162</a></span> are not such a big fool as you +look to be; I never thought of that."</p> + +<p>"Which looks as if you are a bigger dunce than you seem; but," added +Fred, turning toward the Shawanoe, "have you seen any thing of the +Winnebagos?"</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot has seen their footprints in the woods; they are on the watch +for his white brothers that they may gain their scalps, because the gun +of the Wolf was taken from him."</p> + +<p>"They seem to have hard work in finding us: where do those Winnebagos +come from?"</p> + +<p>Deerfoot pointed to the northward, or rather to a little east of north.</p> + +<p>"Their hunting grounds are many suns' travel that way."</p> + +<p>"Why do the spalpeens come down in this part of the world, and why don't +they behave thimselves whin they do?" demanded Terry, with some +indignation.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot shook his head, as though the question was more than he could +answer.</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot has met Shawanoes and Sacs and Wyandottes and Pawnees far away +from their villages and hunting grounds, besides the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p163" id="p163">163</a></span> strange Indians +who come much further from the setting sun. The red men travel whither +they will. Why the Winnebagos passed near the home of my brothers only +they can tell."</p> + +<p>"Well, they're a bad lot," said Terry, "to try the mean trick they did +on me; though," he added the next moment, "I'm glad they done the same, +for if they hadn't, how would I've got hold of this lovely gun? Do ye +think we shall have any more trouble with them?"</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot believes there will be trouble, and it will come soon!"</p> + +<p>"Well, if it does, all ye have to do is to take away the rist of their +guns and set 'em on the run home agin."</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p164" id="p164">164</a></span> +<a name="A_SUSPICIOUS_SOUND_3200" id="A_SUSPICIOUS_SOUND_3200"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XVII.</h2> +<h3>A SUSPICIOUS SOUND.</h3> +</div> + +<p>By and by Fred Linden and Terry Clark became drowsy. Devoutly kneeling, +they spent several minutes in prayer, and then stretched out on a single +blanket, with their backs toward each other, and the face of Fred in +such a position that he could look across the blaze at Deerfoot on the +other side. The latter had remained still and motionless, while the +lads, remembering the lesson they had learned at their mothers' knee, +asked their Heavenly Father to hold them in His keeping. The young +Shawanoe, who spent many an hour in communion with his Maker, was +touched to see that his friends did not forget their duty.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot stirred the burning wood so that it threw out more light, and +then, reclining on his left elbow, so that the illumination came +directly in his face (the worst direction possible),<span class="pagenum"><a name="p165" id="p165">165</a></span> he drew from +beneath his hunting-shirt the small Bible, that had been presented to +him by the Preston family, and began reading it.</p> + +<p>Fred Linden, who had his eyes fixed upon him, was so interested that his +drowsiness departed. Without moving he watched him closely. He saw him +turning the leaves back and forth, as if looking for some place he had +in mind. It took him but a minute to find it, when, still leaning on his +elbow, and with the light striking his face and the printed page, he +seemed to become so absorbed as to lose all consciousness of his +surroundings.</p> + +<p>Fred Linden, without betraying that he was awake, surveyed this +remarkable performance with an admiration that for the moment made his +eyes misty with emotion.</p> + +<p>The eyes of Deerfoot were downcast, as he read the page, so that they +could not be seen but the handsome oval face; the luxuriant black hair, +with the eagle feathers thrust into the crown; the rows of gleaming +beads around the neck; the deerskin shirt that covered the breast and +arms to the wrists, on the left one of<span class="pagenum"><a name="p166" id="p166">166</a></span> which shone the golden bracelet; +the red sash, behind which were shoved the knife and tomahawk; the +brilliant fringes of the hunting-shirt and leggins; the small, +ornamented moccasins; all these of themselves made a striking figure; +but Fred, handsome and rugged himself, who was not accustomed to see any +thing like beauty in the human form, was struck with the symmetry of the +figure before him. He particularly noticed the tapering legs, and could +not help saying to himself:</p> + +<p>"There is no Indian or white man that can run as fast as he."</p> + +<p>And the mental declaration of the lad was truth. The fleetness of the +young warrior had never been equaled, and he had never yet met the +person whom he could not outrun with ease and without putting forth his +whole speed.</p> + +<p>"He don't look strong, but he is the last person that I would want to +meet in a fight; I'll bet he is so quick that he could dodge the bullet +fired at him."</p> + +<p>I must draw the line here: Deerfoot could not do any thing of the kind.</p> + +<p>"And he is reading his Bible! I never in all<span class="pagenum"><a name="p167" id="p167">167</a></span> my life saw an Indian who +could read a word of print, or do more than sign his name with a cross +or some figure like a bug: I wonder whether we couldn't hire him to +teach school for us at Greville."</p> + +<p>Fred thought a great many queer things about his new friend, but lay +watching him fully ten minutes before he spoke. Then, when he saw him +turn a leaf, he said in a low voice:</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot, will you please read aloud?"</p> + +<p>Fred expected that the Shawanoe would start and look up in surprise; but +he never raised his eyes, or gave the least sign that these words of his +were unexpected. He knew that Fred was watching him from the first, and +so, before the words were more than fairly out of his mouth, Deerfoot +began reading in a low, impressive monotone, as though he had merely +resumed, after turning over the leaf.</p> + +<p>"After this I beheld, and lo! a great multitude, which no man could +number, of all nations, and kindred, and people, and tongues, stood +before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and +palms in their hands;<span class="pagenum"><a name="p168" id="p168">168</a></span></p> + +<p>"And all the angels stood round about the throne, and about the elders, +and the four beasts, and fell before the throne on their faces and +worshiped God.</p> + +<p>"Singing, Amen; blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honor +and power and might be unto our God for ever and for ever, Amen.</p> + +<p>"And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, Who are these which are +arrayed in white robes? and whence came they?</p> + +<p>"And I said unto him, sir, thou knowest. And he said unto me, these are +they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes +and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.</p> + +<p>"Therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve Him day and +night in His temple; and He that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among +them.</p> + +<p>"They shall hunger no more, neither shall they thirst any more; neither +shall the sun light on them, nor any heat.</p> + +<p>"For the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and +shall lead them<span class="pagenum"><a name="p169" id="p169">169</a></span> unto living fountains of waters; and God shall wipe +away all tears from their eyes."</p> + +<p>Deerfoot read a few minutes longer from his favorite part in the New +Testament and then ceased. He had not lifted his eyes from the page, but +he knew that Fred Linden was asleep. He observed it in his breathing, +which was as soft as that of an infant.</p> + +<p>The rocky cavern, the smoldering camp-fire, the two sleeping boys, the +motionless Indian stretched out and reading his Bible by the faint +light, the great, solemn forest walling them in, the profound stillness +that reigned everywhere: these were elements in a picture the like of +which it may be said (except where Deerfoot was one of the figures), had +never been seen anywhere else, and was not likely ever to be seen again.</p> + +<p>The fire sank lower and the light on the printed page became so dim that +even the keen eyes of the young Shawanoe could not trace the words. He +looked at the embers as if asking himself whether he should renew the +blaze and continue reading. But the hour for meditation had come, and he +closed the book. Looking<span class="pagenum"><a name="p170" id="p170">170</a></span> fondly at the stiff, wooden cover, he touched +his lips with infinite tenderness to it, and carefully placed it in the +inner receptacle of his hunting-shirt, murmuring as he did so:</p> + +<p>"The best friend that Deerfoot ever knew!"</p> + +<p>O light of life! Comforter of the sorrowing heart! Consoler of the +stricken soul!</p> + +<p>In the flush of bounding health, when the passions throb high, we may +not heed thy blessed teachings, but when man's promises prove false, and +the head bows before the endless strife, and woes overwhelm us like a +flood, there is relief, there is light, there is life in Thee. The +wicked may jeer, the learned may scoff, the powerful may despise, the +favored may turn away, but there comes the time when learning, gifts, +wealth, power, beauty and all the world can give turn to ashes, and they +have no boon compared to Thine. "And God shall wipe away all tears from +their eyes." The pampered monarch, the dying beggar, the statesman, the +slave, the mother bowed with woe, the father shaken with grief, +childhood in its innocence, man in his strength, beauty in its scorn, +trembling old age, can find<span class="pagenum"><a name="p171" id="p171">171</a></span> no balm but in Thee. Better that the sun +should be blotted from the heavens and the earth left a trackless void +than that Thy light should be denied the world.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot lay flat on his face, his arms crossed so that his head and +shoulders were held a few inches above the flinty floor, and his dark +eyes were fixed on the embers in front. It was his favorite enjoyment, +when the stirring incidents of the day were done, and he had read from +the only Book he ever wanted to read, to spend a time in meditating on +the truths that it may be said had become a part of his very being.</p> + +<p>Many a time had he lain thus, as motionless as if dead, while the +wonderful brain was busy with thoughts that stirred the profoundest +depths of his nature. There are beliefs that come to us at which reason +may laugh, but which it can not shake or disturb. There are questions +that the glib unbeliever may ask that we can not answer. But away down +in our hearts is a faith which the whole world can not remove, and which +can be uprooted only by ourselves. Woe to him who dares lay violent +hands upon it!<span class="pagenum"><a name="p172" id="p172">172</a></span></p> + +<p>Deerfoot no more doubted that he and every one was in the direct keeping +of God than he doubted that he breathed and moved. He knew that the +Great Spirit had caused him to be made a prisoner by whites so that he +might learn the way of life; he knew that He had given him an insight +into the mysteries of His word that was denied to many others. A deep, +outstretching sympathy for those less favored than he suffused his whole +being. Gladly would he have given up his life in pain and torture and +agony, as did One in the dim long ago, if by so doing he could earn the +smile of his Heavenly Father.</p> + +<p>But this remarkable young Christian felt that he was doing the work +appointed for him to do. Here and there he dropped a word that proved to +be seed sown upon good ground, and which had borne its fruit. He had met +his enemies in fair combat and had never taken wrong advantage of them: +his marvelous bow and arrow, and his still more effective rifle, had +brought many a dusky miscreant low, but he had used his amazing gifts in +the line of duty, and for the good of others. Would that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="p173" id="p173">173</a></span> could have +won them by love, but it was not in the nature of things that he should +do so. He had "broken the Bread of Life" to more than one, and he hoped +that ere he should be called home, he should point the way to others.</p> + +<p>Suddenly he raised his chin from his hands and turned his head slightly +to one side. His ear, whose acuteness was almost beyond belief, had +caught a suspicious sound. Profound as might be the meditation of the +Shawanoe, he could never forget his surroundings.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p174" id="p174">174</a></span> +<a name="LIKE_A_THIEF_IN_THE_NIGHT_3394" id="LIKE_A_THIEF_IN_THE_NIGHT_3394"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2> +<h3>LIKE A THIEF IN THE NIGHT.</h3> +</div> + +<p>The crisp autumn night had not reached its turn when the full moon +climbed from behind the straggling clouds obscuring her face, into the +clear air above, and shone down on the wilderness, with the same calm +splendor with which it had shone during the ages before the foot of a +white man had rested on the soil of our country. Here and there, at +widely-separated points, as the orb moved toward the zenith, could be +seen the star-like twinkles of light which showed where the sparse +settlements had been planted by the pioneers. At intervals, too, miles +away from the clearings, could be distinguished the glimmer of the +hunters' camp-fires, where the hardy men had lain down wrapped in their +blankets, and to sleep the sleep of health. Still further away, by the +side of some calmly flowing river or creek,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p175" id="p175">175</a></span> were the ragged tepees of +the wild Indians. Mountain, forest and stream made up the landscape, +that was illuminated by the moon on the night when Fred Linden and Terry +Clark lay down in slumber by the fire in the cavern, and Deerfoot the +Shawanoe took upon himself the duty of acting as a sentinel over them.</p> + +<p>It was not yet midnight when the figure of a crouching Indian emerged +like a shadow from the little gully which marked the course of the tiny +stream in front of the camp. Just at the point where he appeared, a few +rays of the moonlight found their way among the limbs, and added +impressiveness to his appearance. A glance would have told that he had +approached at the most stealthy gait of which he was capable, and was +still using all the skill at his command.</p> + +<p>Finding himself within the faint light of the moon, he straightened up, +like one who is not certain of his surroundings and is using his eyes +and ears to their utmost. Standing erect in this manner he showed +himself to be a full-grown warrior in middle life, of strong limbs<span class="pagenum"><a name="p176" id="p176">176</a></span> and +frame, and attired in the usual dress of his people.</p> + +<p>The long, coarse hair dangled about the shoulders, some of the strands +having fallen forward in front of the chest, at the time his head drew +it over while in a crouching posture. It grew so low on his forehead +that no more than an inch was between the roots and shaggy eyebrows. +Beneath these the eyes glittered like those of a snake. The ugly +features were made more ugly by the different colored paints—most of it +black—that was daubed over them, and the countenance was distorted by a +swelling recently produced.</p> + +<p>The breast and arms were covered by deerskin, a fringe running down in +front to the belt, which held his tomahawk. The frightful horn-handled +knife was tightly grasped in his right hand. Below the belt was +breechcloth, followed by leggins and moccasins, but it was noticeable +that he carried no rifle with him.</p> + +<p>Perhaps you have guessed the reason; he had none to carry, for he was +the Wolf who had been deprived of his valuable weapon on the day before +by Deerfoot the Shawanoe.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p177" id="p177">177</a></span></p> + +<p>As was learned in due time, the Winnebago, after being despoiled by +Deerfoot, had made all haste to rejoin his band, that were encamped at +no great distance from Greville. When he told his brother warriors of +the indignity to which he had been subjected, they were as rampart as he +for revenge. They were on the point of starting for a settlement, +intending to await the chance to shoot down some of the unsuspecting +people, when the leader, a man of iron will, interposed.</p> + +<p>He said that according to the story of the Wolf himself, his gun had +been taken from him by a single warrior. A Winnebago ought to be ashamed +to confess such a thing, and the only way by which the Wolf could redeem +himself was to recover his gun unaided by any of his people. Let him +come back to the party with his rifle and then they would risk their +lives a dozen times over to repay the young Shawanoe and his youthful +friend (they knew nothing about Fred Linden) for the insult they had put +upon one of the leading warriors of the Winnebago tribe.</p> + +<p>You can well understand how displeasing<span class="pagenum"><a name="p178" id="p178">178</a></span> this decision was to the Wolf, +but there was no help for it. The warrior who gave the order was not +only the leader of the company, but the principal chief of the tribe. No +one dared to dispute his command, and he intimated that it was not only +necessary for the Wolf to recover his gun in order to enlist the +services of the rest, but his standing at home would be compromised if +he went back without his rifle and the story that it had been taken from +him by a single warrior of another tribe.</p> + +<p>From this you will understand the eagerness with which the Wolf set out +to regain the weapon.</p> + +<p>The fact that Fred Linden and Terry Clark left Greville the next morning +after the affair, mixed matters to that extent that, for a time, the +Winnebago was at fault. It was his intention to prowl around the +settlement, awaiting his chance, for he suspected that Deerfoot had gone +thither with the lad who had given the Wolf such a blow in the face; but +the discovery of the footprints of the two boys leading to the southward +mystified the Indian.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p179" id="p179">179</a></span> He was quite close to the creek, and the sun had +crossed the meridian at the time this discovery was made. It was natural +that he should look for the trail of the Shawanoe, but he could not find +it.</p> + +<p>Finally, with a half-suspicion of the truth, the Wolf went into the +settlement to make inquiries. He could speak enough broken English to +make himself understood, and, as it so happened, it was Mr. MacClaskey +himself whom he accosted. He told the inquirer the truth, adding that +Terry took with him a gun that was captured from a vagabond Indian. But +for that he would not have been allowed to go, for there was but one +rifle in the family, which the settler would trust in no hands but his +own for any length of time.</p> + +<p>The Winnebago was shrewd enough to disarm any doubt that might have been +felt about himself. It was the rule in the settlement to show kindness +to every wandering Indian that visited them, and no one dreamed that any +thing was to be feared from the Wolf. But his heart was full of exulting +malignancy. He knew who had the gun, and aware that the two<span class="pagenum"><a name="p180" id="p180">180</a></span> boys had +started for the camp of the Ozarks, he understood where to look for it. +The fact that the Winnebago had no gun with him would have caused the +belief that he was the vagabond Indian, had he not explained that he +left it in the woods as a token of comity.</p> + +<p>The Wolf sauntered back until he was across the stream and out of sight. +Then he sped along the trail, with a long, loping trot, which his race +can maintain for hours without fatigue. He had a long distance to +travel, but he reached the scene of the encounter with the strange +animal, just as it was growing dark.</p> + +<p>At this point, he showed admirable woodcraft. The signs on the ground +puzzled him for a time, but there was the carcass of the animal, and by +and by he found the imprints of the small moccasins, which told him that +the young Shawanoe had rejoined the others at this point.</p> + +<p>As you can well believe, this was any thing but a pleasant discovery, +for, superior as was the strength of the Winnebago, he would have +preferred to meet the two boys, even though both were armed, than to +find himself face<span class="pagenum"><a name="p181" id="p181">181</a></span> to face again with the remarkable Indian youth.</p> + +<p>But there was no help for it, and the dusky Winnebago compressed his +coppery lips with the resolve that the gun should be in his hands before +the rising of the morrow's sun.</p> + +<p>The light was rapidly fading among the trees and he improved what was +left of it. Prowling around the spot in a circle, with his nose close to +the ground, he discovered that the three youths had started along the +bank of the brook toward its head.</p> + +<p>Thereupon the Winnebago formed the correct conclusion; they had moved +from the main trail (doubtless on the suggestion of the young Shawanoe), +in search of some place to encamp where there would be less danger of +detection.</p> + +<p>By the time the Wolf had satisfied himself on this point, it had become +too dark among the trees for his eyes to detect the trail, which at +mid-day would have been as distinct as a beaten path. He therefore +adopted the plan of which I have made mention elsewhere: he followed a +general rule.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p182" id="p182">182</a></span></p> + +<p>The conclusion being that the parties for whom he was searching had +located themselves somewhere along the creek, it was useless to try and +follow the footprints, though there were points here and there where the +sense of touch might have helped him. He decided to creep stealthily up +stream until he found the camp, and then bide his time.</p> + +<p>It is hard to form an idea of the extreme care with which this was done. +Had the Winnebago not known of the presence of Deerfoot, he would not +have taken half the time consumed, but he had seen enough of that +wonderful youth to know that it would require more than a child to +outwit him.</p> + +<p>At a point about half way between the trail and the camp among the +rocks, the Wolf thought his hands touched some imprints in the earth +which showed that the three had turned to the right and gone deeper into +the woods. It required reconnoitering before he discovered his mistake.</p> + +<p>With the same amazing patience he renewed his stealthy progress up the +stream, until at last he emerged into the moonlight and found<span class="pagenum"><a name="p183" id="p183">183</a></span> that at +last he had reached the spot for which he had hunted so long.</p> + +<p>It so happened that as he straightened up, he looked directly into the +mouth of the cave and saw the dull glow of the camp-fire, like the open +eye of some monster. Not only that, but he observed the three forms +stretched out by it. The heart of the savage throbbed with pleasure, for +he felt that success had come at last.</p> + +<p>With the same absolute noiselessness he began creeping into the mouth of +the cavern. One of the embers fell apart with a soft rustle, which +caused him to stop and hold his breath lest the sleepers should awake. +But they did not stir, and in a minute he resumed his advance.</p> + +<p>The two white lads had flung the blankets from their faces, so that he +saw Fred Linden plainly, and enough of the other to identify him as the +one who had smitten him. Nearer to the Winnebago than they was the third +form, which he knew equally well.</p> + +<p>"It is the Shawanoe," was his thought; "I will bury my knife in his +heart and then slay the others."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p184" id="p184">184</a></span></p> + +<p>A minute later he reached forward his upraised right hand and suddenly +brought it down with a force that pinned the blanket to the earth. But +to his unspeakable disgust Deerfoot was not within it.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p185" id="p185">185</a></span> +<a name="SHAWANOE_AND_WINNEBAGO_3593" id="SHAWANOE_AND_WINNEBAGO_3593"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XIX.</h2> +<h3>SHAWANOE AND WINNEBAGO.</h3> +</div> + +<p>While Fred Linden and Terry Clark lay in that part of the cavern where +the floor was of rock, the blanket of Deerfoot was spread on the earth. +Consequently when the Winnebago brought down his knife with such vicious +spitefulness, it went through the folds of the blanket and was buried to +the hilt in the ground underneath.</p> + +<p>You know that, despite the marvelous quiet with which the Winnebago +approached the cavern, he was heard by Deerfoot, who, pausing only long +enough to make sure that an enemy was approaching, whisked outside. +There he stood in the impenetrable shadow under the trees, and saw the +Winnebago at the moment he emerged into the faint moonlight and stood +upright.</p> + +<p>The first look confirmed his suspicion that it<span class="pagenum"><a name="p186" id="p186">186</a></span> was the Winnebago, who +had come back to avenge himself for the affair of the preceding day. +Deerfoot smiled to himself, for there was a tinge of absurdity about the +whole business that was sure to become still more so.</p> + +<p>The Shawanoe paused a few seconds before darting out of the cavern, +until he could arrange his blanket, so that it would appear as if it +infolded his sleeping form, and then he quietly awaited events.</p> + +<p>It must be admitted that it looked like leaving Fred and Terry in great +peril to permit such a savage enemy to creep so close to them while they +were sound asleep; but Deerfoot knew that the first thing that the Wolf +would do would be to attempt his life, precisely as he did attempt it. +Before he could do any thing more, the Shawanoe concluded to impress his +presence upon the visitor.</p> + +<p>At the moment, therefore, that the Winnebago stopped his advance and +slowly raised his knife, as he supposed over the breast of Deerfoot, +that gentleman, kneeling on one knee, brought his rifle to bear upon the +Winnebago, the dull light from the fire shining along the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p187" id="p187">187</a></span> barrel, whose +muzzle was within a yard of the unsuspicious Wolf.</p> + +<p>The blanket through which the keen-pointed knife had been driven was no +more firmly transfixed for the moment than was the Wolf when a slight +hissing noise caused him to turn his head, and he saw the dreaded +Shawanoe in a kneeling position with his gun leveled at him, the finger +on the trigger, and the bright eye glancing along the barrel.</p> + +<p>The Winnebago was literally unable to move or speak, and Deerfoot, +motionless himself, held him thus for several seconds. Then with the gun +still pointed, he said in a low voice:</p> + +<p>"Dog of a Winnebago! Deerfoot has spared the life of the Wolf, and he +now seeks to strike him in the dark."</p> + +<p>This address loosened the tongue of the terrified warrior, who, seeing +his captor raise his head from sighting along the barrel, though he +kept the weapon leveled, obeyed the beckoning motion of Deerfoot, and +crept noiselessly out of the cavern. On the alert for any chance, he was +ready to seize it, but the first object on which his eye rested in the +dim moonlight was<span class="pagenum"><a name="p188" id="p188">188</a></span> the figure of the young Shawanoe holding his gun in +such a position, that, should it be necessary, he could fire like a +flash.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot would not have hesitated to lay his gun aside, and, drawing his +knife, give the Winnebago the same chance with himself; but the Wolf had +left his weapon where he forced it through the blanket into the ground, +so that he had none except his tomahawk, and he was not likely to +attempt any thing with that.</p> + +<p>Besides, while Deerfoot had not the least fear of his enemy, he did not +wish to fight with him. He did not engage in his many desperate +encounters through love of victory, but because it had seemed to him +that it was his duty, and there was no other way out of the trouble.</p> + +<p>It must be said, too, that at this hour the Shawanoe happened to be in a +mood which rendered such encounters more than usually distasteful to +him. After he had closed his Bible and lay on his face, looking into the +embers and meditating, the same thought that had stirred him many a time +before filled his mind again.</p> + +<p>Why do men strive to kill each other?<span class="pagenum"><a name="p189" id="p189">189</a></span></p> + +<p>It was a question which has puzzled many a wise man in the past and has +not yet been answered. Thousands of affectionate husbands unlock the +white arms of the loving little children from their necks, kiss the +heartbroken wife good-by, and then rush out to try to murder one whom +they have never seen, who has also just torn himself loose from his +family. There is something in the thought that mystifies beyond all +explanation.</p> + +<p>The problem which directly interested Deerfoot was whether the day would +not come when the red men of every tribe could meet the pale faces in +friendship instead of hatred. Why should they always be at war? Could he +do a little to bring about that day of universal peace? Was there not +some work which the Great Spirit had laid out for him by which he could +help to soften the feeling of the two peoples toward each other?</p> + +<p>But Deerfoot had asked himself the same question many a time before, and +the only answer was that the most he could do was to follow the light +within him: that is, aid to remove a part of the antagonism between the +two races.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p190" id="p190">190</a></span></p> + +<p>Alas, too, that while he was considering the question, his ear caught +the soft rustle that told him one of his own race was seeking his life. +Deerfoot was sorrowed more than angered. He wished that the Winnebago +had taken some other time to make his stealthy attack.</p> + +<p>Joined to this emotion was that of another akin to sympathy for the +Winnebago in his complete discomfiture. He had come back to regain his +rifle, but not only had failed, but had lost his knife, and now was +standing at the mercy of a Shawanoe young enough to be his son. The +latter resolved that, though the Wolf had earned death, he would not +harm him, unless forced to do so in self-defense.</p> + +<p>For half a minute the warriors, with ten feet separating them, looked +straight at each other in silence. Fred Linden and Terry Clark slept +soundly, for as yet there had been no noise sufficient to awake a light +sleeper.</p> + +<p>"Why does the Wolf seek the life of Deerfoot?" asked the latter, willing +to relieve the embarrassment of the other.</p> + +<p>"The Wolf sought the gun that had been stolen from him."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p191" id="p191">191</a></span></p> + +<p>"But it was not hidden in the blanket, that he should drive his knife +through it."</p> + +<p>"The Wolf believed it was," was the curt response.</p> + +<p>"Does the Wolf strike with his knife at his own gun?" asked the +Shawanoe, without betraying any emotion.</p> + +<p>"He would rather do so than that it should stay in the hands of an +enemy."</p> + +<p>"It never would have been in the hands of an enemy had the Wolf acted as +a brave warrior; but he sought the life of the young pale face who had +never done him harm."</p> + +<p>"Has not his people stolen the hunting grounds of the red man?" demanded +the Winnebago, who, seeing that some grace was to be allowed him, burst +into the argument that multitudes of his people have used before and +since. Before he could proceed further, Deerfoot asked: "Are these the +hunting grounds of the Winnebagos?"</p> + +<p>"They are the hunting grounds of his race, though they may not be of his +totem; Deerfoot should join with his brother the Wolf in driving the +white men into the sea."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p192" id="p192">192</a></span></p> + +<p>"There was a day when that might have been done," replied Deerfoot, who +felt that faint throb and thrill which sometimes came to him, as if to +tell him that his Indian nature was not yet entirely dead within him; +"once the pale faces were but a handful, and the red men hunted over all +the ground that lies between the great waters. They could have swept the +pale faces into the sea, but they would not be brothers with themselves; +they fought each other. So the pale faces grew, and the day will never +come when they need fear the red men."</p> + +<p>"The brave warrior does not ask what can be done, but does with all his +might that which he knows the Great Spirit wishes him to do."</p> + +<p>"The Great Spirit does not tell him to kill his pale face brother; for +they are all His children and He loves them. The Great Spirit has spoken +to Deerfoot and told him that all His children should love one another."</p> + +<p>"Does Deerfoot do so?"</p> + +<p>"He does; he never strikes but when the Great Spirit tells him to do so; +if he was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p193" id="p193">193</a></span> Wolf and the Wolf was Deerfoot, he would have slain the +Shawanoe long ago."</p> + +<p>The Winnebago would have denied this had he not seen that it was idle to +do so. What would he not have given at that moment could he have +exchanged places with the handsome and triumphant young warrior?</p> + +<p>"The <i>true</i> Great Spirit loves all His children, whether they be pale or +red or of the color of night; He smiles when they meet each other as +friends, and He will reward in the spirit land those who do His will on +the earth. Let the Wolf bury the words of Deerfoot in his heart, for +they are the words of truth, and if they are heeded he will be +happy—Go!"</p> + +<p>The amazed Winnebago doubted for a moment that he had heard the command +aright; but the wave of the hand which accompanied it, and the fact that +it was in perfect consonance with the words he had just heard, satisfied +him there was no mistake about it.</p> + +<p>"The Wolf thanks his brother for what he has done."</p> + +<p>The heart of the Winnebago forced the words between his lips as he +turned his face away and<span class="pagenum"><a name="p194" id="p194">194</a></span> walked down the bank of the stream in the +direction whence he came. He vanished the next instant in the darkness.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot did not stir until every sound of the soft footsteps had died +out. Then he lowered the hammer of his gun, bent his shoulders slightly +forward, so as to walk freely, and entered the cavern where his friends +were still sleeping.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p195" id="p195">195</a></span> +<a name="ANOTHER_NIGHT_VISITOR_3795" id="ANOTHER_NIGHT_VISITOR_3795"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XX.</h2> +<h3>ANOTHER NIGHT VISITOR.</h3> +</div> + +<p>Deerfoot the Shawanoe was convinced of one thing—the Wolf would trouble +him no further that night. What he might do in the future must be left +for the future to tell. Whether the few words that he had dropped should +prove the good seed of which I have spoken, or whether they should be +choked up by thorns, not even the Wolf himself could tell.</p> + +<p>The young warrior showed his convictions by flinging some wood on the +fire, so that its blaze filled the cavern, and preparing for sleep. He +first sat down and pulled out the knife of the Wolf, whose blade took on +an additional gleam from the cleansing it had received in being forced +into the flinty earth. He examined it with no little curiosity, though +it was similar to his own.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p196" id="p196">196</a></span></p> + +<p>A glance, however, showed that it was an inch or two longer. It was +straight and oval-shaped, the blade not quite two inches wide, with a +handle that had been cut from a deer's horn and fitted with no slight +skill. Whether it was the product of aboriginal ingenuity or was the +work of some cutler of the Caucasian race could only be guessed, the +matter really not being worth the trouble of guessing. Its two edges and +the point were very sharp. Deerfoot having laid aside his gun, grasped +the blade in his left hand and circled it through the air like a +swordsman at play. He was so pleased with it that he decided to keep it. +He would not throw away the one that had served him so well, but would +present it to Fred Linden, while he retained the one with which he was +sure he could do better work.</p> + +<p>It was singular that while the Shawanoe was turning the weapon over in +his hand, and examining it with so much interest, that the occasion for +its immediate use should come, but so it was.</p> + +<p>He was on the point of shoving it in behind his belt and lying down to +sleep, when a movement<span class="pagenum"><a name="p197" id="p197">197</a></span> of the bushes outside was heard. It was so +distinct indeed that he knew it was not caused by a person.</p> + +<p>The rustling was accompanied by a scratching sound and low growl. +Turning his head, he saw an immense wolf standing at the entrance of the +cavern, his whole figure revealed in the firelight. With his jaws parted +and his form erect, he was a formidable creature, before which almost +any one would have recoiled. He would have advanced straight to an +attack upon the young warrior but for the fire which partly interposed. +Even as it was, he seemed making ready to leap at the throat of the +youth, who was sitting on the blanket, looking coolly at him.</p> + +<p>It would have been the easiest matter in the world for Deerfoot to catch +up his gun and shoot him dead, but he chose to do otherwise. Drawing one +of the embers forth by the end that was not burning, he held it before +him in his right hand, and, grasping the knife in his left, ran lightly +toward him, as though he meant to jam it into his eyes.</p> + +<p>The bravest animal can not stand unmoved<span class="pagenum"><a name="p198" id="p198">198</a></span> before such an attack, and the +namesake of the human enemy whisked about and darted out of the cavern +with the Shawanoe close behind him. The former bounded a half dozen +steps, pausing on the very spot where the hostile warrior was first +seen, and facing about, as if to observe whether his foe dare follow him +any further. But Deerfoot had him now where he wished, and he flung the +torch aside among the undergrowth, where it lay smoking for a few +minutes before it went out.</p> + +<p>The fierce animal must have been of the opinion that he too had his +antagonist where he wanted him, for, without the least hesitation, he +uttered a snarling growl and made two leaps straight at him. The first +carried him a little more than half the intervening distance, and the +second was meant to bear Deerfoot to the earth.</p> + +<p>The young warrior, however, stepped lightly to one side, so that the +wolf missed him altogether, and would have been forced to wheel about +and make a second attack had the chance been given him, but at the +instant it landed, the left hand, grasping the long, keen knife,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p199" id="p199">199</a></span> shot +forward with great force and lightning-like swiftness, and was buried to +the hilt in the throat of the brute.</p> + +<p>It was a blow as effective as a cannon ball could have been, for the +knife clove the seat of life in twain, and the beast rolled over on the +earth dead, almost before it could emit a single yelp of agony.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot stood a moment surveying the carcass before him, and then, with +no more excitement than he would have shown in speaking to Fred or +Terry, he said: "'Tis a good weapon, and will serve Deerfoot well."</p> + +<p>Then he walked to the tiny brook, carefully washed the gleaming blade, +shoved it behind his belt, where it was held in place without the sheath +that clasped the other, and walked back to the cavern. The boys had not +been disturbed by the outcry of the wolf, and Deerfoot, throwing some +more wood on the flames, lay down on the blanket, drew it partly about +him, and in ten minutes was asleep, not opening his eyes again until the +light of morning streamed into the cavern and only a few smoldering +embers were left of the camp-fire.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p200" id="p200">200</a></span></p> + +<p>He smiled when he looked upon the two youths, who were still soundly +sleeping, all unconscious of the stirring events that had taken place +during the darkness. There was no call for a renewal of the fire, and, +after spending a few minutes in communion with the Great Spirit, he +passed outside the cavern, drank from the clear water in the brook, and +laved his face and hands.</p> + +<p>Just as he finished, Fred Linden emerged, rubbing his eyes and yawning, +while Terry Clark was close behind him.</p> + +<p>"Good morning, Deerfoot!" called the former; "it was just like you to +let us sleep all night while you kept watch: to-night you must let us +take our turn."</p> + +<p>"Fred has exprissed me own sintimints," added Terry; "we have had so +much slumber that we can kaap awake for a month. Helloa!"</p> + +<p>The gaze of the boys at that moment fell on the body of the wolf, +stiffened in death.</p> + +<p>"You have had visitors," said Fred; "my gracious, but he's a big fellow! +Killed by a knife thrust too, that looks as if it had gone<span class="pagenum"><a name="p201" id="p201">201</a></span> half way +through his body; how was it, Deerfoot?"</p> + +<p>The Shawanoe waited until they had finished bathing their hands and +faces, and then he quietly told them the story, including the account of +the warrior's visit. As you may well suppose, the boys opened their +eyes, and Terry, running inside, brought out the blanket, which had been +folded in such a manner that the knife of the Winnebago passed through +three thicknesses of the cloth.</p> + +<p>"And to think that we slept through it all!"</p> + +<p>"Begorrah, but wasn't it lucky that we didn't have the blanket wrapped +about us?" gasped Terry, who was in earnest in his momentary belief of +the narrow escape of himself and companion.</p> + +<p>"It is well that you kept guard last night; neither of us would have +heard the approach of the Winnebago; and wouldn't have known any thing +about the other wolf until he lit on our shoulders."</p> + +<p>"My brother is mistaken," said Deerfoot; "he is like the rattlesnake; he +gives warning<span class="pagenum"><a name="p202" id="p202">202</a></span> before he strikes; I heard him growl, and he stopped at +the entrance to the cavern, afraid of the fire."</p> + +<p>"Why didn't you shoot him?"</p> + +<p>"Would he have died more quietly, or with less pain than from the knife? +It is the knife that the Winnebago left; Deerfoot wanted to learn +whether it would serve him well."</p> + +<p>"And I should think ye ought to be satisfied, as a cousin of me own once +remarked after working five years for a man without any pay excipt +starvation and kicks."</p> + +<p>"The knife proved itself a good one," said Fred; "but the poorest knife +would be just as effective in your hands."</p> + +<p>Deerfoot withdrew his own weapon from its skin sheath, and handed it to +Fred.</p> + +<p>"Let my brother carry that, for the hour may come sooner than he thinks +when it will be of use to him."</p> + +<p>Fred accepted it gratefully, saying, as he managed to find place for it +somewhat after the manner of Deerfoot:</p> + +<p>"If I can handle it with half of your skill, it will serve me well +indeed, but that can never be."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p203" id="p203">203</a></span></p> + +<p>Deerfoot placed the larger weapon within the sheath from which he had +withdrawn his own and made no reply to the compliments of his friends. +He had heard many such before, but he placed no value upon them. He +regarded himself as simply trying to use in the best way the gifts of +the Great Spirit. His many escapes from death and injury were due solely +to God's protecting care, and he could never take to himself any credit +for what he did.</p> + +<p>The excitement of the boys having subsided, the three sat down in front +of the cavern to eat their breakfast. Enough of the food brought by Fred +was left to give each and all the meal needed, but when they were +through, not a particle was left; henceforth they must depend upon what +their rifles brought them for support while on the way to the camp in +the Ozarks.</p> + +<p>"We have two or three days' travel yet before we can reach camp," said +Fred, while they were making ready to resume their journey; "but I don't +think we shall want for food. What troubles me the most is that scamp of +a Winnebago. You have spared him<span class="pagenum"><a name="p204" id="p204">204</a></span> twice, but I don't believe it will +make a friend of him."</p> + +<p>"He was so boilin' mad," added Terry, "because he lost his gun that now +that he has also lost his knife he may get so much madder that he'll +flop over and become pleased again."</p> + +<p>This, however, was a kind of philosophy to which the others could not +agree. Deerfoot owned that he was in doubt; the sentiment of gratitude +is not one of the chief virtues of the American race, though many +story-tellers would have us believe that it is. There have been +instances known where a red man has shown something of the kind, but as +a rule they have no more of it than had the frozen serpent that was +warmed in the bosom of him who proved his foolishness by making the +experiment.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p205" id="p205">205</a></span> +<a name="THE_CAMP_OF_THE_WINNEBAGOS_3997" id="THE_CAMP_OF_THE_WINNEBAGOS_3997"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXI.</h2> +<h3>THE CAMP OF THE WINNEBAGOS.</h3> +</div> + +<p>Now that the little party had started once more toward the camp in the +Ozark Mountains, they moved at a brisk pace. It took them but a short +time to reach the main trail, where there was a short pause while +Deerfoot made what may be called a microscopic scrutiny of the ground.</p> + +<p>The result did not please him, for he saw the proof that the Wolf had +turned to the right, and had preceded them over the route which they +were to follow. He would have been better satisfied had he crossed the +trail or turned the other way. The fact that he had gone southward meant +that the main party which he was seeking to join were in that direction, +though the keen eyes of the Shawanoe could detect no signs that they had +trodden the same ground. That signified nothing, however,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p206" id="p206">206</a></span> as they might +have pursued a slightly different route, falling back upon the main path +further on.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot, in telling his young friends what he had learned, added that +he had no doubt that they would hear from the Winnebagos again, and +possibly at an hour when least expected. Fred Linden was disturbed more +by the knowledge that the party were approaching the camp where his +father and his companions were unsuspicious of the danger. They could +easily steal close enough to the cabin to shoot down all three without +warning.</p> + +<p>When he mentioned his fear to Deerfoot, that sagacious young warrior +told him that he saw no cause for anxiety, though he could not deny that +something of the kind might take place. His theory was that the +Winnebagos were not disposed to attack any party of whites in mere +wantonness, the act of the Wolf being the whim of a single +gnarly-brained warrior.</p> + +<p>Be that as it may, our young friends were anxious to make the best +progress they could, and, for fully a dozen miles, they kept up their +brisk gait. At the end of that time, the sun<span class="pagenum"><a name="p207" id="p207">207</a></span> was overhead, and they +were obliged to stop on the bank of a broad, swiftly-flowing stream. The +prints made by the hoofs of the horses that had passed that way some +days before were plainly seen, though there had been a fall of rain +since. A glance at the water showed that it was so deep that the hunters +must have swam their animals across.</p> + +<p>It would have been an easy matter for the boys to swim also, but they +preferred to use a raft. Accordingly, they set to work, and it did not +take them long to gather enough logs and driftwood to float all three. +These were deftly fastened together by Deerfoot, who used hickory withes +for that purpose, and, then, with a long pole which he cut and trimmed +with his tomahawk, he pushed from shore.</p> + +<p>The propelling pole was fully fifteen feet long, and in the middle of +the stream, the boys were surprised to see that when one end was pressed +against the bottom, no more than two feet were above the surface: the +depth was much greater than they had suspected.</p> + +<p>It was hard work to keep the clumsy raft<span class="pagenum"><a name="p208" id="p208">208</a></span> moving at such disadvantage, +but Deerfoot would not yield the pole to either of his companions, and, +after awhile, he drove it against the shore, and all stepped upon dry +land, without so much as their feet having become moistened.</p> + +<p>They had been carried some distance below the trail by the current, but +they quickly regained it, and pushed on. Having eaten nothing since +morning, all three were ahungered, but Fred and Terry grimly determined +to wait for Deerfoot to suggest a stop before they asked for it. Had +they but known that many a time, when on the tramp, he had gone two days +and nights without taking a mouthful, they would not have been so +willing to await his pleasure.</p> + +<p>But though he would not have thought of stopping before nightfall had he +been alone, he was too considerate to subject them to discomfort; but it +was useless to stop, since as yet they had seen nothing in the way of +game to shoot.</p> + +<p>Terry and Fred were beginning to feel impatient with each other because +of their mutual<span class="pagenum"><a name="p209" id="p209">209</a></span> stubbornness when the Shawanoe, who had been walking +quite fast, slackened his pace and turning his head, said:</p> + +<p>"My brothers are hungry, and they shall have to eat."</p> + +<p>"Ye couldn't tell us better news," replied the grateful Terry, "though I +would be obliged to ye if ye would impart the information where there is +any chance of our gettin' any such thing, as the people used to say whin +me uncle on me mother's side offered to bet a sixpence on anythin'."</p> + +<p>Deerfoot made no answer, but walking still more slowly, he was seen to +raise his hand to his mouth. Then followed the peculiar cry that a wild +turkey makes when it is lost from its companions. The Shawanoe knew that +the birds were in the surrounding woods, though none had shown itself.</p> + +<p>By and by there was an answer to the call from a point ahead. Asking the +boys to wait where they were, he trotted lightly forward, and was not +absent ten minutes when he came back with a plump turkey, whose neck he +had wrung.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p210" id="p210">210</a></span></p> + +<p>Since the lads had heard no report of a gun, they wanted to know by what +means he had secured it. He replied that he had stood behind a tree and +repeated the call until a group of the birds approached within a few +rods, when he made a dash among them, and seized his prize before she +could spread her wings and fly—all of which told of a dexterity that +few others possessed.</p> + +<p>In a brief while, a good dinner was boiled over the coals, a short rest +taken, and the three were on the road again, it being their wish to +travel further than on the day before. Had Deerfoot been alone he would +have broken into a trot that would have doubled the distance before the +set of sun.</p> + +<p>But the trail over which they were walking grew rougher. It was so rocky +in some places that it must have tried the endurance of the horses +ridden by the hunters. Instead of being direct, it grew very sinuous, +made so by the efforts to avoid many formidable obstacles that rose in +front. All this was of little account to the dusky leader, though of +necessity it prolonged the journey, and he was obliged to<span class="pagenum"><a name="p211" id="p211">211</a></span> slacken his +pace to suit those who were less accustomed to such work.</p> + +<p>It was about the middle of the afternoon, when they were checked again +by coming abreast of a stream that was too broad and deep to be forded. +The trail, however, instead of entering the water, turned up the bank, +and the three, under the leadership of Deerfoot, did the same.</p> + +<p>This diversion continued for fully two hundred yards, when the path +struck the water, the point on the other side where the horsemen had +emerged being in plain sight. The former method was resorted to, and in +less than an hour after reaching the creek the three had safely ferried +themselves across. It was neither so broad nor so deep as the other, but +it delayed them fully as much.</p> + +<p>Within a half mile from the stream last crossed they came upon the trail +of the whole Winnebago party. Just as Deerfoot suspected, they had taken +another route, and had come back to the main path a good many miles away +from where the Wolf left it the night before.</p> + +<p>His experienced eye told him that they were<span class="pagenum"><a name="p212" id="p212">212</a></span> close upon the company, who +numbered precisely twelve—several more than he supposed. Whether the +Wolf was with them could not of course be learned until a glimpse of the +party themselves was obtained.</p> + +<p>Matters had now taken such a shape that the Shawanoe told his companions +that the utmost care must be used, since they were liable to stumble on +the very ones whom they were anxious to avoid. He instructed them to +allow him to keep fully a hundred feet in advance, and never to diminish +the distance without orders from him.</p> + +<p>This was a prudent step, and Fred and Terry did their best to carry out +the wishes of their guide, who walked on at a moderate pace, without +once glancing back at his friends, who he knew would respect what he had +said to them.</p> + +<p>Bear in mind that this arrangement was made toward the close of the +afternoon of an autumn day. The three had not traveled more than two +miles, with the leader so far in advance, when the gathering gloom +became such that he would not have been visible to his followers<span class="pagenum"><a name="p213" id="p213">213</a></span> had he +not fallen back so as to keep in sight.</p> + +<p>Finally, when less than a dozen yards separated them, and the graceful +figure of the young Shawanoe looked like a shadow gliding in advance, he +suddenly halted. The eyes of the boys were upon him, and they saw him +raise his hand as a signal to stop; they obeyed without so much as a +whisper.</p> + +<p>He stood like a statue for two or three minutes, and then, turning his +head without moving his body, beckoned them to approach. They could +barely see the motion of his arm, as they stepped softly to his side; +but before reaching him, they caught the glimmer of a light among the +trees, somewhat in front and to the right. When they stood near him, +they saw it more distinctly.</p> + +<p>In a partly open space, near the invariable stream of water, were a +group of Indians, some stretched lazily on the ground, some squatted +like tailors, two busy cooking something over the fire, and nearly every +one smoking long-stemmed, stone pipes. They were a sturdy set of +warriors, who were likely to give a good account<span class="pagenum"><a name="p214" id="p214">214</a></span> of themselves in a +hunt or fight, and both Fred and Terry knew who they were before +Deerfoot, with his arm extended and his finger pointing toward them, +said:</p> + +<p>"It is the camp of the Winnebagos!"</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p215" id="p215">215</a></span> +<a name="KEEP_TO_THE_TRAIL_4181" id="KEEP_TO_THE_TRAIL_4181"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXII.</h2> +<h3>"KEEP TO THE TRAIL"</h3> +</div> + +<p>It was an interesting scene on which the three youths looked. There were +a dozen Winnebago warriors lolling and smoking in camp, while two of +their number were preparing their supper, by half-broiling it over the +blaze and coals. Fred and Terry stood in silence by the side of +Deerfoot, gazing upon the strangers with a curiosity such as no other +sight could have inspired.</p> + +<p>A small tree interfered somewhat with the view of Fred, and he took a +step forward. Immediately the Shawanoe put out his arm and shook his +head to signify that that would not do; they were as close as was safe. +Then Fred shifted his position a little to one side, as you feel like +doing in a public hall when a column is in front of you. To this +Deerfoot offered no objection, and the lad was satisfied.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p216" id="p216">216</a></span></p> + +<p>"Begorrah, but there's the spalpeen!" whispered Terry, in some +excitement, pointing his finger toward the camp, and with no thought of +the uselessness of such an act.</p> + +<p>The others knew that he referred to the Wolf, who had caused them so +much trouble, but they had already seen him. He was standing at one end +of the group, with folded arms, while he scowled, and the firelight +fell upon his features with such directness that the scowl could be +plainly seen. He appeared to be looking at the two warriors busy with +the fire, though more than likely his gaze fell indifferently upon them +and the rest, all of whom were in his field of vision.</p> + +<p>The tomahawk showed in his girdle, but of course he was without any +other weapon, and Terry could not avoid a smile when he noted it and he +had to say something despite the displeasure of Deerfoot.</p> + +<p>"Do ye observe his left eye and the end of his nose where one of me +blows landed? What could be foiner than the swell that ye see there? He +will naad to use no black paint for siveral days, as me grandfather—"<span class="pagenum"><a name="p217" id="p217">217</a></span></p> + +<p>At this point Deerfoot deliberately placed his hand over the mouth of +the speaker, abruptly ending what he proposed to say.</p> + +<p>Now, nothing could be clearer than that if the Winnebago party were in +such plain view of the three youths, the latter in turn were liable to +be discovered by them. They were standing beyond the circle of +firelight, where the darkness screened them from sight, and, if one of +the red men should look in that direction, he could not have seen them; +but there was the probability that any moment one of the warriors might +start out to reconnoiter their surroundings, in which event, discovery +was almost certain. Besides, the exuberant spirits of Terry Clark taught +Deerfoot that it was unwise to trust him in such a delicate position.</p> + +<p>Altogether, the time spent in watching the Winnebagos was barely ten +minutes. During that period, some of those reclining on the leaves got +up, walked about and sat down again; others kept their feet, and one +stepped to where the two were busy with a steak of some kind that they +were broiling over the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p218" id="p218">218</a></span> coals, as though his hunger was making him +impatient.</p> + +<p>But the Wolf never stirred a muscle, and Terry afterward insisted that +he did not wink his eyes, so motionless was he. The same scowl added +hideousness to the painted face, and it was easy to understand that his +meditations were of any thing but a pleasant nature.</p> + +<p>Turning his back upon the camp, Deerfoot motioned for them to go back. +They did so, he following on their heels until not the faintest glimmer +of the fire could be seen. Then he led them by a round-about course to +the trail beyond the camp, and explained his wishes.</p> + +<p>He was now free to admit that there was reason to believe the Winnebagos +intended an assault upon the three hunters among the foothills of the +Ozark, and who were unsuspicious of such danger. Of course the Shawanoe +had no direct knowledge that such was their purpose, but he was so +convinced that he meant to take the utmost precautions against it.</p> + +<p>He therefore proposed that he should linger near the camp until he could +learn of a verity what their intentions were. If they meant to<span class="pagenum"><a name="p219" id="p219">219</a></span> attack +the Hunters of the Ozark, then he would hasten to give warning to +Linden, Hardin and Bowlby, who, re-enforced by the three youths, would +be strong enough to beat off an Indian party twice as strong.</p> + +<p>In the meantime, Deerfoot wished Terry and Fred to push toward the camp +with all the speed of which they were capable, he promising to follow as +soon as he could. They had walked almost the entire day with scarcely a +halt on the road, but he wished them to keep on into the night so long +as they could. They would need nothing to eat before morning and between +sundown and sunup they ought to make a long advance on their journey.</p> + +<p>You will probably wonder why (the situation being such as was explained +by Deerfoot), he did not keep company with the lads and help them in +their forced march to the mountains. One reason was that he was +convinced in the first place that a demonstration would be made by the +Winnebagos against the Hunters of the Ozark, and he wanted to get both +boys—especially Terry—out of the neighborhood as soon as he could; for +their presence hampered<span class="pagenum"><a name="p220" id="p220">220</a></span> his own actions. The safest place for them was +in the strong cabin to the southward, and they could not get there too +soon.</p> + +<p>Yet they would certainly travel as fast in his company as by themselves, +and Fred and Terry, therefore, could not see why he should stay behind +instead of going with them; yet Deerfoot the Shawanoe never took a step +of that kind without the best reason for it, as you will admit when it +is made clear to you. To give this explanation would require such a long +diversion from the thread of my story that you would be impatient. +Before I am through with the history of Deerfoot, you shall know not +only the reason for his course but for several other things that have +been referred to in the stories told about him.</p> + +<p>The confidence of Fred Lincoln and Terry Clark in the wonderful young +Shawanoe was so perfect that they did not question any decision, no +matter how little they failed to see its reason. If what he asked was in +their power, they would bound at the chance of doing it, just as they +did now.</p> + +<p>He had a parting warning to give.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p221" id="p221">221</a></span></p> + +<p>"Let my brothers make sure that they do not lose the trail; they must +look at the ground often: when they do not see the path they must stop +and await the rising of the sun; they can not reach the cabin too soon, +but they can never reach it by going wrong; <i>keep to the trail</i>!"</p> + +<p>The circuitous route which they had taken under the guidance of +Deerfoot, had brought them back to the path at a point fully a hundred +yards beyond the camp-fire, which had been started in the small open +space only a few rods from the path. So far as they knew there was +nothing now between them in the way of a direct advance to the cabin of +their hunters.</p> + +<p>"Fred," said Terry, after they were fairly under way, and while he +almost stepped on the heels of his friend; "Deerfoot thinks we won't go +more than five or six miles; let's show him that we ain't such babies as +he thinks."</p> + +<p>"I feel as you do; I propose that we keep it up all night."</p> + +<p>"Will ye be kind enough to raich yer right hand over your lift shoulder +and shake wid me on the same?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="p222" id="p222">222</a></span></p> + +<p>Instead of doing precisely as asked, Fred laughingly turned about and +shook hands with his friend, whom he loved and for whom he was ready at +any time to risk his life. They were on their mettle and they meant to +show the young Shawanoe that they were capable of doing much more than +he seemed to believe. They intended that when, after a few hours, he +started to overtake them, he would find that he had a good many miles +further to travel than he supposed.</p> + +<p>Had Deerfoot known of their thoughts he would have smiled and been +pleased. He wanted them to do their best and he was willing, should it +prove to be safe, to allow them to keep up the delusion that their gait +could bear any comparison with the speed of which he was capable.</p> + +<p>Meanwhile, the boys started in earnest to carry out their intention. +Their only fear was that they might be hindered by the difficulty in +keeping to the trail; for though the full moon was again overhead, and +though many of the leaves had fallen from the trees, little light was +there to help them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p223" id="p223">223</a></span></p> + +<p>But for a time, at least, the difficulty was much less than they +expected. The path, though it continued to lead over rough places and +around obstructions, sometimes up-hill and sometimes down, was still so +clearly marked that Fred Linden went forward with scarcely a halt or any +hesitation.</p> + +<p>Though there are men who have walked their five and six hundred miles +with little rest on the road, it is a severe task for any one to keep it +up through an entire day and night, as you can soon become convinced by +making the experiment; but Fred and Terry were sturdy, strong-limbed +fellows, born and bred on the frontier, who were capable of standing a +great deal. When, therefore, they meant to astonish Deerfoot by their +progress during the night, they felt no distrust of their ability in +that direction.</p> + +<p>There was no reason why they should put any restraint on themselves, and +they talked quite cheerily, Terry indulging now and then in some of his +quaint remarks. But a tired boy does not feel like keeping up a lively +conversation for any length of time, and so it came<span class="pagenum"><a name="p224" id="p224">224</a></span> about that after +awhile they walked steadily forward, for miles at a time, without +exchanging more than a few syllables. Terry could see the figure of his +friend with his rifle over his shoulder always a few feet in front, +there being just enough light in the gloom to keep his form in sight, +while Fred heard the steady tramp, tramp behind him, sometimes keeping +pace with his own and sometimes falling "out of step."</p> + +<p>"Helloa! this is too bad!" suddenly exclaimed Fred, coming to an abrupt +halt; "I guess this ends our tramp for to-night."</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p225" id="p225">225</a></span> +<a name="AN_INFURIATE_SHAWANOE_4372" id="AN_INFURIATE_SHAWANOE_4372"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXIII.</h2> +<h3>AN INFURIATE SHAWANOE.</h3> +</div> + +<p>WITH the departure of Fred and Terry, Deerfoot felt as though he had +flung off a blanket that had been wrapped about his shoulders: his arms +were now free and he could use them at will.</p> + +<p>He shrewdly suspected that his young friends would fancy they had been +put upon their mettle, and would, therefore, exert themselves to their +fullest to meet his expectations. He was glad it was so, and he would +have been much better pleased could he have known they were in the cabin +at the foot of the mountains, or, better still, safe at their home in +Greville.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot now stealthily approached as close to the camp-fire as was +safe. He screened his body behind a tree, but he was nigh enough to +catch every word that was said in an ordinary<span class="pagenum"><a name="p226" id="p226">226</a></span> tone, and he understood +the Winnebago tongue well enough to want no interpreter.</p> + +<p>The Shawanoe had hardly taken his position to act as cowen, when the +venison steaks were about one-fourth broiled, which was enough to +satisfy the parties interested. Those who had charge of the culinary +operations divided the meat into a dozen slices, so that each warrior +was provided for, and the feast opened. The strong animal appetites, and +teeth like those of the steel traps that were set at the foot of the +Ozarks, soon brought the feast to a close, after which the feasters +walked the few steps necessary to the brook near at hand, and lying down +on their faces drank their fill, just as so many pigs would have done, +grunting with satisfaction as they came back and resumed their pipes.</p> + +<p>All this Deerfoot had seen so often that it had no interest to him. He +kept his eyes on two warriors—the Wolf and one whom he had never seen +before. These two sat near each other on the ground while eating, and +they talked together in low tones. Since none of those around could +overhear the words, it was<span class="pagenum"><a name="p227" id="p227">227</a></span> impossible for Deerfoot, with all his +wonderful acuteness, to catch a syllable. He would have given a great +deal could he have done so, for he suspected the dark plot that was +taking shape in their dusky brains. There was a dangerous flash in the +black eyes of the young Shawanoe while he watched their movements.</p> + +<p>It was clear to him that the Wolf had lost prestige, instead of gaining +sympathy by his last misfortune. Having gone out to gather wool he had +come back shorn, to go out a second time and to come back shorn to a +still more ludicrous degree. The manner in which the Wolf kept apart +from the rest, affiliating only with the single warrior at his side, +showed the feeling in the party.</p> + +<p>It was easy to recognize the leader or chieftain, though his dress was +precisely like the rest, but his air of authority told the story plainly +enough. The Winnebagos were a fine set of men in their war paint, and, +as I have said, were able to give a good account of themselves in any +scrimmage in which they might become engaged.</p> + +<p>As unexpectedly to the warriors as to Deerfoot<span class="pagenum"><a name="p228" id="p228">228</a></span> himself, the Winnebago +chieftain, who was standing on one side of the fire where his rifle with +several others leaned against a tree, took his pipe from between his +lips and spoke to the Wolf in tones which caused that redskin to look up +in wonder. Seeing that the sachem hesitated, as if waiting for him to +rise, the Wolf came nimbly to his feet, as did his friend at his elbow. +The majority of the rest, however, sat still and showed no special +interest in what was going on.</p> + +<p>"The Wolf was the bravest of the Winnebagos," remarked the chief, "when +our war parties met those of the Sauks and Foxes and Pottawatomies who +dared to come into our country; the heart of the Wolf bounded with +delight and no tomahawk was hurled with such swiftness as his: no gun +was fired more often; no scalping knife took back more scalps to hang +upon the ridge-pole of his wigwam.</p> + +<p>"But the Wolf came across the Big Water and his heart longed for the +scalp of the pale face; he went out to hunt for it; he came back; the +tongue of the Wolf is not double<span class="pagenum"><a name="p229" id="p229">229</a></span> and tells no lies; the Wolf met a +Shawanoe warrior who took his gun from him.</p> + +<p>"It was the young Shawanoe called Deerfoot; the Winnebagos have been +told about Deerfoot, the friend of the white man; the heart of Black +Bear (meaning himself) was angry; he was chief of the Winnebagos; he +told the Wolf that he must go forth and bring back his rifle; the Wolf +went; he did not bring back his rifle, but left his knife behind; +Deerfoot saw him and took it away from him.</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot is but a youth; he is not a mighty warrior; the Wolf must get +his gun and knife; he must bring back the scalp of the Shawanoe, he +shall take Wau-ko-mia-tan with him; each shall have his gun; let them +bring back the scalps of Deerfoot and the two pale faces with him; then +will Black Bear forget that the Wolf was not always a great warrior.</p> + +<p>"Let the Wolf and Wau-ko-mia-tan make haste; the Winnebagos are on the +war path; they will carry back with them the scalps of the pale faces +who are gathering the skins of the beaver and otter and foxes by the +base of the mountain."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p230" id="p230">230</a></span></p> + +<p>It may be said that this little speech developed the plan of the +Winnebago campaign. The Wolf had fallen so low in the opinion of his +chieftain and brother warriors, that it was necessary for him to take +heroic measures to restore himself. Seeing this, the sachem had just +notified him that he must secure the scalps of Deerfoot and the two +white boys with him. Wau-ko-mia-tan (who was the warrior that sat at the +elbow of the Wolf), was to be his companion. The chieftain knew how +closely the two were allied, and he indulged in the little fiction of +allowing one to keep company with the other, when the truth was he was +afraid to let the Wolf go alone. Since on each of the two former +excursions he had lost something, the probabilities were that if he came +back again, it would be without his scalp.</p> + +<p>The eagerness with which the Wolf accepted this task, the moment he +found that he was to have a companion, showed that he was an admirable +representative of the average Indian: gratitude to him was a vice rather +than a virtue.</p> + +<p>The expression on the face of Deerfoot showed<span class="pagenum"><a name="p231" id="p231">231</a></span> that all forbearance was +ended. He had twice spared the ingrate: he would do so no more.</p> + +<p>Had the Wolf told his leader that the mercy of Deerfoot had touched his +heart, so that his arm could never more be raised in anger against him, +but that he would seek the scalps of the hunters at the base of the +mountains, the Shawanoe would have felt an admiration for him. Had he +sought out Deerfoot and asked for the return of his weapons (though that +would have been very unlike his race), Deerfoot would have restored them +to him. But now, as it was, when they should meet it would be as mortal +enemies.</p> + +<p>Nothing showed the vicious ingratitude of the Wolf more vividly than the +fact that instead of waiting for the morning before entering upon his +wicked enterprise, he started within three minutes after Black Bear, the +chieftain, finished his little speech. The sachem picked up his own +rifle from where it leaned against the tree and handed it to him, while +Wau-ko-mia-tan stood at the other end of the group, until the warrior, +his ugly face glowing like that of a demon, stepped to his side. Then<span class="pagenum"><a name="p232" id="p232">232</a></span> +the two, without a word or motion like a farewell, turned away and +vanished in the gloom of the wood.</p> + +<p>They had not taken a dozen steps, when Deerfoot glided from behind the +tree and passed after them, as if he were the shadow thrown out by the +light of the camp-fire. The expression on his face was such as would +have hushed Fred Linden and Terry Clark to awed silence could they have +seen it.</p> + +<p>The two Winnebagos did not come directly back to the trail, but fell +into it at almost the precise point where Deerfoot had led his two +friends. They stopped a few minutes and talked in their low, guttural +tones, none of which was understood by the Shawanoe, who listened with +the closest attention.</p> + +<p>There was considerable distance at that time between the warriors and +Fred and Terry, who had set out with the ambition to keep up their +traveling through the entire night. The Winnebagos did not wait long, +when they moved on at their usual pace.</p> + +<p>Less than a mile from the camp, the warriors again came to a halt and as +before talked in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="p233" id="p233">233</a></span> low voice. The point was where the wood was more +open, so that the moonlight which found its way among the limbs above +showed their forms quite plainly. More than that, enough of their words +were audible to enable the listening Shawanoe, who had crept dangerously +near, to catch their meaning.</p> + +<p>The Winnebagos turned off at almost a right angle and left the trail +behind them. The ground was broken, but they had not gone far, when it +became evident that they were following another path, though it was so +faintly marked that no eye except that of an American Indian could have +discovered it in such an uncertain light.</p> + +<p>As they advanced, the surface became not only rougher, but the grade +which they ascended was so steep that it would have been tiresome to an +ordinary traveler.</p> + +<p>Suddenly Deerfoot himself wheeled aside from the indistinct path to +which the Winnebagos clung and passed lightly and with great speed +through the wood where no one had walked before. So swiftly did he make +his way, that, though he crossed a deep ravine<span class="pagenum"><a name="p234" id="p234">234</a></span> and went a considerable +distance, it was less than live minutes before he came back to the +shadowy trail.</p> + +<p>Instead of keeping along this path, in the same direction as that of his +enemies, he turned about and advanced to meet the red men who had dared +to come that way. He walked with his usual noiseless step, and stopped +on reaching the edge of the ravine over which he had leaped when it +crossed his path only a few minutes before.</p> + +<p>This gully was more than twenty feet in depth, and about half as wide. +The trail led to the edge on one side, continuing on the margin directly +opposite, so that any one who wished to keep to it was perforce +compelled to leap the chasm—a slight task for any Indian, though it +would have been easy to make a bridge by means of a fallen tree.</p> + +<p>The moon was now directly overhead, so that a flood of light fell into +the craggy ravine, lighting up the gray rocks and bowlders, the +prostrate trees that had fallen from the sides, the vegetation along the +slopes and the mossy grass that had been watered by the torrents when<span class="pagenum"><a name="p235" id="p235">235</a></span> +they roared through. The trees grew rank and close to the edge at the +top—so close that some of them had slidden off and fallen part way +below, carrying the gravel, sand and earth with the prong-like roots +part way to the bottom.</p> + +<p>So faint was the mark of the trail opposite that even with the help of +the moonbeams, it took an eye as keen as that of Deerfoot to tell where +his enemies would appear. But he coolly awaited them, though his +calmness was the fearful calm of a fury such as even he rarely knew.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p236" id="p236">236</a></span> +<a name="THE_DEFIANCE_4578" id="THE_DEFIANCE_4578"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXIV.</h2> +<h3>THE DEFIANCE.</h3> +</div> + +<p>The expression of the face of Deerfoot was terrible. The whole fury of +his nature was at white heat. He knew that the two Winnebagos had set +out to commit a fearful crime, and it was his work to stay their hands. +There was but the single way in which they could be stayed.</p> + +<p>The young Shawanoe kept back a couple of paces from the edge of the +ravine, where the shadow of the stunted trees above would hide him from +his foes when they should come in sight. He held his gun pointed and +cocked. Though his passion had the glow of the furnace, he was as calm +as death.</p> + +<div class="figcenter" style='width:350px'> +<a name="illus-002" id="illus-002"></a> +<img src="images/ozark-236.jpg" alt=""There was a fierce whizz like the rush of an eagle's wing."" title="" width="350" /><br /> +<span class="caption">"There was a fierce whizz like the rush of an eagle's wing."</span> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="p237" id="p237">237</a></span>He had not long to wait. By and by a low guttural exclamation struck his +ear, and his hearing, strung to a marvelously fine point, caught the +sound of the soft moccasins on the hard earth. Less than a minute later +the form of the Wolf came into the moonlight, as a bather emerges from +the side of a lake. Seeing the open ravine at his feet, he stopped, and +instantly his companion, Wau-ko-mia-tan, appeared at his side.</p> + +<p>They quickly saw that the leap was an easy one.</p> + +<p>"Wau-ko-mia-tan will leap across," said that warrior, "then the Wolf +will follow; let us lose no time, for the Shawanoe may be gone."</p> + +<p>The speaker recoiled a single pace and gathered his muscles for the +leap. He took one quick step and made a terrific bound upward and +outward, straight for the rocky brink whereon Deerfoot the Shawanoe +instantly stepped into the moonlight.</p> + +<p>The Winnebago was in mid-air, crouching like a leaper, with his legs +gathered under him and his arms at his side, when there was a fierce +whiz, like the rush of an eagle's wing, something flashed in the +moonlight, and the tomahawk, driven by a lightning-like sweep of the +Shawanoe's arm, was buried in the chest of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p238" id="p238">238</a></span> Winnebago as it would +have sunk in so much sodden earth.</p> + +<p>An ear-splitting screech burst from the throat of the smitten warrior, +who struck the edge of the ravine like a bundle of rags flung thither, +and then tumbled to the bottom as dead as the jagged rock on which he +lay.</p> + +<p>The Wolf stood transfixed, unable to understand what had taken place. +Then he saw the figure of the youthful warrior on the other side and +heard his voice.</p> + +<p>"Rattlesnake of a Winnebago! Die the death of the rattlesnake!"</p> + +<p>The wretch was given no time to protest again, for the words were yet in +the mouth of Deerfoot when the flash of his rifle lit up the partial +gloom, and the crack of the weapon mingled with the death shriek of the +redskin, who slumped end over end down the ravine and lay beside the +body of Wau-ko-mia-tan as dead as he.</p> + +<p>"Thus shall die all that seek to follow your footsteps," muttered the +Shawanoe, who, standing where he stood when he slew both, proceeded to +reload his rifle with as much coolness<span class="pagenum"><a name="p239" id="p239">239</a></span> as though he had just fired at a +target on a tree.</p> + +<p>This finished, he let himself over the edge of the ravine, holding fast +a moment by one hand, and then letting go, dropped lightly beside the +two bodies that lay below. His face showed no excitement now, and he +moved with his usual care and deliberation. Drawing the hunting-knife +which he had taken from the Wolf, he partly bent over, but straightened +up again, saying to himself:</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot is a Christian Indian and can not scalp a foe though as base +as they."</p> + +<p>Picking up each rifle (that of Wau-ko-mia-tan being still clutched by +his nerveless fingers while the Wolf's had fallen from his grasp), he +deliberately broke the locks of each by striking them on the stones. He +then recovered his own tomahawk, and carried off the useless weapons +with him.</p> + +<p>He passed down the ravine until he reached a point where the sides were +not so high. There he clambered out, still keeping the two broken guns. +He had reached high ground on the side from which had come the +Winnebagos,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p240" id="p240">240</a></span> and he walked grimly forward, until in a brief while he +reached the main trail over which he and the boys had passed a brief +while before.</p> + +<p>He turned toward the left, which led him in the direction of the camp of +the Ozarks as well as toward the camp of Black Bear and his Winnebagos. +He took longer steps than usual, but did not trot or run.</p> + +<p>When he once more caught the glimmer of the camp-fire among the trees, +he slackened his pace and drew nigh with the caution that had become a +second nature to him. He quickly saw that the Winnebagos had disposed of +themselves for the night. The fire was burning as brightly as ever, +because of the attention it received from the two warriors who were +standing on guard.</p> + +<p>The party were in a portion of the country where they knew there was +scarcely a possibility of their being molested by any one; but the +American Indian loves nothing like laziness and war; and, treacherous by +nature himself, he expects treachery at all times in others. And so, +although they knew of no enemies within miles of them (unless it was +Deerfoot,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p241" id="p241">241</a></span> whom they did not fear) they had two vigilant sentinels on +duty. The rest were stretched out on their blankets with their feet +turned toward the blaze, sleeping like so many tired animals.</p> + +<p>At the moment of Deerfoot's approach, the Winnebagos on guard were +standing some twenty feet apart, with the fire burning between them. +Each held a loaded gun in hand and cast his keen glance hither and +thither in the gloom, eyes and ears alert for the first suspicious sight +or sound.</p> + +<p>The sentinel nearer Deerfoot was Black Bear himself. The chieftain +evidently believed that the best way to instruct his warriors in their +duty was to set the example. His attitude showed that something had +arrested his attention. Deerfoot knew that the sound had been made by +his moccasin, for he purposely rustled the leaves.</p> + +<p>Black Bear looked intently off in the gloom, but seeing nothing, turned +his head and told the other guard to fling more wood upon the fire. He +obeyed, and the circle of light quickly extended out among the trees.</p> + +<p>It would have been an easy matter for the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p242" id="p242">242</a></span> Shawanoe to slay both, but he +had no thought of doing so. That would have been killing without +justification.</p> + +<p>The Winnebago chieftain was gazing intently into the night, when from +behind a tree, no more than a dozen steps distant, softly stepped the +young Shawanoe.</p> + +<p>"Listen, Black Bear," said he, "to the words of Deerfoot the Shawanoe. +Twice did he spare the life of the Wolf and the Wolf thanked him, but he +went out a third time to take his life; he was a rattlesnake, but he had +not the courage of the rattlesnake, for he took with him Wau-ko-mia-tan, +whose heart was that of a rattlesnake also; they bent their steps where +none but Deerfoot has the right to go; therefore Deerfoot killed them +and took away their guns. <i>There they are!</i>"</p> + +<p>In the same minute that Deerfoot began speaking, the second sentinel +stepped forward and took his place beside his chief. That both were +amazed need not be said. Each stood with the muzzle of his gun lowered, +neither dreaming that the youth thought of assailing them.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p243" id="p243">243</a></span></p> + +<p>Deerfoot spoke in the slow but impressive voice natural to his race. But +the last exclamation escaped him like the discharge from a Leyden jar. +So quickly that neither saw a movement, he hurled the broken gun of the +chief straight at him, following it with the second gun driven at his +companion.</p> + +<p>Both hit their mark. Black Bear was struck in the chest with such force, +that he was carried off his feet and knocked half fainting to the earth. +The other was hit and compelled to recoil a step, but the weapon struck +him lengthwise, and he was not harmed. He rallied and brought his gun to +his shoulder, but by the time it was leveled, the Shawanoe had vanished.</p> + +<p>Such an exploit, as you may well suppose, caused consternation among the +Winnebagos for the space of several minutes. No gun had been fired, but +the American Indian is a light sleeper, and slight as was the +disturbance, it aroused every one. There was a gathering about the +fallen chieftain, who, however, came to his feet without help, though he +gasped and was weak for a few moments. The explanation given by the +other sentinel removed the general<span class="pagenum"><a name="p244" id="p244">244</a></span> fear of an attack, but three of the +warriors scattered through the wood to make sure that no surprise +overtook them, while the others with an agitation rare among red men +talked over the astounding occurrence.</p> + +<p>The broken rifles lying on the ground left no doubt that when the +Shawanoe declared he had slain both the Wolf and Wau-ko-mia-tan he spoke +the truth. Else, how could their shattered guns be in his possession?</p> + +<p>And this same youth, with an audacity beyond comprehension, had flung +the two guns at the chieftain and his brother warrior and defied them. +It seemed as though he must be more than a human being, to be capable of +such deeds. Legends had reached them of some of the exploits of the +wonderful young Shawanoe, but this surpassed them all.</p> + +<p>The Winnebagos, however, were among the bravest tribes in the west, and +when they broke camp at early dawn, Deerfoot, who was on the watch, knew +that it was their determination to slay every one of the three hunters +in the camp at the foot of the Ozarks, as soon as they could reach +them.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p245" id="p245">245</a></span> +<a name="THE_SIGNAL_FIRE_4770" id="THE_SIGNAL_FIRE_4770"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXV.</h2> +<h3>THE SIGNAL FIRE.</h3> +</div> + +<p>Deerfoot the Shawanoe remained in the vicinity of the Winnebago camp +until the warriors made their start at an early hour the following +morning. He took more than one survey of the red men, who gathered about +the blazing fire and talked over the remarkable events of the night. He +could easily have slain every one of the scouts whom they kept moving +through the wood, but he had no wish to do so.</p> + +<p>He heard and saw enough to convince him that they intended to make an +attack on the camp in the mountains, but he did not feel absolutely sure +that they would not turn aside and follow in the path of the Wolf and +Wau-ko-mia-tan, until the party had advanced several miles to the +southward along the Ozark trail.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p246" id="p246">246</a></span></p> + +<p>It seemed strange that the Winnebagos paid no attention to the two +missing warriors, and yet, after all, it was not singular. They knew +they were dead and it was therefore a waste of time to give heed to +them. If by any possibility they were alive, they must take care of +themselves, just as all brave Indians did: if unable to do so, the +consequences must be on their own heads.</p> + +<p>So the ten Winnebagos, under the lead of the famous chieftain Black +Bear, moved along the trail in the direction of the camp of the Hunters +of the Ozark, and the expressions and words that had been overheard by +the watchful Shawanoe, left no doubt that by way of revenge they meant +to slay the three trappers who had located there for the winter.</p> + +<p>The Winnebagos came from the north-east. Their lodges, villages and +hunting grounds were many moons' travel away, and the section of country +through which they were journeying was so sparsely settled that they had +no fear of pursuit. Now, when you give an American Indian the chance to +commit some vicious mischief with no fear of being made to<span class="pagenum"><a name="p247" id="p247">247</a></span> pay +therefor, you may set it down as a truth that nine hundred and +ninety-nine out of every one thousand will commit that crime. It was a +matter of indifference, in the first place, whether they harmed the +hunters or not. Since the latter were removed some distance from their +path, it is probable that they would not at that time have taken the +trouble to go in quest of them: it was the feeling of revenge that was +the deciding weight in the scale.</p> + +<p>Let us recall the situation as it was on the second morning after Fred +Linden and Terry Clark left their homes in Greville. The boys themselves +were the furthest advanced along the trail to the mountains, while at a +considerable distance behind, filed the ten Winnebago warriors, and +hovering in the vicinity was Deerfoot the Shawanoe, watching every +movement with the vigilance of a lynx.</p> + +<p>Whenever he chose he could make a circuit around the Winnebagos, and +joining the boys beyond, hasten to the hunters' camp and apprise them of +their danger; but there remained an abundance of time in which to do +that, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="p248" id="p248">248</a></span> he did not wish to leave the vicinity of the enemies until he +saw a little more of them.</p> + +<p>It was evident that the Winnebagos were in no hurry. They must have +known that two of the youths were following the trail in advance, for +the heavy shoes of the lads could not fail to leave their imprints in +many places; but, such being the case, the red men might ask in what +manner they could know that a party of Winnebagos were following them, +unless such knowledge came through Deerfoot the Shawanoe, who, wherever +he might be, certainly was not in front of them.</p> + +<p>When the Indians came to a stream of water, they did not rush in and +wade or swim to the other side, as they would have done had there been +any call for haste, but like those who had gone before, they stopped +long enough to make a raft on which they could float across. The +American Indian is not as fond of water as he should be, and though the +Winnebagos would have cared little for the chill of the stream, it was +more pleasant for them to pass over dry shod; so they made their several +rafts and poled themselves to the opposite bank.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p249" id="p249">249</a></span></p> + +<p>You would not look for humor under such circumstances, and yet on one of +the three rafts there was so much of it shown that even the grim +Shawanoe smiled.</p> + +<p>The structures on which the red men floated were, as a matter of course, +of the frailest nature, intended as they were to last only long enough +to bear them to the other shore. With proper management, all would have +done this, but on one of the rafts holding four of the warriors, there +was an aboriginal wag. A single Indian managed the pole, while the +others squatted carefully in their respective positions and were +expected to keep quiet, so as not to disintegrate the frail structure.</p> + +<p>The wag to whom I have referred, while sitting with an innocent +expression on his painted countenance, quietly loosened the two or three +withes, and gave the logs such an impetus that they separated like two +bodies positively charged with electricity, when brought together. The +warrior who handled the pole was standing with legs somewhat apart, +resting on a different log, when they suddenly separated still more, and +he sat down with a splash in<span class="pagenum"><a name="p250" id="p250">250</a></span> the water. Another log revolved backwards, +as did the savage who was sitting on it, while the others were also +plashing in the stream, which was not deep enough to make them swim, +though it came to the neck of the shortest one. The four warriors waded +to shore amid the grins of the others, and with no suspicion of the +criminal that had played the trick upon them.</p> + +<p>The next stream was reached by the Indians a couple of hours later. This +was not as deep as the other and they did not stop to make rafts. After +a little searching, they found a portion where the current did not come +above their knees and they waded.</p> + +<p>In doing so, Black Bear took the lead, and, in accordance with a custom +universal among Indians, each warrior carefully stepped into the +footprints in front of him. The water was so limpid that the impression +made by the chieftain's moccasin was plainly shown, so that there was no +difficulty in this respect. Had a person been trailing them, he would +have seen before him what seemed to be the footprints of a single man. +There was but a slight variation<span class="pagenum"><a name="p251" id="p251">251</a></span> near the further shore, where the +moccasin of one of the Winnebagos had slid from a stone on which, like +all the others, it was placed. The brown stone was slippery with a faint +coating of slime, and the scrape of the deerskin down the side gave it a +white gleam like the belly of a fish. It was a "slip" in every sense, +and, when the slight splash announced it, Black Bear at the head of the +procession turned about with his most impressive scowl.</p> + +<p>The party made a halt on the other bank. It was considerably past noon, +and, while some busied themselves in starting a fire, and a couple began +fishing in the stream, two others going into the woods with their guns, +Deerfoot was quite sure that they had decided to spend an hour or so for +dinner. He concluded, however, to follow the two who went into the +woods, and it was fortunate that he did so.</p> + +<p>The first surprise that came to him was when the Winnebagos had gone +nearly an eighth of a mile from camp. All this time they were making +their way up quite a steep slope, so that they were close to the top of +a high, wooded ridge.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p252" id="p252">252</a></span></p> + +<p>The Shawanoe might well wonder why they had taken such a course, but +when two frightened deer burst through the undergrowth and dashed by at +full speed, within easy gun shot, and the Winnebagos looked at them +without raising their guns to fire, then it was that Deerfoot was +genuinely astonished.</p> + +<p>The conclusion was inevitable that these red men were not looking for +game.</p> + +<p>With a suspicion of their real errand (and that caused another +surprise), Deerfoot stealthily followed the Winnebagos until they paused +on the highest part of the ridge. He was not long kept in doubt as to +their business.</p> + +<p>The top of the ridge was almost bare. There were a few stunted trees, a +number of bowlders and rocks, and here and there, patches of scraggly +grass. From this elevation, however, a magnificent view opened out on +every hand before the spectator. To the north stretched the undulating +country covered with prairie, stream, valley and forest, the last +brilliant with all the gorgeous hues that come with the frosts of +autumn.</p> + +<p>These flaming colors were visible in whatever<span class="pagenum"><a name="p253" id="p253">253</a></span> direction the eye turned, +and the same varied surface was seen everywhere, but to the southward, +the Ozark Mountains had a faint bluish tinge, like a mass of clouds +resting in the horizon. It was in that direction that the camp of the +hunters lay, and thither the footsteps of pale face and redskin were +directed.</p> + +<p>The two Winnebagos spent only a minute or so in scanning the surrounding +country, when they began gathering wood, until they had quite a pile. A +quantity of leaves, some of which were damp, was mixed among the twigs, +so that when with a little trouble they were fired by means of the flint +and steel in the hands of one of the red men, the fuel did not burn +clearly but gave off considerable dark smoke, which was what the +Winnebagos wanted.</p> + +<p>As soon as the fire was fairly burning, one of the Indians flung his +blanket over it, his friend seizing the other part, while both held it +thus until it was in danger of taking fire or smothering the flames. Had +the coarse cloth been a little more cleanly it is likely that it<span class="pagenum"><a name="p254" id="p254">254</a></span> would +have been burned, but as it was it strangled the blaze until it may be +said there were several bushels of smoke gathered beneath and the embers +were at their last gasp.</p> + +<p>At that moment, the Indians raised the blanket so that they stood +upright, and plenty of fresh air was allowed to feed the blaze. Then +they slowly waved the blanket between them, sometimes lowering it until +it was scorched by the sleepy flames, and then elevating it above their +heads. All the time, they manipulated the blanket, sometimes straight up +and down, sometimes diagonally, and indeed, in every possible way.</p> + +<p>The result of all this varied swinging was that the black column of +vapor which slowly climbed the sky, was broken into circles, spiral +curves, and all sorts of odd-shaped figures, which did not dissolve for +several minutes in the clear air above.</p> + +<p>I need not tell you what this meant, for in another place I have +described the same thing. It was a signal fire intended by the +Winnebagos for the eyes of a party of friends who were too far off to be +reached in any other way.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p255" id="p255">255</a></span> Deerfoot had seen such telegraphy many a time +and oft, and more than once he had used it. He could interpret such a +signal when made by a Shawanoe, Wyandotte, Sauk or Fox, but he had never +learned the code in use by the Winnebago military authorities.</p> + +<p>However, it was not possible that there was any very fine shade of +meaning in the various manipulations of the two warriors. Keen brained +as is the American Indian, he is unable to do a great many things with +which he is credited: one of these is to do more than telegraph the +simplest messages by means of fire, though it is beyond question that +important tidings has been flashed hundreds of miles in a single night, +from mountain top to mountain top, by means of the signal fires of the +Indians.</p> + +<p>What disturbed Deerfoot was this proof that there was a second party of +Winnebagos in that section of the country. He had not dreamed of such a +thing, and it might well cause him alarm, that is, for the three men who +were so intent on gathering their furs comparatively a short distance +away.</p> + +<p>Carefully screening himself from observation,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p256" id="p256">256</a></span> the Shawanoe looked +intently in the direction of the gaze of the Winnebagos. He saw that +they were not peering at any other ridge, but at the broad low valley to +the north-west. They had not long to look when they detected a thin +bluish column of smoke creeping upward among the tree tops and +dissolving in the clear air above.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot also saw it, and he knew that it was a reply to the first +signal. There was another party of Winnebagos in the neighborhood; they +would soon join Black Bear's party, and there was no time for delay. +Indeed, but for the discovery he had made, the Shawanoe would have felt +that he had tarried too long already.</p> + +<p>It was not far now to the camp of the Hunters of the Ozark, and it was +perilous to wait to warn them. Every hour counted. Not only that, but, +as you can readily see, Fred Linden and Terry Clark were in still +greater danger.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p257" id="p257">257</a></span> +<a name="ON_THE_EDGE_OF_THE_PRAIRIE_5003" id="ON_THE_EDGE_OF_THE_PRAIRIE_5003"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXVI.</h2> +<h3>ON THE EDGE OF THE PRAIRIE.</h3> +</div> + +<p>The night was far advanced when Fred Linden and Terry Clark reached the +stream, where the former remarked that their progress was stopped. Of +course he meant that they could continue if they chose to make another +raft or they could wade, but they had journeyed so far since dusk, and +the trouble of constructing a float was such that he thought it best to +wait where they were until daylight. They were pretty well fagged out, +and nothing could have been more grateful than to throw themselves on +the ground and sleep for several hours.</p> + +<p>Terry was as tired as his companion, but he stood irresolute, inclined +to think it best that they should push on.</p> + +<p>"The stream doesn't look very deep," said he, "and if ye agraas wid me +that we can wade,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p258" id="p258">258</a></span> it'll be wiser if we make tother side and then +journey to the nixt straam."</p> + +<p>"But that may be a good many miles further on."</p> + +<p>"Thin all we have to do is to travel a good many miles," said the plucky +Irish lad, sitting down to take off his shoes.</p> + +<p>"I shall never give in to <i>you</i>," remarked Fred, also seating himself +and beginning to remove his foot-gear.</p> + +<p>Before any thing more could be done, however, both were startled by the +discovery that some one was on the other side of the stream. First they +heard the guttural exclamations which they knew were made by Indians, +and then they saw one of the red men come out into full view in the +moonlight.</p> + +<p>Without a word, the boys hastily moved back under the shadow of the +trees, making sure that they also placed several rods between them and +the trail which they had followed to the edge of the water. Secure from +observation, they fastened their eyes on the other bank, where they saw +an interesting sight.</p> + +<p>Three Indian warriors stood for fully five<span class="pagenum"><a name="p259" id="p259">259</a></span> minutes in plain sight, +while they discussed the same question that had engaged the lads—that +is, in what manner the stream should be crossed.</p> + +<p>It did not take them long to decide. The foremost stepped into the +water, followed by the other two, none removing his moccasins or +leg-gear, and in a brief while they came out upon dry land again, within +fifty feet of where the lads were crouching under shelter.</p> + +<p>The boys trembled as they realized how narrow their escape had been. Had +they not paused for a few minutes, they would have been in the middle of +the stream, just as the others came down to the edge of the water. In +the light of their recent experience with the Winnebagos, they had not a +particle of doubt that the three belonged to the same tribe and that +they were fierce enemies. Had they not slain the boys, they would have +made captives of both and conducted them to the main party. Then when it +should have been found that one of the prisoners had the gun that once +belonged to the Wolf, their fate would have been sealed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p260" id="p260">260</a></span></p> + +<p>The incident drove from the mind of Fred all wish to tarry on the road. +He wished that they were many miles on their way to the camp in the +Ozarks. They considered themselves members of the little party of +hunters whom they could not reach any too soon.</p> + +<p>"I obsarved while the spalpeens were wadin'," said Terry, "that none of +them wint lower in the water than their knees. Why didn't they take off +their shoes like dacent gintlemen, and cross as they should; but bein' +as they didn't do the same, why, we'll sit them the example."</p> + +<p>A minute later, the boys stepped into the stream, and, by using care, +reached the other side, with all their garments dry. Their shoes were +quickly replaced, and the two were off again, so moved by what they had +seen, that for the time they forgot fatigue and every thing else.</p> + +<p>"I tell you, Terry, that matters are beginning to look worse than even +Deerfoot thought, and you know that when he left us he didn't feel +satisfied, by any means."</p> + +<p>"Could it be," asked his companion, "that<span class="pagenum"><a name="p261" id="p261">261</a></span> these spalpeens don't belong +to the same crowd that we saw?"</p> + +<p>"I am quite sure they do; these three would not have been so separated +from the others."</p> + +<p>"Where could they have come from?" asked the puzzled Terry.</p> + +<p>"Where all the Indians come from—the woods. I suppose a large party of +Winnebagos have been off on a tramp, and they are coming together with a +view of going home or of making an attack on some place or persons."</p> + +<p>A random guess, like this, sometimes comes closer to the truth than a +labored theory. The three Indians whom they had so narrowly escaped were +members of Black Bear's party and were on their way to meet him. +Furthermore, there were more of them at no great distance.</p> + +<p>"Me father lost his life by the Indians," said Terry, in a soft voice; +"but though it was not known what tribe the same belonged to, I don't +think they were Winnebagos; but Indians are Indians and are always ready +to kill white people whiniver the chance comes along."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p262" id="p262">262</a></span></p> + +<p>"You are right; father doesn't think there is the least danger or he +wouldn't have sent for me. He has hunted several seasons without any +trouble with them, but he ought to have learned long ago to be forever +on the watch."</p> + +<p>"Fred," said the other, stopping short in his excitement; "do ye think +they are goin' to attack the <i>sittlement</i>?"</p> + +<p>"Impossible! There's the blockhouse and plenty of men to defend it +against a thousand savages."</p> + +<p>"But the woods saam to be full of thim; there may be some kind of an +Indian war that has broke out and these are the first part of the rid +army that is to coom down and swaap us over the Rocky Mountains."</p> + +<p>But Fred could not share in this prodigious fear. He faced to the front +again and laughed, as he resumed his walk.</p> + +<p>"There couldn't be any thing like <i>that</i> without warning reaching us; +some of the runners would have come to Greville with the news; besides, +Deerfoot would have been certain to know something about it."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p263" id="p263">263</a></span></p> + +<p>"<i>That</i> sittles it!" exclaimed Terry, with a sigh of relief; "ye are +right in sayin' the Shawanoe would have knowed about it; he would have +larned it before the spalpeens that started out on the war path, and, +bein' as he didn't say any thin', I'm sure ye are right; but all the +same, it looks bad for the Hunters of the Ozark, which maans oursilves +as well as the men in the mountains."</p> + +<p>"There's no use of denying that there is enough to make all of us +anxious, but when I remember that father and Mr. Hardin and Bowlby have +spent so many years in the Indian country, I can not help feeling hope +that they will be able to take care of themselves. You know they are all +good shots and they have a cabin strong enough to stand a rough siege."</p> + +<p>"I don't forgit the same; but there's a good many more rid than white +men and Mr. Bowlby is lame."</p> + +<p>"What of that? He doesn't expect to fight with his feet."</p> + +<p>"There are many scrimmages in which it's handy to use yer faat. If +Deerfut hadn't popped along just as I keeled over the Wolf<span class="pagenum"><a name="p264" id="p264">264</a></span> I'd jumped +on him; then, do ye not mind that the men may take it into their heads +to run away."</p> + +<p>"They have their horses," said Fred, foreseeing and agreeing with the +response that his young friend would make.</p> + +<p>"Not one of 'em is worth a cint at such a time; a one-legged Indian +could outrun the fastest; they would have to stick fast to the trail +while the spalpeens would walk all around 'em."</p> + +<p>"All that is true, but if they could get a good start, it would be very +handy for Mr. Bowlby to have one of the horses to ride."</p> + +<p>"I don't see much chance of the same," was the sensible comment of +Terry; "but, me boy, have ye any idaa of what time it is?"</p> + +<p>"It must be far beyond midnight: surely we are a long ways in advance of +the Winnebago camp where we left Deerfoot."</p> + +<p>"They are not meaning to make a start to-night?"</p> + +<p>"Of course not; they will not move until morning."</p> + +<p>"Thin I'm in favor of an adjournment<span class="pagenum"><a name="p265" id="p265">265</a></span> <i>sine die</i>, at once and without +waitin' any longer."</p> + +<p>"What do you mean?" asked the puzzled Fred, stopping and looking around +at his companion.</p> + +<p>"I'm tired out."</p> + +<p>"So am I, but I made up my mind to keep walking till I dropped, before I +would give in to you. It will be a sensible thing for us to rest, but we +must get far enough from the trail, so that if any more stragglers come +along this way, they won't stumble over us."</p> + +<p>This was only simple prudence. They groped along for several rods, +through the undergrowth and among the limbs, and were still walking, +when Terry's foot struck some obstruction and he fell flat.</p> + +<p>"Are you hurt?" asked Fred.</p> + +<p>"Hurt? No; that's the way I always lay down, as me uncle obsarved whin +he fell off the roof—call me early, Fred, and be sure ye don't take up +more of the bed—than—a—gintleman——"</p> + +<p>The poor wearied fellow was asleep.</p> + +<p>Fred smiled, as he lay down beside him<span class="pagenum"><a name="p266" id="p266">266</a></span> The air was quite brisk, so he +unstrapped his blanket and flung part of it over his friend and the rest +over himself, the two lying back to back as they lay the night before in +the cavern. The dried leaves made as soft a couch as they could want and +Fred had only time to murmur a prayer to heaven, when he too became +unconscious.</p> + +<p>They slumbered for four full hours, when both awoke at the same moment, +refreshed and strengthened. The sun was well up in the sky, and +fortunately the weather continued clear, crisp and bracing. Indeed it +could not have been more nearly perfect.</p> + +<p>They laughed when they saw where they had made their bed, right in the +open wood, just as any wild animal would have done when overcome by +fatigue. There was no water within sight and no food at command. The +blanket was quickly folded up into a neat parcel and strapped to the +back of Fred and the two retraced their steps to the trail, which they +hoped to follow until it took them to the camp at the foot of the +Ozarks.</p> + +<p>"I have found out one thing, that have I,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="p267" id="p267">267</a></span> remarked Terry, with the air +of one announcing a great discovery.</p> + +<p>"What is that?"</p> + +<p>"The hungriest young gintleman on the western side of the Mississippi is +the handsome youth whom ye have the honor of walkin' with this very +minute."</p> + +<p>"I can feel for you on <i>that</i> question," added Fred; "for it seems to me +that I never wanted food so bad in all my life; we must be on the +lookout for game. Do you know how to make that call that Deerfoot used +to bring the turkey to him?"</p> + +<p>"No, but I know how to use the turkey after the same is brought to me. +If I should try the signal, it would scare all the turkeys and deer and +foxes and bears and wolves and beavers out of the country, which bein' +the same, I won't try it, principally because I don't know how to begin +to try it."</p> + +<p>"My gracious, Terry; if you could shoot like you can talk, we wouldn't +have to wait long for something to eat."</p> + +<p>"Whisht, Fred," whispered Terry, in some<span class="pagenum"><a name="p268" id="p268">268</a></span> excitement; "the wood just +beyanst ye looks as if it wasn't any wood at all."</p> + +<p>Fred Linden had noticed the peculiarity. The trees were becoming so +scarce and far apart that it was evident they were approaching some +extensive clearing where no trees grew at all. The next minute the two +stood on the edge of an immense prairie, which revealed a sight that +profoundly interested them.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p269" id="p269">269</a></span> +<a name="A_MORNING_MEAL_5251" id="A_MORNING_MEAL_5251"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXVII.</h2> +<h3>A MORNING MEAL.</h3> +</div> + +<p>The two boys stood on the edge of a prairie which had a varying width of +from one to three miles. Looking to the right and the left, neither end +could be seen, so that there was no means of judging its length.</p> + +<p>The trail led straight across to the wilderness on the other side, which +at that point was all of two miles distant. You can understand that +walking was so much easier on the open ground that any party of +travelers would hasten to take advantage of such a chance. The hoofs of +the half dozen horses had left such a distinct impression that the eye +could follow the trail a long ways from the margin of the woods.</p> + +<p>This prairie was entirely covered with a growth of succulent grass. The +season was so late that it had lost most of its verdancy, but<span class="pagenum"><a name="p270" id="p270">270</a></span> there was +an abundance of nutriment in the blades and it was splendid +feeding-ground—one of those breaks in the almost limitless forest of +which grazing animals were sure to take advantage.</p> + +<p>The boys had paused only a minute or two, gazing out on the almost level +expanse, when Terry uttered an exclamation of delight and pointed to the +right. Looking in that direction (as Fred had done at the moment his +companion spoke), he saw a welcome sight indeed. A herd of buffaloes +were cropping the grass within gunshot of the young hunters.</p> + +<p>As I have said in another place, there were no such droves as have +sometimes been seen on the vast prairies of the far west, numbering +fully a hundred thousand, though a century ago some amazing collections +of animals were met within sight of the Mississippi.</p> + +<p>The herd upon which our friends looked with so much interest numbered +little more than a hundred, and they were ruminating along the side of +the prairie instead of cropping the grass in the middle of the plain. +Some of them seemed to be browsing among<span class="pagenum"><a name="p271" id="p271">271</a></span> the trees and undergrowth, but +the major part were scattered over the prairie to a distance of two +hundred yards, while they were strung to a still greater extent parallel +with the course of the prairie itself. From this you will see they were +much dispersed, none of them being close to another, except he may have +brushed against him now and then.</p> + +<p>The front of the drove was not less than two hundred feet away and +others could be heard ruminating among the trees, where their huge bushy +heads and big round eyes were often thrust into view. Some of them may +have caught sight of the lads, but if so, they did not consider them +worth attention, for they continued browsing and grazing, advancing step +by step toward the spot where our young friends stood.</p> + +<p>"Frederick," said Terry, laying his hand on the arm of his companion, +and speaking with the gravity of a judge, "whin ye swoop yer gaze on +thim playthings out there, bear in mind that there's our breakfast, as +me grandmither obsarved whin the dinner table upsit and ivery thing +rolled down cellar."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p272" id="p272">272</a></span></p> + +<p>"Our opinion is unanimous on that point; I have already selected my +victim, and if you will go away and start a fire, it will hurry matters +along."</p> + +<p>"It ain't as bad as that," said Terry in some surprise, "I'm not so near +dead that I'm goin' to die in ten minutes if I don't git somethin' to +ate: I will stay and superintind the operations of shootin' one of them +little pets out there."</p> + +<p>"It isn't the first buffalo I have killed—"</p> + +<p>"I'm not aware that ye have killed that yit," interrupted the Irish lad +in his quizzical fashion.</p> + +<p>"You soon will be, but I have been out with father before to-day and +shot buffaloes: have you?"</p> + +<p>"No; whin I goes out huntin' yer fither has't the proud distinction of +bein' taken along. Lucky for the buffaloes I niver took a notion to go +out and kill siveral thousand: for that raison we find the drove out +there so innocent and confidin' that they don't know enough to be afeard +of us."</p> + +<p>"Maybe they have no cause to be."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p273" id="p273">273</a></span></p> + +<p>"But they can't know that <i>I'm</i> not goin' to shoot among them,—so why +shouldn't they be scared out of their siven sinses? Howsumiver, ye have +me permission to show the animals that ye are actin' under me own eye +and orders and it will be an incouragement to yersilf to know the same."</p> + +<p>From what has been said, it will be understood that Fred Linden knew +much more about buffaloes than did his companion. [The proper name is +<i>bison</i>: the genuine buffalo is not found in America.] As he had said, +this was not the first time he had hunted them, but with Terry Clark it +was different. He had spent a good deal of his time in the woods and had +gone in quest of wolves, bears and deer, but he had never brought down +one of the lumbering animals for whose flesh he now yearned with a +yearning that only the most ravening hunger can inspire.</p> + +<p>Terry had formed a deep plot during the short conversation. He did not +know the best manner in which to shoot a buffalo and he was too proud to +ask instruction. He encouraged the scheme, therefore, of Fred making the +first<span class="pagenum"><a name="p274" id="p274">274</a></span> shot. That would give him a chance to see how it was done, so +that when he came to exhibit <i>his</i> skill, he would make no mistake.</p> + +<p>Although up to this time the animals had not shown that they cared a +straw for the two beings who stood so near and were looking at them with +loaded guns in their hands, yet they were liable to become stampeded at +any moment. A snort and jump by a single animal were likely to set the +whole drove on a dead run, in which all hope of a breakfast on buffalo +steaks would be gone for that morning at least.</p> + +<p>So, as a matter of prudence, Terry stayed where he was, but partly +sheltered himself, so as not to startle any one of the animals that +might come upon him suddenly. At the same time, Fred bent low and with +loaded and cocked rifle began stealing toward the nearest buffalo.</p> + +<p>As it happened this was a cow in fine condition. She was plucking a +ribbon of grass that followed the edge of prairie. By some chemistry of +shadow and sunshine, there was this little strip of unusually tender +herbage, which the cow was eating in her quick, vigorous way,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p275" id="p275">275</a></span> as though +afraid that some of her companions would find and take it from her.</p> + +<p>Fred singled out this one as his prize. Being so close to the wood, he +could not have wanted a better chance to steal up to her. Indeed he had +but to stand still, for she was coming a regular half step at a time as +she clipped the grass in front of her; but the youth's hunger would not +allow him to wait the few minutes that would have been required.</p> + +<p>When within fifty feet of the cow, Fred knelt on one knee and brought +his rifle to a level. The cow was still advancing, "head on," when he +made a noise similar to that which comes natural to you when you wish to +drive the hens out of your garden-patch. The cow stopped abruptly, threw +up her head and stared at the hunter. The sight of the crouching figure +must have suggested to the stupid animal that every thing was not right, +for with a frightened whiff, she bounded short around with the intention +of joining the other animals.</p> + +<p>At the very moment she turned, Fred Linden fired, sending the bullet +directly back of her fore leg, where it tore its way through flesh,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p276" id="p276">276</a></span> +muscles, bones and the heart, the battered bullet humming off through +the air on the other side.</p> + +<p>No shot could have been more effective. The cow made a couple of wild +leaps and then lunged forward, her nose striking the earth with such +force that her head doubled under her and she swung over on her back and +side with a violence that made it seem as if she had fallen down a high +precipice.</p> + +<p>Following his old rule, Fred loaded his gun where he stood, before +moving out to examine his prize. It was at this juncture that a stampede +of the whole drove was due. Now that the boys had secured their +breakfast they would not have cared had the animals thundered off out of +sight.</p> + +<p>But the terror of the smitten creature was too brief to affect the rest, +even though several were quite close to her at the time she gave the +snort and rolled over on the ground. A cow grazing near did raise her +head for a moment and look at her fallen friend as though she hardly +understood it. She seemed to meditate plunging into the rest of the +drove<span class="pagenum"><a name="p277" id="p277">277</a></span> with head down and with tidings of the disaster, but she must +have concluded that since the other cow was dead, it wasn't worth while +to make any fuss over it; for she dropped her head and resumed her +grazing as though she had no further interest in the matter.</p> + +<p>Even when Fred ran out, and, stooping down, began cutting a large slice +from the shoulder of the victim, none of the others paid any attention +to him. Close behind him came Terry, who was so desirous of examining +the prize, that he postponed starting the fire.</p> + +<p>"Terry, how will that do for a shot?" asked Fred, with some pride, as he +plied his knife.</p> + +<p>"Where did ye land the shot?"</p> + +<p>"Right there, behind the fore leg; you can see the hole where it +entered."</p> + +<p>Terry turned his head to one side, closed an eye and surveyed it as +though he was measuring the height of a wall: then he shook his head.</p> + +<p>"What's the matter with you?" asked the impatient Fred.</p> + +<p>"Ye are a sixteenth of an inch too far forward, be the token of which +the ball wint<span class="pagenum"><a name="p278" id="p278">278</a></span> through the upper part of the heart: whin ye kill a +buffalo coow ye should always sind the ball through the lower instead of +the upper part of the heart. Ye surprise me so much that I am graved +with ye, me own Fred."</p> + +<p>The latter laughed.</p> + +<p>"I suppose it would have done as well had I sent the bullet through her +brain; but that takes the finest kind of marksmanship."</p> + +<p>"Av course, which explains why ye didn't dare attimpt it: whin we have +finished our dinner, supper and breakfast all in one, I'll step out on +the perarie, strike an impressive attitude and drop the biggest bull in +the drove, just to tach ye the gintaal way of doin' that same thing."</p> + +<p>"Well, I shall be glad to learn the best style of bringing down the +creatures."</p> + +<p>By this time, Fred had severed a piece of meat from the shoulder of the +buffalo. It weighed several pounds, but Terry broke in with the +wondering inquiry:</p> + +<p>"What are ye goin' to do with <i>that</i>?"</p> + +<p>"That's for our dinner; what would you suppose?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="p279" id="p279">279</a></span></p> + +<p>"I thought that was the part of the coow that ye were goin' to be +sinsible enough to lave behind while we built a fire around the rist and +had enough of a maal to stay the pangs of hunger."</p> + +<p>Without waiting to hear the response of his companion, Terry ran among +the trees and began gathering wood with which to start a blaze. Both +boys were such experts at this that only a brief time was necessary. +Fred laid the buffalo steak on the leaves and took part, striking the +flame with his own flint and tinder. There was no water within reach and +this was quite a deprivation, but the boys were hungry enough to wait +for that. From his scant store of mixed salt and sugar, Fred drew forth +enough to season the enormous slice and it was speedily half broiled.</p> + +<p>Two such hungry youngsters are not likely to be particular about their +dinner being done to a turn, and they were eager to eat it when it was +exceedingly rare. Leaving Terry to make known when it was ready for the +palate, Fred walked to the edge of the prairie to take a survey.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p280" id="p280">280</a></span></p> + +<p>He could not forget that they had serious business before them, and, +though he was warranted in believing that there was nothing to fear from +the Winnebagos who had caused so much trouble, he was too wise to take +any thing for granted.</p> + +<p>He saw the buffaloes cropping the grass with the same vigorous +persistency which they will show for hours, while the prairie, extending +far to the right and left, failed to show any other living creature upon +it. So far as he could tell, there was no cause for fear.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p281" id="p281">281</a></span> +<a name="A_STRANGE_RIDE_5490" id="A_STRANGE_RIDE_5490"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII.</h2> +<h3>A STRANGE RIDE.</h3> +</div> + +<p>When the boys had eaten their fill, there was a quantity of meat left. +This was cooked still more over the coals, wrapped about with the +greenest leaves that could be got, and then packed in the bundle which +Terry Clark strapped to his back.</p> + +<p>"There's enough of the same," he explained, "to presarve us from pinin' +away with starvation, which reminds me now that I promised ye that I'd +show ye the properest way in which to bring down a buffalo."</p> + +<p>"I'm willing to wait until some other time," said Fred, who feared there +would be dangerous delay; "I am more anxious to get forward than I am to +see you make an exhibition of yourself."</p> + +<p>"It will not take me long," replied Terry, who was sure there could be +no miss where the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p282" id="p282">282</a></span> animals were so plentiful, while of course the delay +ought to be slight.</p> + +<p>"If thim Winnebagos that we obsarved last night have started this way, +they ain' t any more than fairly goin', which puts thim at the laast +calculation a dozen good miles behind us; they won't walk any faster +than we do, so we'll git to the camp a long ways ahead of 'em."</p> + +<p>"All this sounds reasonable, but you know we have learned that they are +not the only Winnebagos in these parts; but then they are under the eye +of Deerfoot and he would give us warning."</p> + +<p>"That sittles it, as I previously remarked some time ago, in token of +which we will shake hands on the same."</p> + +<p>The Irish lad had made such an enjoyable meal that he was in the highest +spirits. He extended his hand to his friend and shook it warmly, as he +was inclined to do for slight cause.</p> + +<p>"Now stand still, obsarve, admire and remimber."</p> + +<p>And with this high flown counsel, Terry with his gun in position began +moving toward an<span class="pagenum"><a name="p283" id="p283">283</a></span> enormous bull. The latter really was not so close to +him as was a cow, but he thought it beneath his dignity to spend his +ammunition on such game as had served for their dinner.</p> + +<p>Although Terry Clark's natural love of humor often led him to assume +what he failed to feel, he was hopeful in the present instance that he +would be able to carry out the little scheme in mind. He knew that the +weapon in his hand was a good one, and he was already so close to the +buffalo that he was sure of bringing it down at the first fire.</p> + +<p>While he was willing to admit that Fred's shot could not have been +improved, so far as effectiveness was concerned, yet he was in earnest +in his intention of firing at the head. He knew that no animal is of any +account after its brain has been perforated, and it seemed to him that +it was more appropriate for a true sportsman to bring down his game by +that means instead of firing at its body.</p> + +<p>Terry made a mistake from which his experience on the border ought to +have saved him. Had he driven his bullet into the eye of the buffalo, he +could have slain him, but he was<span class="pagenum"><a name="p284" id="p284">284</a></span> almost certain to fail by firing +simply at the head. It would have been far better had he followed the +example that his companion set.</p> + +<p>The bull upon which he had cast his eyes was about twenty yards from the +wood. He did not raise his head until this distance was diminished by +one half. Just then a cow showed some alarm of the approaching figure +and walked hastily away. This caused the bull to throw up his head and +stare at Terry.</p> + +<p>"Obsarve!" called the latter to his friend, who began to feel uneasy +over the appearance of things.</p> + +<p>A dozen spears of grass seemed to be dripping from the mouth of the +magnificent bull, who glared at the figure of the young man in the act +of leveling his gun as though he had some curiosity to know what was +going on.</p> + +<p>Terry aimed at the head, making the part between and above the eyes his +target. This was probably the most invulnerable spot of the animal.</p> + +<p>The bull was still staring at the intruder, when the latter, aiming at +the point named, fired. The bullet struck the bony ridge at the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p285" id="p285">285</a></span> upper +part of the head and glanced off into space, inflicting no more real +injury than a paper wad.</p> + +<p>But the impingement of the lead must have given the stupid brute an idea +that harm was meant. His anger was roused, and, dropping his head with a +savage bellow, he charged the young hunter at full speed.</p> + +<p>This was giving the matter an unpleasant turn, but there was no time to +argue, and flinging his gun aside, Terry gave the finest exhibition of +running he had ever shown. No one could have realized better than did he +that the bull "meant business" and it would never do to allow himself to +be caught.</p> + +<p>Fred Linden himself was so startled by the sudden onslaught of the +animal that he was flurried and fired without taking proper aim. He +struck him, but he was unable to check his charge: indeed he rather +added to his fury. Stepping back, so as to shield himself as much as he +could behind the nearest tree, he began reloading his weapon with the +utmost haste.</p> + +<p>Meantime Terry, by desperate running, reached the tree at which he aimed +a few steps<span class="pagenum"><a name="p286" id="p286">286</a></span> in advance of his formidable foe. He had no time to climb +the trunk, but believing the lowermost limb was within reach, he made a +leap, seized it with both hands and swung himself out of reach, just as +the bull thundered beneath like a runaway engine.</p> + +<p>Finding he had missed his victim, the savage beast snorted with rage, +wheeled about, came back a few paces and was passing beneath the limb +again, when a singular accident gave an astonishing turn to the whole +business.</p> + +<p>The limb which afforded Terry Clark his temporary safety was unable to +bear his weight, and, while he was struggling to raise himself to the +upper side and it was bending low with him, it broke like a pipe stem +close to the body of the tree.</p> + +<p>This took place so suddenly that the youth had not the slightest +warning. Indeed it would not have availed him had he known what was +coming, for the time was too brief in which to help himself.</p> + +<p>Down he came with the limb grasped in both hands and fell squarely on +the back of the buffalo bull. Fortunately the bewildered animal<span class="pagenum"><a name="p287" id="p287">287</a></span> had +just shifted his position, so that the lad fell with his face turned +toward the head instead of in "reverse order."</p> + +<p>Even in that exciting moment Terry saw the grotesqueness of the +situation. His legs were stretched apart so as to span the animal just +back of his enormous neck. Letting go of the branch that had played him +the trick, he grasped the bushy mane with both hands and yelled in a +voice that might have been heard a mile away:</p> + +<p>"<i>All aboard! off wid ye!</i>"</p> + +<p>So far as a bull is capable of feeling emotion, that particular specimen +must have been in a peculiar frame of mind. He glared about him, here +and there, turned part way round, as if the whole thing was more than he +could understand, and then as his bulging eyes caught sight of the +remarkable load on his back and he felt the weight of the burden, he was +seized with a panic.</p> + +<p>He emitted a single whiffing snort, and flinging his tail high in air, +made for the other side of the prairie as if Death himself was racing at +his heels. His actions were of that pronounced<span class="pagenum"><a name="p288" id="p288">288</a></span> character that his +fright communicated itself to the rest of the herd. There was a general +uplifting of heads, and then, as the bulls and cows saw their most +eminent leader tearing across the prairie with a live boy astride of his +back, the sight was too much for them. A wholesale series of snorts and +bellows followed, tails were flirted aloft, and away the whole herd +went, fairly making the ground tremble beneath their tread.</p> + +<p>By the time the alarmed Fred Linden had his rifle reloaded there was not +a buffalo within a hundred yards of him. The one that bore his friend on +his back was making as good time as the fleetest and was well toward the +head of the drove. The panic began like an eddy of the sea; there was a +surging of the animals toward the other side of the prairie and away +they went, as I have said, with their tails and heels in the air, as if +they meant to keep up their headlong flight for twenty miles, as is +sometimes the case, when an immense drove become stampeded on the great +plains of the west.</p> + +<p>Whatever feelings of amusement might have<span class="pagenum"><a name="p289" id="p289">289</a></span> been first aroused by the +figure that Terry cut on the back of the terrified bull were lost in the +dreadful fear of Fred that it would prove a fatal ride for his friend.</p> + +<p>He could see him plainly for a fourth of a mile, but by that time the +trampling hoofs raised a dust in the dry grass which partly obscured the +herd and made it impossible to distinguish the figure of the lad +clinging to the mane of his novel charger.</p> + +<p>"He will fall off," was the exclamation of Fred, "and will be trampled +to death by the others."</p> + +<p>He recalled that the bull must have been wounded by his own shot, but +that knowledge gave him concern instead of relief; for if the bull +should give out, he would be trampled by those who were thundering so +close at his heels.</p> + +<p>The buffaloes did not preserve the open order which marked them when +they were grazing, but crowded together, so that their backs looked like +brown dusty waves, rising and falling rapidly from the motions of their +bodies.</p> + +<p>Fred quickly recovered from his astonishment.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p290" id="p290">290</a></span> He had reloaded his gun, +but when ready to fire, was afraid to do so. Too many other buffaloes +interposed between him and the bull, and had he discharged his weapon, +he would have been as likely to hit Terry as to wound the brute that was +carrying him away with such speed.</p> + +<p>Running to where the rifle of the boy lay, Fred picked it up, hastily +reloaded it, and started after the herd. He broke into a loping trot +such as an Indian shows when hurriedly following a trail. He kept his +eyes on the fast receding animals, his interest being now centered on +the moment when they should reach the wood on the other side of the +prairie.</p> + +<p>"It will be the death of him if they dash among the trees," he thought; +"for he will be struck by some limb and have his brains dashed out."</p> + +<p>But such a catastrophe did not take place. The fleeing animals must have +known that their headlong speed could not be kept up among the trees and +undergrowth; so, when those at the head of the drove were close to the +edge of the wood they swerved to the left,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p291" id="p291">291</a></span> and the others followed with +the same furious swiftness with which they had sped across the open.</p> + +<p>Fred Linden at this time was not a third of the way across the prairie, +and he stopped and viewed the sight. He could distinguish the animals +much better than when they were tearing straight away from him. They +ran, so to speak, from under the cloud of dust that had obscured his +vision, which, sweeping backward, left all in plain view.</p> + +<p>What he saw, too, showed that the buffaloes possessed varying rates of +speed. A dozen were well to the front, still crowding close together, +while the rest, also in close order, were strung along at different +distances. Still, they were so far from Fred that his view was any thing +but satisfactory. Shading his eyes with his hand, he peered through the +autumn air in the search for his friend.</p> + +<p>"There he is!" he exclaimed, but the words were hardly out of his mouth +when he saw he was mistaken. The distance was too great for him to see +clearly.</p> + +<p>"How long will this keep up?" was the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p292" id="p292">292</a></span> question which he would have been +glad to answer, for it included the fate of Terence Clark. If his steed +should grow weary and fall behind the others, possibly he would give his +rider a chance to leap to the ground and make off; but the likelihood of +that taking place was so remote that Fred could feel no hope.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p293" id="p293">293</a></span> +<a name="A_YOUNG_HUNTERS_STRATEGY_5725" id="A_YOUNG_HUNTERS_STRATEGY_5725"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXIX.</h2> +<h3>A YOUNG HUNTER'S STRATEGY.</h3> +</div> + +<p>Fred Linden walked rapidly forward until he reached the middle of the +prairie, when he paused and bent his eyes on the swiftly vanishing drove +of buffaloes. They were speeding at right angles to the course he had +been following, and, so far as he could judge at the distance, were on +the same dead run with which they started.</p> + +<p>He was convinced that he was mistaken a brief while before, when, for a +moment, he thought he caught a glimpse of Terry on the back of the +terrified bull. He was unable to distinguish any thing that looked like +him. He might—and it was not at all improbable—be still clinging to +his steed, but he was too far off and too mixed up with the others for +even the keen eyes of Fred Linden to identify him.</p> + +<p>There seemed but the one thing to do: that<span class="pagenum"><a name="p294" id="p294">294</a></span> was to follow the drove +until he learned the fate of his friend. Certain that he would find him +sooner or later, Fred resorted again to his loping trot, which he could +keep up for several hours without great fatigue.</p> + +<p>But he had not gone twenty steps at this gait, when, to his astonishment +and alarm, he observed three Indian warriors, each mounted on a horse, +issue from the wood at the point where the buffaloes would have entered +it had they not turned to the left. The red men headed their animals +directly toward Fred, and advanced at a moderate gallop.</p> + +<p>The sight was enough to make the bravest person thoughtful; for you will +readily see the critical situation of the boy. It was useless to turn +and run, for they would overhaul him before he could get half way to +cover. He was in the middle of a grassy prairie, where there was not the +slightest object which could be used as a screen in a fight with them. +He glanced quickly about, but did not see a stone as large as his hand. +Except so far as his weapons were concerned, he was absolutely +helpless.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p295" id="p295">295</a></span></p> + +<p>Never did Fred Linden display more coolness and knowledge of Indian +character than he did at this time when caught at such fearful +disadvantage. He knew that if he showed any timidity, the red men would +attack him at once, while, if he could deceive them, as he hoped, there +was a possibility that he would escape.</p> + +<p>Two hundred yards away, the Indians drew their cantering horses down to +a walk: they evidently saw there was no call for haste and they could +afford to take all the time they wished. They were riding beside each +other, instead of in Indian file, and being nigh enough to be observed +distinctly, showed that they were dressed precisely like the Winnebagos +whom he had noticed the night before around their camp-fire. This might +have been, had they belonged to another totem, for there is a similarity +in the dress of different tribes, but Fred had no doubt that these were +Winnebagos. It began to look indeed as if there was an irruption of them +into that section of the Louisiana Territory.</p> + +<p>During those trying moments, when Fred<span class="pagenum"><a name="p296" id="p296">296</a></span> calmly watched the approach of +the dusky horsemen, he was observant of the smallest things. He recalled +that they were the same in number as the party which he and Terry so +narrowly missed the night before on the edge of the stream and he half +suspected they were the same, though such supposition did not correspond +with the theories formed and accepted at the time.</p> + +<p>He saw the middle horse, which was darker in color than the others, +slightly stumble; then the rider turned his head and said something to +the warrior on his left, who made answer without taking his eyes from +Fred; then the one on the right said something, his painted features +relaxing into a frightful grin, the guttural words being plainly +audible: all these points being noticed, as I have said, by the young +hunter who had so much more important matters to engage his thoughts.</p> + +<p>He recalled with relief that on picking up the gun of Terry he had +reloaded it, so that he now had two weapons ready for use. With these he +could make a brave resistance, and you may depend upon it that the last +thing he<span class="pagenum"><a name="p297" id="p297">297</a></span> thought of doing was to surrender. He might easily be shot +down where he stood, but he would die fighting.</p> + +<p>The three horsemen advanced with the same deliberate pace, their black +eyes fixed upon Fred, who stood erect, looking straight at them. When +they were within twenty yards, he quietly turned so as to face the other +way, and waved his cap several times over his head. At the same moment +he uttered a resounding whoop, replaced his cap, laid Terry's rifle at +his feet and leveled his own at the amazed savages, who could not have +suspected what was coming.</p> + +<p>You understand that the purpose of Fred was to make the Winnebagos +believe that he had friends on the edge of the wood behind him to whom +he had signaled. The act of laying down his gun was to give the +impression that he was so sure of support that he was ready to fight +until it should appear.</p> + +<p>Now, the red men might have been deceived by this to as full an extent +as the youth desired, but the fact remained that, even if there were +re-enforcements on the margin of the prairie,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p298" id="p298">298</a></span> they were so far off that +they could give no help if the Indians chose to assail the boy. I am +inclined to think that had the Winnebagos believed that a dozen white +hunters were encamped there, they would not have been restrained from +carrying out their design by such fact: but when the cool defiance of +the youth was added to the same, there was enough to make them pause.</p> + +<p>They might shoot him down, wheel and dash for the woods from which they +had emerged but a short time before; but they would be liable to +pursuit, and, when a white borderer takes to the trail, he can be as +persistent as the red man himself, though, as I have said, had they been +eager to shoot the boy, they would not have been stopped by that +knowledge. But they saw that he had his loaded rifle leveled at them: +each Winnebago probably imagined he would be the special target. Their +guns were still in their hands and no doubt the moment any one attempted +to raise his weapon the white boy would fire.</p> + +<p>The distance was so short that there could be no miss. It followed +therefore that the cost of<span class="pagenum"><a name="p299" id="p299">299</a></span> an assault upon the lad would be the death +of one of the Winnebagos, and none of the three could know that he would +not be the victim.</p> + +<p>The cost was more than they were willing to pay, for it must be borne in +mind that not only was the death of one of their number considered +assured, but it was not at all unlikely that such a daring youngster +would be able to do something with the gun at his feet before +succumbing.</p> + +<p>But it is not to be supposed that three mounted Indians would +deliberately ride away from a single youth through fear alone,—that is, +not until they had tried to circumvent him by strategy. And so it came +to pass that within the same minute that Fred raised his rifle, the +Winnebago who sat in the middle waved his hand toward him as a sign of +comity. At the same time he called out: "Yenghese! Long Knife! +Friend—friend—friend!"</p> + +<p>But Fred knew too much to be deceived. He was the master of more +vigorous English, and, without lowering his gun, he called out:</p> + +<p>"Keep off or I'll fire! If you ride another step, I'll let daylight +through you!"<span class="pagenum"><a name="p300" id="p300">300</a></span></p> + +<p>As if to add emphasis to his words, he gently swayed his rifle from +right to left, so that it covered each warrior in turn. There was an +involuntary ducking of the heads, and the Indians, seeing that nothing +was to be done without large risk, opened out—two riding to the right +and one to the left. Thus they passed by Fred without lessening the +space between him and them.</p> + +<p>After all, this was the most trying moment to the youth, for it diverted +his attention in the most exasperating manner. The three horsemen were +in his field of vision, but it was hard to keep watch upon each. He +suspected the maneuver was for the purpose of taking him off his guard, +but it is doubtful whether such was the case, for there was something in +the grim pose of the youthful hunter which warned them that it was +unsafe to trifle with him.</p> + +<p>When the horsemen were opposite each other and on a line with Fred, he +suddenly wheeled with great quickness and held his piece still leveled +so that he could shift it from one to the other the moment needed. On +their part, the Winnebagos watched him with cat-like vigilance,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p301" id="p301">301</a></span> keeping +their heads turned until they came together a hundred feet beyond, and +between him and the wood which he had just left. There they stopped, +their position such that the sides of their animals were turned toward +the lad, whom they continued to view with an interest that it is safe to +say they had never felt in any other of his race.</p> + +<p>It was tiresome to hold his heavy rifle leveled, but Fred stuck to it, +for he knew how much depended on the next minute or two.</p> + +<p>It looked for a time as though the Winnebagos had decided not to leave +without a demonstration, but finally they moved off with their backs +toward Fred, and their horses on a walk.</p> + +<p>"How nicely I could pick one of them off," said he to himself, as the +broad shoulders, with the black hair streaming over them, moved gently +up and down with the motion of the animals, and ranged themselves beside +each other like three dusky targets. "I could hit <i>him</i> or <i>him</i> or +<i>him</i>" he added, shifting his aim from one to the other in turn, "and +it's because they know it that they are afraid to<span class="pagenum"><a name="p302" id="p302">302</a></span> risk a shot. If one +of them had made a motion to take aim, I would have let fly, and I +wouldn't have missed either. Then I would have done something with +Terry's gun."</p> + +<p>These thoughts had hardly found expression, when the middle Winnebago +suddenly turned on his horse, raised his gun and discharged it at Fred +Linden. The instant he did so, he and his two companions threw +themselves forward on their animals and dashed off on a dead run for the +wood.</p> + +<p>Had the warrior been less hurried, it is probable he would have struck +the astonished youth, who plainly heard the <i>pinge</i> of the bullet as it +almost touched his ear. His own arms were beginning to ache because of +their constrained position, but he took as careful aim as possible and +fired at the savage who fired at him.</p> + +<p>More than that, he hit him. A screeching yawp broke the stillness, the +warrior half straightened up on his steed, seemed to sway, and would +have fallen had not one of his companions caught his shoulder and +supported him for a minute or two. The horses were<span class="pagenum"><a name="p303" id="p303">303</a></span> brought down to a +walk, and finally came to a standstill, though they halted at a point +beyond rifle shot.</p> + +<p>"I hope I finished him," muttered Fred Linden, with a snap of his eyes; +"they are seeking my life, and, if I could have my way, I would tumble +every one of them off his horse."</p> + +<p>Never was the value of two rifles shown more strikingly than at this +time. The moment his gun was discharged—had he possessed no other—Fred +would have been helpless, and the Winnebagos would have been upon him +before he could reload his piece; for that was in the days of +flint-locks, when the charge had to be rammed down and the powder poured +into the pan before the weapon was ready for use. It may be said, +however, that under such circumstances he would not have fired.</p> + +<p>But before the horsemen could wheel about, they would have found the +youth standing at "present arms" precisely as before, and the situation +unchanged, except that one of their own number had been disabled, and to +that extent (which was considerable) the gain was on the side of the +lad.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p304" id="p304">304</a></span></p> + +<p>There could be little doubt that the stricken Winnebago was hit hard, +though after some attention from his companions, he was able to sit his +horse. The three warriors seemed to have lost all interest in Fred, for +a few minutes later they rode off at a walk, without, so far as he could +judge, once bestowing a look upon him.</p> + +<p>It struck him as singular that after his stratagem, by which he believed +he gave the impression that he had a party of friends on the margin of +the wood, that the Winnebagos should guide their horses to the very +point. After all, it began to look as though he was not so successful in +that respect as he imagined, and that it was his own courageous demeanor +that for the time had saved his life.</p> + +<p>"I am glad they have ridden off in that direction," said the youth to +himself, as he saw them carefully enter the wood, where they were lost +from sight; "for if they had ridden the other way they would have +bothered me in my hunt for Terry."</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p305" id="p305">305</a></span> +<a name="TERRY_FINISHES_HIS_RIDE_5961" id="TERRY_FINISHES_HIS_RIDE_5961"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXX.</h2> +<h3>TERRY FINISHES HIS RIDE.</h3> +</div> + +<p>That ride of Terry Clark on the back of the buffalo bull was one which +he could never forget had he wished to do so, which of course he did +not. The first thrill, when the beast dashed off on a dead run, and the +wind began blowing by the ears of the lad, was that of pleasure. He was +having an exciting ride, and, as good fortune would have it, the animal +was bearing him straight along the trail toward the camp in the Ozarks.</p> + +<p>"If the baste will show enough consideration for me," thought the lad, +"to kape up his coorse for twinty miles or so, he will give me a good +lift toward raichin' the folks, though sorry I am that I haven't Fred +alongside or rather behind me."</p> + +<p>The bull being on a run, his progress consisted of a series of quick +jumps, which jarred<span class="pagenum"><a name="p306" id="p306">306</a></span> the rider so much that had he not kept a good grip +upon the shaggy mane, he would have been unseated. The hair of the +animal was so long that he was able to make his hold secure, though he +had a constant fear that he would stumble, in which case the rider was +sure to take a tremendous header that was likely to break his neck.</p> + +<p>Terry could feel the throb, as it may be called, of the engine. His +position was such that his heels touched the body close to the shoulders +of the bull. At that point there was an alternate swelling and sinking +of the muscles, as the animal alighted on his feet and leaped away +again, which Terry felt as plainly as if he had held his open hand on +the shoulder. Then, too, the bull had a peculiar sidelong motion, as +though some of his muscles occasionally got out of "gear," and the +action of the hind legs did not "dovetail," so to speak, with that of +the fore legs.</p> + +<p>Nothing escaped the eye of Terry during those exciting minutes. He +thought the head of the bull was held unusually low, but he noticed the +short, thick horns, curving outward<span class="pagenum"><a name="p307" id="p307">307</a></span> and then coming over until they +ended within a few inches of each other, and he was sure that amid the +dusty frontispiece of the immense area of skull bone he could see where +his useless bullet had struck and glanced off; once or twice he caught a +whiff of the breath of the buffalo, redolent with the not unpleasant +odor of grass, and now and then he could hear his fierce snort. It +seemed to Terry that the animal turned his head partly to one side as if +to get a view of the strange creature on his back. Doubtless such was +the fact, and, after each sight, it seemed that he bounded away with +more terror than before.</p> + +<p>Brief as was the time taken by the bull in galloping across the prairie, +it allowed Terry to see every thing. As soon as he felt sure of +retaining his seat, he glanced at the other animals, all of which were +galloping in the same direction as the bull. Some of them were so fleet +that they passed him, but he retained his place near the middle of the +herd.</p> + +<p>The buffalo, or properly the bison, is a stupid animal, but a peculiar +fact about the small drove amid which Terry Clark was riding was<span class="pagenum"><a name="p308" id="p308">308</a></span> that a +number noticed him and in their way tried to push him off. They would +dash up beside the bull with head lowered, and rub their horns against +him in the effort to reach the rider and unseat him.</p> + +<p>"The only way in which ye can do that," said Terry, when he saw what +they were trying to do, "is to climb up and take a saat behind me. Thin, +if ye'll lock yer arms about me nick ye may persuade me to stip down, +but ye can't do much while on the ground."</p> + +<p>The buffaloes were too dull of intellect to realize their helplessness +in this respect, and they continued crowding close to the bull until +they must have caused him some discomfort. This crowding was of such a +marked character that, as you will remember, it was noticed by Fred +Linden as far off as he stood.</p> + +<p>Once or twice the rider had one of his feet slightly jammed, but he was +able to lift it out of danger without imperiling his position. The dust +caused by the hoofs of the animals did not rise until his steed had +passed beyond, so that he suffered nothing therefrom and every thing in +front was in plain view. The speed<span class="pagenum"><a name="p309" id="p309">309</a></span> of the beast, however, caused some +inconvenience, for the wind made him blink, and it was only by half +closing his eyes that he could peer out between the lids and see +clearly.</p> + +<p>Before the other side of the prairie was reached, Terry Clark began +asking himself the natural and important question,—How is this to end?</p> + +<p>The same theories that I have mentioned as occurring to Fred Linden +passed through his brain also. If the bull should dash among the trees +at that headlong pace, the rider could not retain his place for more +than a minute or two; if he was wounded enough to cause him to give out +and fall to the ground, he would be trampled upon by those behind and +Terry of course would share his fate.</p> + +<p>Brief as was the time given for thought, the youth considered a half +dozen plans. He glanced over his shoulder and was alarmed to see how +many animals were in the rear of him. He asked himself whether he could +not slip backward, grasp the swinging tail, and dropping to the ground, +keep his feet while he held fast to the caudal appendage, and pulling +the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p310" id="p310">310</a></span> other way, act as a brake upon the progress of the animal until all +the others had passed on. Then he would "release brakes," and allow the +bull to continue his career as suited himself.</p> + +<p>But he was compelled to admit that the plan was not feasible. The bull +was going at such a pace that the rider would be sure to lose his +balance the moment he struck the ground, and, though he might still hold +fast to the tail and retard the progress of the beast, he was sure of +getting in the way of his heels.</p> + +<p>"If his tail was a little longer," reflected Terry, "I would try the +same, but I'm afeard I would git mixed up with his hind hoofs and things +wouldn't be agraaable."</p> + +<p>So that plan was abandoned.</p> + +<p>"If he goes in among the trees, I'll lean forward on me face until he +knocks out his brains—that is, if he has any—whin I'll dismount."</p> + +<p>That was all well enough if the bull should happen to follow the +programme, but the prospect of his doing so was too remote to afford +much comfort to the youth.</p> + +<p>"I guess I'll kaap erict like a gintleman,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="p311" id="p311">311</a></span> he concluded, "and as soon +as a chance comes for me to jump off, I'll go."</p> + +<p>Terry had no thought but that the buffaloes would dash among the trees +and continue their flight in the same headlong fashion, as long as they +could; but, to his amazement, the head of the drove suddenly swerved to +the left and the bull followed.</p> + +<p>"Be the powers, but this will never do," was his conclusion; "this +perarie may raach all the way to the Gulf of Mexico, and the bull +doesn't act as if he meant to stop before he raaches there; I'm goin' to +make other arrangements."</p> + +<p>He kept his seat until the drove had gone several hundred yards with +unabated speed. So far as he could judge, the bull was holding his own +with the rest: whatever wound he had received was of no account, so far +as its immediate effect was seen. The others continued crowding up as +before, but Terry did not mind them. He yelled and shook his head in the +hope of frightening them off so as to give him the room he wished in +order to make his venture, but they did not mind him. The odd<span class="pagenum"><a name="p312" id="p312">312</a></span> crackling +of their hoofs, the rattling of their horns as they struck together, and +their occasional bellowing, made a din amid which no shout that he could +raise would gain any consideration whatever.</p> + +<p>"There's one thing sartin," said Terry, compressing his lips and showing +by his action that he had made up his mind to end the business one way +or the other. "I'm tired of this crowd, and I ain't goin' to spind any +more time with it."</p> + +<p>Between him and the wood were seven or eight buffaloes, crowding close +in their idiotic fashion, as though to push off the rider. Terry +recalled the day, early in spring, when he ran rapidly across the creek +near his home, by stepping upon the surging masses of ice, one after the +other, and leaping off again before they had time to respond to his +weight. He resolved to try something of the kind.</p> + +<p>Holding fast to the wiry mane with his hands, he drew his feet up under +him, balanced himself a moment, then straightened up, and, turning +quickly, stepped upon the back of the bull that was immediately +alongside. Before<span class="pagenum"><a name="p313" id="p313">313</a></span> that creature could know what had been done, the +pressure was removed and the weight of the lad was borne by a cow which +was his next neighbor.</p> + +<p>Terry Clark ran as nimbly as a monkey across the backs of the +intervening buffaloes, until his foot rested on the one nearest the +wood. A slight slip at the moment of stepping upon his back disconcerted +him so that he could not recover himself. His intention was to land on +the ground with his face in the same direction he was going. Then, even +if he could not keep his feet, he could run with such speed that his +fall would not hurt him; but unfortunately as he struck the ground he +faced the other way, and before he could check himself, he went over +backward with such force that he was knocked senseless.</p> + +<p>After all, the fall may be considered a fortunate one, for he was not +seriously hurt and soon recovered himself. He had received a severe +shock, but in a short time he sat up and stared about him. Recalling +what had taken place, he looked in the direction of the herd of +buffaloes. None of them was in sight, but a<span class="pagenum"><a name="p314" id="p314">314</a></span> dark heap a short distance +away showed where the bull on which he had ridden had given out and +fallen to the ground. He was wounded more seriously than at first seemed +to be the case. Had Terry stayed on his back a few brief minutes longer, +he would have gone down with him and been trampled to death by the hoofs +of those in the rear.</p> + +<p>"I think I'm all here, as me cousin used to remark after he had enj'yed +himself at Donnybrook Fair," said Terry, rising carefully to his feet, +swinging his arms and kicking out his legs. He had been violently +jarred, and he was alarmed by a dizziness that caused him to sit down +again. But he recovered quickly, and soon was as well as ever. He turned +to the left and passed among the trees, where, despite the coolness of +the day, he felt the relief of the shade thus afforded him.</p> + +<p>"I s'pose Fred will be jealous whin he finds out what a foine ride I +have had," he added, his old sense of humor coming back; "but all he has +to do is to catch a buffalo bull and git on his back: but I don't think +he'll forgit the same right away."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p315" id="p315">315</a></span></p> + +<p>Looking over the prairie, he saw the figure of his friend walking in +almost a direct line toward him, though he was so far off that he was +not distinctly visible, partly because of the dust which still lingered +in the air.</p> + +<p>Fred's encounter with the Winnebago horsemen had taken place and ended +while Terry lay senseless on the ground, so that the latter had no +suspicion of the exciting occurrence.</p> + +<p>Terry ought to have walked out on the plain, swung his hat and cheered +his friend; but that would have been contrary to his nature. He kept out +of sight among the trees, until Fred was quite close, when he broke into +vigorous whistling.</p> + +<p>Fred heard the familiar sound, stopped short, looked about him and then +burst into laughter as he saw his comrade. The next moment they ran +together, shook hands and mutually congratulated each other, as you will +admit they had full warrant in doing.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p316" id="p316">316</a></span> +<a name="THE_DEVILS_PUNCH_BOWL_6180" id="THE_DEVILS_PUNCH_BOWL_6180"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXXI.</h2> +<h3>THE DEVIL'S PUNCH BOWL.</h3> +</div> + +<p>It was a thrilling story which Terry Clark had to tell about his ride on +the back of the buffalo, but, after all, it was not so stirring as the +experience which befell Fred Linden, and the Irish lad declared that it +surpassed his own in every respect.</p> + +<p>"Thim Winnebagos are gittin' altogether too plintiful," said he; "whin +they come on horseback as will as on foot, there must be more than we +can take care of, though you managed the three as well as I could have +done the same mesilf. And so ye hit one of 'em whin ye touched off yer +gun, did ye?"</p> + +<p>"There is no doubt of it, though I am sorry to say that it did not end +his career right away."</p> + +<p>"It'll sarve him the good turn of givin' him time to think what a maan +spalpeen he is any<span class="pagenum"><a name="p317" id="p317">317</a></span> way, and that's a good deal. And so ye say they was +mounted on horseback: what has become of thim?"</p> + +<p>"They rode in among the trees over yonder, near where we kindled the +fire and cooked the buffalo steak."</p> + +<p>Terry walked out to the edge of the prairie, and shading his eyes, +peered in that direction.</p> + +<p>"I can see nuthin' of thim; they must have found out that ye hadn't any +frinds there after all the fuss ye made, and it may be they will come +back to sittle with ye."</p> + +<p>"If I alone could attend to them, do you think we together have any +thing to fear?"</p> + +<p>"Of course not, if it's only thim three, but we have seen so many of the +spalpeens that they won't be loikely to foind much trouble in scarin' up +a few hundred more and makin' it uncomfortable for us."</p> + +<p>"Well," replied Fred, with a sigh, "I am so relieved and thankful to +know how well we got through it all, that I am hopeful we shall have no +great trouble during the rest of the way. We ought to be able to reach +the camp<span class="pagenum"><a name="p318" id="p318">318</a></span> by to-morrow night if we don't have any interruption."</p> + +<p>The young friends surely had good reason to feel grateful for their +deliverance from the perils of the morning, and with hopeful hearts they +walked along the margin of the wood until they came to the point where +the trail turned to the left. Over this they started at a brisk pace, +Fred slightly in advance of his companion, for the path was not broad +enough for them to walk any other way with freedom.</p> + +<p>"Terry," said the elder, "do you think it possible that the three +Winnebagos with whom I had the trouble could be the three that we met +last night, when we were about to cross the stream?"</p> + +<p>"Niver," was the emphatic reply; "how could they have got around so far +in front? It was a good many miles the ither way that we saw the same!"</p> + +<p>"I have thought of that, but, you know, we spent several hours in sleep, +during which they might have turned back."</p> + +<p>"But where could they have got their horses?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="p319" id="p319">319</a></span></p> + +<p>"They may have had them within easy reach?"</p> + +<p>"It couldn't be."</p> + +<p>"I guess you are right; we hadn't a very good view of them last night, +though the moon shone on them when they were wading the stream and I had +a fancy that one of them looked like the fellow I hit when I fired."</p> + +<p>"All a fancy," insisted Terry.</p> + +<p>"Well, there's no use of guessing, for any way it must be only a guess; +but where do you suppose Deerfoot is?"</p> + +<p>"I've been thinkin' of the fellow and it saams to me that it's time he +showed up."</p> + +<p>"I wonder whether he could have passed us in the night."</p> + +<p>"That couldn't be, for he meant to stay near the camp-fire where we lift +him till he found out what the spalpeens were goin' to do, and he +couldn't have got that chance till mornin'."</p> + +<p>"Unless they made a start last night."</p> + +<p>"Which the same they didn't do."</p> + +<p>The boys were more in want of water than food, and fortunately they had +not gone far when they struck another stream, narrow<span class="pagenum"><a name="p320" id="p320">320</a></span> enough for them to +leap across, and which afforded them a draught with which to quench +their thirst.</p> + +<p>"Now," said Fred, "since we have had such a good breakfast, we will +think of nothing more to eat until night."</p> + +<p>"I don't know about not <i>thinkin'</i> of the same," said Terry doubtfully, +"but I am with ye in agraain' that we won't go out of the path to hunt +any of the same onless—that is, onless we should think what I've +brought along isn't aqual to our appetites."</p> + +<p>"We must have passed considerably more than half the distance between +home and the camp in the mountains," added the elder, some minutes +later; "so, if all goes well, we ought to be with our friends some time +to-morrow afternoon."</p> + +<p>"I'm of the opinion," remarked the sagacious Terry, "that Deerfut sint +us on ahead last night so as to git us out uv the way; thim pritty legs +of his can travel so fast that he wanted a chance to stritch the same +without waitin' fur us."</p> + +<p>"More than likely you are right; whenever<span class="pagenum"><a name="p321" id="p321">321</a></span> he thinks it necessary, he +will branch out ahead of the Winnebagos and overhaul us; so even though +we see nothing of him, we ought not to feel much concern."</p> + +<p>"How about the wither, me lad?"</p> + +<p>Fred had noticed since resuming their journey, that the sky, which was +clear and sunshiny in the morning, had become overcast. The sun was no +longer visible, and a chilliness in the air warned them that the fine +weather could not last much longer. They had not only been favored in +this respect, but for several days before leaving home equally charming +skies had spanned them. And so, in accordance with the laws of our +changeable climate, a disagreeable turn was to be expected.</p> + +<p>"I was hopeful that it would keep off until we reached camp," said Fred, +looking up through the tree tops at the darkening sky; "but that is too +much, and we must take it as it comes."</p> + +<p>"Push on as fast as ye choose."</p> + +<p>Taking his friend at his word, Fred broke into a slow, easy trot, not +much more rapid than an ordinary walking gait, but one which<span class="pagenum"><a name="p322" id="p322">322</a></span> they could +keep up a long time, where the ground was not too rough. Terry of course +did the same, and they covered fully two miles in that manner, when they +slackened their pace before an extensive rise of the ground. But for +that, they would have gone much further at the same speed.</p> + +<p>Some fifteen minutes were spent in clambering up the stony incline, when +they descended into a broad valley, the path still rough and difficult +of passage. They recognized a dull but increasing roar as made by a +rapid torrent, and ere long stopped on the edge of a stream fifty feet +wide, which dashed and foamed over the rocks, breaking into eddies, and +agitated pools, falling in foamy cataracts and splashing forward again +with a rollicking freedom that formed one of the prettiest and most +romantic sights on which they had ever looked.</p> + +<p>Directly at their feet was a curious formation. By some means at a +remote day, a number of hard stones had been flung downward and given a +spinning motion, which, acting on the softer sandstone beneath, had +begun hollowing it out, as if by the chisel of an engraver.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p323" id="p323">323</a></span> This +strange operation had gone on for years, until a bowl a dozen feet +across and half as deep had been formed. It was almost mathematically +round, very smooth and with a tapering shape to the bottom that made the +resemblance to an enormous punch bowl strikingly accurate.</p> + +<p>This formation (which in accordance with the taste prevailing in all +parts of our country, should be christened the "Devil's Punch Bowl"), +was full of limpid water, fed by a slight overflow from above and +overrunning and flowing calmly over the lower rim. In the bottom lay +three stones, looking like cannon balls. These were the tools with which +the stream had carved the Devil's Punch Bowl. Having done their work, +they were resting in the bottom, where they had lain for a period that +could not be guessed.</p> + +<p>Out beyond, a thin sheet of the water hung like a transparent curtain +over the edge of the rocks. It was so smooth and unruffled that it +seemed stationary, like a film of glass, but, after striking the stones +below, it broke into foam, whirlpools and eddies,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p324" id="p324">324</a></span> which helped to form +as lovely and picturesque a scene as the most devoted lover of nature +could long to see.</p> + +<p>The picture was so pretty indeed that the boys stood for several minutes +lost in admiration. They had never viewed any thing of the kind, and it +was something that would always be a pleasant memory to them.</p> + +<p>But, great as was their admiration, there was a startling question that +came to them: how was this interesting stream to be crossed?</p> + +<p>In front and up and down the bank, the eyes searched in vain for a ford. +It was idle to think of ferrying themselves over, while the cascades, +pools, eddies and general "upsetting" of a broad deep stream, made its +passage as perilous as that of the rapids nearer home in which the two +had come so near losing their lives.</p> + +<p>"There is no possible way by which we can reach the other side," said +Fred, after they had walked a few rods up and down the stream.</p> + +<p>"I don't obsarve any way mesilf," was the response of Terry.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p325" id="p325">325</a></span></p> + +<p>"But there <i>must</i> be, for how could father and the rest have crossed?"</p> + +<p>"They may have put up a bridge."</p> + +<p>"But where is the bridge? There are no signs of any thing of the kind," +said the bewildered Fred; "they couldn't have made a bridge without +leaving it behind."</p> + +<p>"The high water has swipt it away."</p> + +<p>Fred stood surveying the stream and the banks, for several minutes, +during which he once more walked back and forth, but he was right when +he said that the place had never been spanned by even the simplest +structure, for it could not have been done without leaving some traces +behind.</p> + +<p>This being the case, the mystery was greater than ever; for it was +certain that at that hour their friends were many miles distant on the +other side.</p> + +<p>"This is a little ahead of any thing I ever heard tell of," remarked +Fred, taking off his cap and scratching his head, after the fashion of +Terry when he was puzzled.</p> + +<p>"It couldn't be," ventured the latter, who also had his cap in his hand +and was stirring<span class="pagenum"><a name="p326" id="p326">326</a></span> up his flaxen locks, "that they carried a bridge along +with 'em."</p> + +<p>"Impossible!"</p> + +<p>"That's what I thought, as me sicond cousin remarked whin they told him +his uncle carried his shillaleh a half mile and passed two persons +without beltin' 'em over the head."</p> + +<p>"There's something about this which I can not understand."</p> + +<p>Terry turned and looked at him in his quizzical way and solemnly +extended his hand. Fred shook it as he wished, though he was far from +feeling in a sportive mood.</p> + +<p>"They <i>must</i> have crossed," he added, replacing his cap with some +violence, compressing his lips and shaking his head in a determined way; +"do you walk up the bank, while I make a search in the other direction; +we <i>must</i> find the explanation."</p> + +<p>The proposition was acted upon, Terry clambering carefully along the +slippery bank and over the rocks, until he was fully a hundred yards +from his friend, who busied himself in doing the same thing in the +opposite direction.</p> + +<p>All at once the Irish lad shouted. Looking<span class="pagenum"><a name="p327" id="p327">327</a></span> up to him, Fred saw that he +was beckoning him to approach.</p> + +<p>"I knew there must be something of the kind," thought Fred, who after +much labor placed himself beside his friend.</p> + +<p>To his disappointment, Terry had paused before the worst part of the +series of cascades. It was at the broadest portion of the stream, where +the falls, whirlpools, eddies and deep water would have turned back the +most skillful swimmer.</p> + +<p>"What do you mean?" asked the astonished Fred.</p> + +<p>"I thought I'd show you the place where they <i>didn't</i> cross," was his +reply, and then he broke into the merriest laughter, as well he might, +for he had solved the mystery.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p328" id="p328">328</a></span> +<a name="THE_TERROR_IN_THE_AIR_6444" id="THE_TERROR_IN_THE_AIR_6444"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXXII.</h2> +<h3>THE TERROR IN THE AIR.</h3> +</div> + +<p>"Do obsarve where the trail comes down to that big bowl?" asked Terry, +pointing to the huge, circular cavity below them.</p> + +<p>"Of course."</p> + +<p>"Well, that's a mistake; <i>that isn't the right trail</i>."</p> + +<p>Fred turned about, and jumped and ran back to the Devil's Punch Bowl, at +a rate that threatened his neck. Stooping over, he carefully examined +the path. He saw that his companion was right; the trail which they had +followed to the edge of the stream was one that had been worn by animals +in coming to and going from the Punch Bowl. You will admit that no +better punch in the wide world could be furnished the dumb beasts than +that which was thus freely given to them.</p> + +<p>As if to confirm that which did not need confirming,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p329" id="p329">329</a></span> a large buck at +that moment appeared in the path, within a hundred feet of where Fred +had straightened up, after examining the trail. He threw up his head on +catching sight of the young hunter, gave one quick, inquiring stare and +then whirled about and was off like a flash.</p> + +<p>Fred Linden could have brought him down at the moment he wheeled had he +chosen to do so, but he recalled his own proposition to Terry some time +before, about firing such a shot. Indeed, since they had some of the +cooked buffalo steak left, there was no call to use any more ammunition +for game.</p> + +<p>Terry Clark came laughing down the rocks, looking upon the whole +business as one of the funniest of incidents, but to Fred it was any +thing but a laughing matter. Time was becoming of the utmost value, and +this divergence from the trail meant delay—a delay, too, whose length +could not be guessed. If they had turned aside several miles back, it +was more than likely that they would lose all the advantage gained by +the laborious travel of the night before.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p330" id="p330">330</a></span></p> + +<p>"How could we have made such a blunder?" asked Fred, his eyes wandering +back over the path, as though searching for an explanation of the +mistake; "I suppose at the point where the trails cross the direction +isn't changed much and this is more distinct than the other. Terry, I +can't see any thing about this to laugh at."</p> + +<p>"I don't obsarve much of the same mesilf," said the other, whose face +nevertheless was on abroad grin; "I wasn't laughing at yersilf, or the +mistake we made."</p> + +<p>"What was it then that amused you so much?"</p> + +<p>"I was thinkin' how funny it looked to see the deer and bears and +buffaloes and foxes and panthers all standing round that big bowl and +winkin' at each ither while they drank their health."</p> + +<p>"Terry, there's going to be trouble because of this blunder."</p> + +<p>"What do ye signify be the same?"</p> + +<p>"I believe that all the advantage we gained by traveling so hard last +night is lost. When we follow this trail back until it reaches the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p331" id="p331">331</a></span> main +one, more than likely we shall meet the Winnebagos at that point, if +they will not actually be between us and the camp in the Ozarks."</p> + +<p>"I'm afeard it's not all a falsehood that ye are telling me," said +Terry, with an expression in which there was nothing like a jest.</p> + +<p>"Let's be off then."</p> + +<p>At this juncture the Irish lad made a proposition which his companion +accepted, for he thought it promised them much saving in time and +travel.</p> + +<p>It was quite certain that the false trail followed pretty much the same +direction as the true one: at any rate there could be no doubt that it +crossed the stream which had stopped them, so instead of picking their +way back for several miles, they decided to keep along the edge of the +water itself until they struck the path.</p> + +<p>To make sure of avoiding another blunder, one should have gone up and +the other down stream, for manifestly they could not be certain they +were above or below the true path; but each felt too strong a misgiving +about such<span class="pagenum"><a name="p332" id="p332">332</a></span> a course. Their surroundings required mutual support.</p> + +<p>Beside this, they were convinced that the trail which they wished to +recover lay above instead of below, so that, when making their way they +were not held back by any doubt, though each could not fail to see that +it was only a piece of guess-work.</p> + +<p>Fortunately for their peace of mind, they were right, and the plan saved +them much time and travel. They had not gone very far, when they came +upon the path, marked so distinctly that there could be no possible +mistake.</p> + +<p>The width of the stream was about the same as below. The water was +smooth, deep, clear and sluggish. The bank sloped gently down from each +side and on the other shore were plainly seen the prints of the hoofs +where the animals had left the water. It was so deep that whoever went +over there had done so by floating or swimming.</p> + +<p>The crossing was so far above the point where the cascades began, that +nothing was to be feared from them. The clumsiest raft could be ferried +over by a child before it would drift<span class="pagenum"><a name="p333" id="p333">333</a></span> into danger, while in case of +swimming, the peril was still less.</p> + +<p>"If it wasn't so chilly," said Fred, "I would propose that we swim the +stream."</p> + +<p>Terry shivered and shook his head.</p> + +<p>"We must go over on a raft; it is not only cowld, but is gittin' +cowlder."</p> + +<p>"There's a storm brewing; it looks as black as ink off yonder."</p> + +<p>At this moment the boys made a discovery which both pleased and alarmed +them. Such a float as they needed was at their call. There lay a half +dozen logs and trees fastened together by several withes, and with +enough buoyancy to bear them to the other side. Even the pole to be used +in propulsion lay upon the heavy timbers that were pulled just far +enough against the bank to prevent them floating off with the current.</p> + +<p>While it was pleasant to know that they would not have to go through the +labor of constructing any thing of the kind, yet there was a cause for +fear in the presence of the structure which led them to hesitate several +minutes before using it.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p334" id="p334">334</a></span></p> + +<p>It proved that some one had crossed from the other side upon it, while +the withes were so white and fresh at the angles, where they were +twisted open, as to show that the raft had been made but a short time.</p> + +<p>The natural question was as to who could have been coming from the other +way.</p> + +<p>"I know," said Terry, compressing his lips and shaking his head.</p> + +<p>"Who?"</p> + +<p>"Winnebagos; they're so plintiful that it couldn't have been any one +ilse, for they wouldn't have had a chance."</p> + +<p>"I suppose you are right," remarked Fred thoughtfully, "for they do seem +to be almost everywhere, though I can't understand why they should be +coming this way."</p> + +<p>"Suppose there was but one of the spalpeens, and he'd been out on a +scout, and was on his way back to the rist of the spalpeens with the +news, would it be onraisonable to think he would take a little pains to +kaap his leggins and moccasins from gittin' damp enough to give him +cowld?"</p> + +<p>"Well, I can think of no better reason than<span class="pagenum"><a name="p335" id="p335">335</a></span> that, and am willing to +believe it is correct, but don't you see, Terry, that all this goes to +prove that we have lost a dangerous amount of time? We ought to have +been many miles further on the road than we are."</p> + +<p>"The buffalo bull had a good deal to do with our impolite tarryin', and +as he is slaapin' with his four mithers, I maan his forefathers, let him +rist in pace."</p> + +<p>The boys did not allow their words to delay their hands. The raft was +shoved clear, and the two took their positions upon it, Fred holding the +pole, while his companion looked after the guns. They were astonished to +find, directly after leaving land, that the pole, which was nearly +twenty feet in length, would not reach bottom.</p> + +<p>This compelled them to use it as a paddle. The progress was slow, but +the distance was so slight that it did not take them long to reach the +other bank, where they set the structure adrift, so that it could not be +used by any one else.</p> + +<p>Looking directly up stream, where the sky was in plain sight, its +blackness startled even<span class="pagenum"><a name="p336" id="p336">336</a></span> the boys, who were used to seeing the most +violent changes of temperature. The hue was not of the dark blue which +often gives warning of the coming tempest, but there was a greenish +tinge to the blackness that would have awed any one.</p> + +<p>While they looked, a zigzag ribbon of flame fluttered across the +darkened portion, accompanied by a crash that seemed to shiver the +earth. Fred Linden, who happened to be staring straight at the fiery +burst, saw the upper part of a large cypress that leaned over the water, +leap from the trunk as though it had been sawn short off and flung into +the water.</p> + +<p>It was all ablaze, and, falling upright into the current, kept its +equilibrium, that is, it did not fall to any side, but swept slowly +downward as upright as when on the tree, and suggested that some giant +as big as the Statue of Liberty was walking beneath, with an enormous +torch held above his head to light his path.</p> + +<p>"Did ye iver see the like?" asked Terry.</p> + +<p>"No; it is wonderful."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p337" id="p337">337</a></span></p> + +<div class="figcenter" style='width:350px'> +<a name="illus-003" id="illus-003"></a> +<img src="images/ozark-336.jpg" alt=""Did ye iver see the like?" asked Terry." title="" width="350" /><br /> +<span class="caption">"Did ye iver see the like?" asked Terry.</span> +</div> + +<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="p339" id="p339">339</a></span><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span>Although it was about mid-day, the heavens were so overcast that the +gloom was like night itself. At the same time the darkness had a ghastly +tinge which made the faces of the boys, when they looked at each other, +livid and unearthly.</p> + +<p>The scene was so impressive that they stood motionless, watching the +flaming tree and the inky heavens beyond. Suddenly in the sky they saw a +figure that resembled a vast balloon slightly inclined to one side, and +spinning on its axis with inconceivable swiftness.</p> + +<p>At the bottom the snout-like appendage wavered off to one side as though +the amazing velocity of the upper part was twisting it loose. A similar +formation appeared a few minutes after a short distance behind.</p> + +<p>And now began the most extraordinary exhibition of all. Imagine two +whirling balloons, a hundred feet in height, and so black that they +stood out from the surrounding gloom, showing like pitch against the +dimly lit sky behind. They began a witches' waltz in the firmament, +sometimes leaning far backward, then dancing forward, as if saluting +each other, then "balancing," then dancing up and down, then so far away +from each other that<span class="pagenum"><a name="p340" id="p340">340</a></span> one would pass out of the field of vision, soon to +reappear, however. At times they seemed as if about to rush into each +other's arms, and then they coquetted away again and resumed the weird +dance in the skies.</p> + +<p>You understand that I am trying to describe one of those terrible +visitations of the west known as a cyclone. Little was heard of them a +century ago, and the balloon to which I have compared the form of the +ghostly dancers, was unknown to the lads, who watched the exhibition +with an interest that was not turned into terror, as it would have been +to-day, by the knowledge of the awful power for death and destruction +that lies within that concentration of electricity in its most fateful +form.</p> + +<p>It seemed a long time that this strange scene lasted, though it could +not have been many seconds. Suddenly, while the balloon-like forms were +saluting each other, they rushed together. There was no shock +perceivable when they met, but there were vivid flashes from within the +murky folds, as the heat lightning sometimes plays among the clouds at +the close of a warm day.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p341" id="p341">341</a></span></p> + +<p>Having met, the forms engaged in a wrestling bout. Round and round they +spun with the same bewildering swiftness, leaning far to one side, as +though about to fall, and all the time whirling with such speed on the +one spiral leg that it seemed unable to keep pace with the bulkier part +above.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<a name="FRED_LINDEN_AWAKENS_TO_AN_ALARMING_FACT_6696" id="FRED_LINDEN_AWAKENS_TO_AN_ALARMING_FACT_6696"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXXIII.</h2> +<h3>FRED LINDEN AWAKENS TO AN ALARMING FACT.</h3> +</div> + +<p>The approach of the cyclone was attended by an appalling roar, and a +mass of branches and trees flying through the air, which warned the boys +of their danger.</p> + +<p>"Terry, it won't do to stay here," shouted Fred, casting about for some +place of refuge; "where shall we go?"</p> + +<p>Quite close to the stream which they had just crossed was an enormous +rock. Its irregular surface, a dozen feet in extent each way, must have +reached far down in the ground, so that nothing could have been more +immovable. It was not the refuge that the boys would have taken, had +they been given time to hunt for one, but surely they could not have +found a better.</p> + +<p>A couple of leaps took Terry to the place, and, as he threw himself on +his face, Fred was directly behind him. As they lay, the shelving rock +was less than two feet above their heads. Though they could hear, they +could not see what was coming. They could look to the right and left, +but only for a few seconds in front.</p> + +<p>Using their eyes as best they could, they saw the air filled with +leaves, twigs, branches, huge limbs and trunks, which spun forward and +over and over, like so many feathers in a tornado.</p> + +<p>The first shock that came to the boys crouching behind the rock was a +dead thump near their heads. An uprooted tree had been hurled from some +point above, like an enormous spear, and, striking the rock at a slant, +slid over the rough surface like the finger of a player over the face of +a tambourine and out beyond, hunting for some spot where it could +penetrate. It found it on the ground, but it was instantly wrenched +loose by the resistless power that had first thrown it forward, and went +end over end into the general wreck and ruin beyond.</p> + +<p>The next sight which startled the boys was on their left, directly over +the stream. The air was filled apparently with snow, as if a violent<span class="pagenum"><a name="p342" id="p342">342</a></span> +squall had suddenly sprung up. It was accompanied by a hissing noise, +which mingled with the fearful roar that had not stopped and was like +that of the stormy Atlantic beating upon the rock-bound coast.</p> + +<p>Striking the stream, the cyclone whirled most of the water from its bed, +scattered the mist and foam among the trees, and saturated the boys +where they lay. The huge torch was quenched as suddenly as it was +lighted.</p> + +<p>The most terrifying moment to Fred and Terry was when they felt the rock +in front of them move. It was turned several inches to one side, and for +one frightful moment, they believed that that too would be sent skimming +through the air, or whirled over upon them. But there was no other +refuge to which they could fly; had they attempted to rise to their +feet, they would have been snatched up and dashed to death. So they +flattened themselves as much as they could on their faces, and the +terrific outburst could not reach them.</p> + +<p>Such an elemental fury can not last long. Having torn up the ponderous +trees, overturned rocks, and cleaned out the stream, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p343" id="p343">343</a></span> cyclone seemed +to mount upward and leave the earth entirely, probably to descend some +miles away and continue its work of destruction.</p> + +<p>Fred lay still several minutes after it had passed, and then turned to +look at his companion. He had unrolled the package and taken therefrom +the cooked buffalo steak, which had been so roughly handled during his +ride on the bull.</p> + +<p>"Well, well," said the astonished Fred, "I believe you are the only +person in the world who could eat his dinner in the middle of such a +storm as this."</p> + +<p>"I was thinkin', bein' as we are in so much of a hurry, that I would +save some toime by dinin' without delay, though ye do me an injoostice +by sayin' I'm through the same; I'm jist about to begin and I'll be +plaised to have yer company."</p> + +<p>Terry may not have had much sentiment, but he was sensible. Fred sat up, +his head just rising above the rock, and, for a few minutes, they gave +their attention to their meal. There was enough for a fair lunch, but no +more. A gentle wind blew against them, being<span class="pagenum"><a name="p344" id="p344">344</a></span> the remnant left by the +cyclone, and while they ate, you need not be told they used their eyes.</p> + +<p>The sight was a striking one: the trees lay across each other, many with +their prong-like roots pointing toward the sky, limbs and trunks having +been tossed about in the most bewildering confusion. The water that had +been lifted from the creek rendered not only their clothing wet, but +every thing around them was saturated. Walking to the side of the +stream, they looked down at the sloping banks, wet and muddy, but with +little water except in the bottom. The current, however, was pouring so +swiftly from above that this was rapidly filling up, and before long +would reach its former level.</p> + +<p>Now that the cyclone had passed, the sky rapidly cleared. There was a +chilliness in the air, and the sun did not show itself.</p> + +<p>The boys took but a short time to view the destruction, great as it was, +when they faced about in the direction of the camp which was their +destination from the first. It looked as though they were finally +separated from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p345" id="p345">345</a></span> trail, for since it was so covered by fallen trees +and limbs, not the slightest trace of it was seen. They were filled with +dismay, and indeed would have been at their wits' end had not the +cyclone confined its fury to exceedingly narrow limits. All its +prodigious force was spent in and directly along the stream. Twenty +yards away, the forest was undisturbed, so that the elemental scythe had +made a clean swath as it sped along.</p> + +<p>"Hurrah!" called out Terry, "here's the path; I follyed a straight line +as I could from the water here, so I'm sure I couldn't coom out very far +from the right place."</p> + +<p>Fred hurried over the ruins to his side, and a glance at the ground +showed that his friend was right: there was the trail at their feet.</p> + +<p>"Now," said Terry, recovering his spirits, "if we had only knowed that +that storm was coomin', we could have fastened our guns to our backs and +swum across, without waitin' to build the raft, and saved all the time +that we lost."</p> + +<p>"But we would have been wetted all the same, had we done so."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p346" id="p346">346</a></span></p> + +<p>"And gained that much time; do ye know," added Terry, in a half +frightened voice, "what I obsarved?"</p> + +<p>"I suppose you saw what I did,—the air full of water, trees, limbs, +stones and lightning."</p> + +<p>"While we were peepin' over the edge of the rock, ye moind that the wind +cut our faces so we had to lower 'em to keep our heads flyin' off where +we couldn't find 'em agin. It was yersilf that stuck yer nose in the +ground, but I took a paap off beyanst the creek and I saan one of the +Winnebagos."</p> + +<p>"Can it be possible! what was he doin'?"</p> + +<p>"Turnin' summersets at the rate of twinty to the second and about a +dozen faat above the ground; I had only the one glimpse of him, but whin +I obsarved him it looked to me as if his head and one leg wint off in +different directions; I s'pose he's lookin' for the same."</p> + +<p>Fred Linden could hardly believe that Terry had seen one of their +enemies, though, as you can well understand, from what cyclones have +done in recent years, it was not at all impossible. The youth insisted +so strongly on the first part of his statement, that Fred decided<span class="pagenum"><a name="p347" id="p347">347</a></span> that +at the time the storm burst, one at least of their foes was on the bank +behind them.</p> + +<p>All this confirmed the belief he had expressed that they had lost +invaluable time by wandering from the trail, and that they would have +hard work to keep far enough in advance to reach the camp before the +Winnebagos. The proof that they had received too of some of the +Winnebagos being in front complicated the situation and added to the +mental discomfort of both.</p> + +<p>The sky which, as you will remember, had become overcast sometime before +the bursting of the cyclone, continued to clear, and to the surprise of +the young hunters, about the middle of the afternoon the sun showed +itself. The chilliness, however, remained, though the two walked so +briskly that they could have well stood a still lower temperature.</p> + +<p>Fortunately for them (though it also operated in favor of their enemies) +the trail was traveled without difficulty. The ground was uneven, +sometimes up and sometimes down, but it was not hard for the feet and +they made good progress. The distance they had to go<span class="pagenum"><a name="p348" id="p348">348</a></span> was too great for +them to hope to reach the end of the journey before the morrow, even if +they traveled most of the night. They had already proven their pluck and +resolution, and you may be sure, now that they were on the right path, +that they did not throw away any minutes.</p> + +<p>They had eaten the extra buffalo steak sooner than was intended, but +they could afford to wait until the morrow before partaking of any more +food.</p> + +<p>The afternoon was far along and they were pushing forward in their usual +vigor, talking in a hopeful strain now and then, when both were startled +by the report of a rifle. It did not sound in front nor to the rear, but +only a moderate distance to the left. The boys stopped and looked in +each other's face.</p> + +<p>"Anither of the spalpeens," whispered Terry; "now there ought to be a +gun fired on tother side of us and one in front and one behind us."</p> + +<p>"They may be there, all the same," replied Fred, staring in the +direction whence came the report, as though he expected the appearance<span class="pagenum"><a name="p349" id="p349">349</a></span> +of the one who had caused it. They looked and listened for several +minutes, but saw and heard nothing more, and resumed their hurried pace, +frequently glancing behind, for they were in that distrustful state of +mind which comes to one who has a strong suspicion that an enemy is +trying to steal behind him unawares. The actual presence of such an +enemy is no more trying than the suspense itself.</p> + +<p>The shot might have been innocent—that is, fired by some wandering +white man or Indian who had not the remotest thought that any other +person was within hearing. Probably such was the fact, though there was +enough uncertainty about it to prevent the theory affording the youth +the comfort it otherwise would have done.</p> + +<p>The lads, as you may well believe, did not stop to look into the matter, +but pressed on at a gait which they were confident would prevent any of +their enemies overtaking them, unless they broke into their loping trot, +which was hardly likely.</p> + +<p>Somehow or other, Terry seemed to be thinking<span class="pagenum"><a name="p350" id="p350">350</a></span> more about the three +Winnebago horsemen with whom Fred Linden had had his encounter than he +did about his own experience.</p> + +<p>"How thim spalpeens could be ridin', whin all the rist are afoot, is +somethin' that puzzles me," said he, after they had walked some distance +further; "can't ye give some explanation that will relaave me mind, +Fred?"</p> + +<p>"I can certainly know no more about it than you do."</p> + +<p>"Didn't ye obsarve them with particularity?"</p> + +<p>"I can't say that I did; they were rather small, tough-looking; two were +bay in color, while one was black: I noticed the black one more than the +others, because the Indian that I hit was riding on him; I remember that +he had a star in his forehead."</p> + +<p>"Who? The Winnebago?"</p> + +<p>"You know well enough that I meant the horse——"</p> + +<p>Fred Linden stopped short, and turned his white, scared face upon his +friend. He had just awakened to an astounding fact.</p> + +<p>"What's the matter, Fred? Are ye ill?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="p351" id="p351">351</a></span></p> + +<p>"My gracious! why didn't I think of that before? Those three horses +belong to father, Mr. Hardin and Mr. Bowlby."</p> + +<p>"Are ye sure of the same?"</p> + +<p>"Why, of course; I can't understand why I did not notice it the moment I +saw them!"</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p352" id="p352">352</a></span> +<a name="THE_CANOE_6937" id="THE_CANOE_6937"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXXIV.</h2> +<h3>THE CANOE.</h3> +</div> + +<p>It certainly was remarkable that when Fred Linden was watching the three +Winnebagos so closely, and when, as I have said, he noticed more than +one trifling matter, that he failed to recognize the animals they were +riding. All three were familiar to him, and the one he had spoken of as +being darker in color than the others, and as having a star in his +forehead, was the identical animal owned by his father. Fred, himself, +had ridden him more than once.</p> + +<p>It should be said, however, that they were the pack-horses, which even +when put to their best paces, could not make good speed. Nevertheless, +they were of great value to the hunters.</p> + +<p>The first conviction of the lad on awaking to the alarming fact, was +that his father and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p353" id="p353">353</a></span> other two men had been killed by the +Winnebagos. The thought overcame him so that he leaned against the +nearest tree and was on the point of fainting.</p> + +<p>"They are all dead, Terry—I know it—we may as well give up, and try to +reach home."</p> + +<p>Terry was agitated, but not so much so as his friend.</p> + +<p>"Why, my dear boy, it's not so bad as <i>that</i>," he said feelingly; "do ye +not moind that whin the gintlemen go to trappin' and huntin' they turn +the horses loose to graze? The spalpeens have coom along and run off +with the same."</p> + +<p>"Do you think so?" asked Fred, looking up yearningly for the grain of +comfort that his companion was able to give.</p> + +<p>"I don't <i>think</i> so; I know so; if the gintlemen took the bastes into +the cabin and slipt with the same ivery night, as me rilatives do with +their pigs in Ireland, why ye might think that they had suffered before +the Winnebagos tuk thim away; but they have snaaked up where the animals +was grazin', jumped onto their backs and rid off."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p354" id="p354">354</a></span></p> + +<p>This view of the case was so reasonable, that Fred rallied and half +smiled at his own faintheartedness. He stood erect and drew a deep +breath of satisfaction.</p> + +<p>"I believe you are right, but it strikes me that such thieves would have +stolen all instead of half the horses."</p> + +<p>"They've lift the ither three for their frinds that I make no doubt will +be along to take thim, if they haven't done so now."</p> + +<p>"You know that the loss of a horse is considered almost as bad as the +loss of a man in this part of the world."</p> + +<p>"Sometimes he amounts to a good deal more, as me mither—"</p> + +<p>Terry paused in his remarks, for just then Fred uttered a +warning—"<i>Sh!</i>" to signify that something was in the path in front. The +next moment, he ran several paces to the right and sheltered himself +behind a tree, Terry being only a few seconds behind him.</p> + +<p>Both had discovered what it was. A brown bear of moderate size was +waddling along toward them. He had probably struck the trail, and +finding it easier walking than among the trees<span class="pagenum"><a name="p355" id="p355">355</a></span> and undergrowth, was +swinging forward in the direction of the stream that had received such a +visit from the cyclone.</p> + +<p>The boys could not know for a minute or two whether the beast had seen +them, but they felt no alarm. As I have said, he was not very large nor +formidable looking, and, if he chose to turn aside to attack them, they +were more than his equal. As it was, their own eagerness to get forward +was all that prevented them from shooting him.</p> + +<p>Bruin lumbered ahead in his awkward way, and, as the boys peeped forth, +they fancied that his big brown eyes glanced mischievously at them; but +they were mistaken. He did not see nor scent them, but went by, and, in +a few minutes, disappeared from sight among the trees.</p> + +<p>Hardly waiting till he had vanished, the youths stepped back into the +path and resumed the rapid pace at which they had been traveling. The +sun, that had been partly shining from behind the clouds, was low in the +sky, and it was not long before they were journeying in the twilight. +The moon rose early, but its<span class="pagenum"><a name="p356" id="p356">356</a></span> light was so much obscured by the mists +that it gave little if any help, and the friends were disappointed to +find it difficult to make any progress at all.</p> + +<p>At this trying juncture, they found themselves once more on the bank of +a stream that had to be crossed before they could go any further. It was +fully double the width of the one last passed, but did not look as if it +was deep.</p> + +<p>"My clothes ain't all dry yit," said Terry, "and I'm in favor of wadin' +if we can."</p> + +<p>"I am afraid it is too deep for that, and with our guns and bundles and +thick clothes it isn't an easy thing to swim. Besides it's colder than +it was last night and it won't be pleasant to spend a few more hours in +wet clothing: mine is about dry."</p> + +<p>Fred added that if they should decide to push on, the only way of doing +so was by the usual means of a raft. It would take considerable time to +build one, and probably still longer to work their way to the other +side.</p> + +<p>"No use of waitin'," said Terry; "let's take hold; I've an idaa that we +ain't far from<span class="pagenum"><a name="p357" id="p357">357</a></span> the cabin and ivery mile that we can make now counts."</p> + +<p>Fred started to give his help, when to his unbounded amazement, he +narrowly missed going headlong over a small Indian canoe that lay at +their feet. They would not have been more surprised had they come upon +Deerfoot himself in a sound slumber, and not until they had stooped down +and examined it closely were they certain that it was not some log +fantastically shaped by nature that had floated thither.</p> + +<p>But an Indian canoe it was beyond all mistake, though after searching +all around it, they failed to find the paddle so necessary for its +propulsion. The boat had been drawn up the bank, underneath some bushes +and undergrowth, where it would not have been seen by any one further +off than six feet. It was so far back too from the stream that it would +require an unusual overflow to carry it away.</p> + +<p>It was not so dark that the lads could not see that it was of beautiful +pattern and fine make—one of those delicate vessels which under the +skillful guidance of its owner skim like<span class="pagenum"><a name="p358" id="p358">358</a></span> a swallow over the water. It +was a prize indeed.</p> + +<p>Now, as you very well know, there is nothing wonderful about an Indian +canoe, but the astonishment of the boys came from the fact that they +found it in this place. Fred Linden, in listening to the accounts given +by his father on his return in the spring from his trapping expeditions, +had heard him say more than once that there was no Indian village +between Greville and the camp at the foot of the Ozarks, and that, +according to the friendly red men who occasionally visited them, he +believed that the nearest lodge lay nearly two hundred miles to the +north-west of Greville. It was this fact that gave the Hunters of the +Ozark so much confidence in themselves when they went on their long +hunts, though, as you have learned, danger did sometimes come from the +wandering Indians, the father of Terry Clark having lost his life at +their hands.</p> + +<p>All this being known to the boys, they had cause to wonder how it was +that an Indian canoe lay hidden under the bushes on the shore. None of +those people would go to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p359" id="p359">359</a></span> trouble of making such a boat, unless he +expected to use it many times. It would be the same as if you had a +costly rowboat constructed with which to cross only once a canal or +small stream of water.</p> + +<p>But, as in many other cases, it was idle to speculate, and the boys did +not allow any feeling of surprise to rob them of the valuable minutes. +Finding no paddle with which to manage the boat, Fred cut a small +sapling and trimmed it so that he had a pole fully twenty feet long. +Then the guns were laid in the bottom, Terry took his seat, and they +carefully pushed from shore, Fred managing the pole.</p> + +<p>As they suspected, the water was quite shallow, the depth nowhere being +more than three or four feet; but the current was rapid, and in some +places the bottom of the canoe grated over the gravel. Both had to move +well to the stern to raise the bow, so as to allow them to reach land +with dry feet.</p> + +<p>"It's a pity to allow this to float off and be lost," said Fred; "let's +draw it up the bank where the owner won't have any trouble in finding +it."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p360" id="p360">360</a></span></p> + +<p>"I would give a good deal if I could be introduced to that same +gintleman," remarked Terry, who took off his cap and scratched his head +as he added:</p> + +<p>"I wonder whither that is one of the canoes from near home?"</p> + +<p>"What are you talking about? How could it get <i>here</i>?"</p> + +<p>"By some subterranean communication, the same as we boys used to sind +notes to the gurls whin I was laarnin' the higher mathematics in +college."</p> + +<p>Fred made no comment upon the remark of his friend. The canoe, when +relieved of their weight, was so light that the bow was pulled to the +shore by means of the pole. Then Fred alone drew it up beyond the reach +of the water, and it was left until the owner should come forward to +claim it.</p> + +<p>The two now set out to hunt for the trail, with a view of making eight +or ten miles more before they stopped to rest; but the result was +discouraging. It took more than a half hour to make sure they had found +it, and then they had not gone twenty yards, when Fred<span class="pagenum"><a name="p361" id="p361">361</a></span> said he could +not tell whether he was in the path or not.</p> + +<p>"It's no use," he added; "we may as well stop, for we are sure to repeat +the mistake of to-day: we'll get so far wrong that it'll take many hours +to find our way back again, and we shall lose far more than we gain."</p> + +<p>"That bein' the same—and I'm willin' to agraa that ye are now strivin' +to till the truth—let's turn off from the trail, go back so far that +there isn't any chance for any one to saa us and slaap till mornin'."</p> + +<p>Since there was nothing else to do, the boys did as Terry proposed. They +were not so tired as they were the night before, and they did not dare +to lie down on the leaves and sleep as they did then. There were wild +animals prowling through the woods, and the fact that the lads escaped +once could be no guaranty that they would have equally good fortune a +second time.</p> + +<p>Terry proposed that they should climb a tree and make a bed among the +branches; but that was hardly feasible. It is not often that the limbs +of a tree are accommodating enough to<span class="pagenum"><a name="p362" id="p362">362</a></span> allow any one to rest with +comfort. The branches may be pleasant for a time, but the limbs soon +become like iron rods and the position so cramped as to drive away all +comfort. In addition, there was the danger of a fatal fall during sleep.</p> + +<p>So it was decided to hunt out the most secluded place possible and start +a fire. That would keep off the wild animals, and the boys were not in +such need of sleep that they could not afford to take turns with each +other in watching through the night.</p> + +<p>While hunting a suitable spot, they moved down the river bank for fully +a hundred yards, and then entered some dense undergrowth which they +penetrated until they were sure that no safer place could be found. So +they began gathering twigs, leaves and branches, and piling them against +the shaggy bark of a tree, and soon had all they wanted. This was fired +by means of the flint and steel, and a roaring, crackling blaze made +every thing look cheerful.</p> + +<p>"Let's walk off a little ways," said Fred, "and see whether the light +can be noticed very far; you know that we can not be too careful."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p363" id="p363">363</a></span></p> + +<p>Terry liked the proposal, and rose to act upon it. They moved in +opposite directions, walking several rods, and then carefully passing +entirely around the camp-fire. The result was satisfactory, for the +undergrowth in all directions was so thick that they felt as secure from +discovery as if the fire had been kindled within an impenetrable cave.</p> + +<p>And yet they were woefully mistaken, as they were destined to learn in a +brief while.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p364" id="p364">364</a></span> +<a name="AMERICA_VERSUS_IRELAND_7177" id="AMERICA_VERSUS_IRELAND_7177"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXXV.</h2> +<h3>AMERICA VERSUS IRELAND.</h3> +</div> + +<p>Having satisfied themselves that they could not have fallen upon a safer +place, the boys came back to their camp, as it may be called, and sat +down in front of the blaze. Their knapsacks were unstrapped from their +backs and the blankets spread upon the leaves. There was some moisture +in the thick cloth, but not enough to deter them from using them as +couches. Their own clothing had become dry, and, under the warm glow of +the fire, the blankets would soon be the same.</p> + +<p>In spite of the reconnoissance just made, both felt some uneasiness over +their own situation. They were confident that no one further away than +two or three rods would observe the fire, but the possibility remained +that some enemy might pass within that space, brief as it was. Their +experience since leaving Greville<span class="pagenum"><a name="p365" id="p365">365</a></span> taught them that a large number of +Winnebagos were in the wilderness, and, as Terry remarked, the nearer +they approached camp, the more plentiful did they seem to become.</p> + +<p>It was this feeling which caused them to let the fire sink to half its +first size and led them to keep far back within the circle of light +thrown into the surrounding gloom. They talked in low voices, often +listening and looking around, and were in any thing but a comfortable +frame of mind. The feeling with them was that if any enemy should happen +to be lurking in the vicinity, every possible advantage would be on his +side.</p> + +<p>"I feel, Terry, as though all this is wasted time. I know it is more +than likely that the Winnebagos are doing the same as we, that is, +nothing at all; but that makes me more anxious to push on."</p> + +<p>"I've an idaa," remarked the Irish lad, who was stretched out in a lazy +posture, with his cap in hand, while, as was his custom, he scratched +his pate with the other; "I'm thinkin' why couldn't we aich take a torch +in hand and walk along over the path with the same?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="p366" id="p366">366</a></span></p> + +<p>Fred was half inclined to try the experiment, but fear prevented. They +had learned that the Winnebagos were not only in the rear but in front. +No more conspicuous target can be given than that of a person carrying a +lighted torch: it was the same as when a man with a candle in his hand +starts out to explore his house for burglars. So that plan was not +adopted.</p> + +<p>Terry was about to speak to his companion, when the latter saw him +start, and, rising quickly to the sitting position, stare at a point +beyond Fred. He had seen something that terrified him.</p> + +<p>With his big round eyes still fixed on the gloom behind young Linden, +Terry stealthily reached for his gun, which lay on the leaves close by, +and softly drew back the flint. Fred, as may be supposed, was alarmed, +and starting half to his feet, glanced nervously around.</p> + +<p>He saw nothing.</p> + +<p>"What's the matter?" he asked in an undertone, as he also laid his hand +upon his weapon.</p> + +<p>"Whin I was lookin' at ye," said Terry in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="p367" id="p367">367</a></span> husky whisper, "I obsarved +one of the spalpeens standin' right behind ye and close enough to touch +ye with his hand. Before I could spake, he slipped out of sight like a +shadder."</p> + +<p>Fred did not ask his companion whether he was sure of what he said, for +he knew he was not mistaken.</p> + +<p>"That shows we shouldn't have started the fire; it has caught the eye of +some of the Indians, who will be here in a few minutes; let's slip back +in the darkness and get as far off as we can; it don't make much +difference what course we take, but it will never do to stay here."</p> + +<p>Fred Linden had no more than completed his guarded remark, when he too +caught sight of a warrior standing on the very edge of the circle of +light and looking straight at him. The view of the dusky intruder was +faint but unmistakable.</p> + +<p>The outlines and figure received enough of the firelight to cause him to +look like a dim painting against a dark background. He was holding a +rifle in one hand and appeared to be<span class="pagenum"><a name="p368" id="p368">368</a></span> contemplating the lads, as if +seeking to learn their identity before he advanced or performed some +action.</p> + +<p>"<i>Sh!</i> don't stir," whispered Fred, softly raising the hammer of his +gun, "I see him,—I'll drop him!"</p> + +<p>With the utmost caution he brought the gun around in front until it was +almost to his breast. Then as quickly as he could he raised it to his +shoulder and aimed at the daring redskin.</p> + +<p>But the latter was invisible, he had vanished like the picture on the +slide of a magic lantern.</p> + +<p>As you may suppose, the boys began to feel queer. There was something so +peculiar about this business that, as Terry expressed it, he was "crawly +all over." What they might have done can only be guessed, for before +they could move away from the fire, Deerfoot the Shawanoe, who had been +having a little amusement at their expense, advanced from the gloom and +addressed them.</p> + +<p>"The heart of Deerfoot is glad when he sees his brothers do not sleep; +he has watched them, but their eyes are open."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p369" id="p369">369</a></span></p> + +<p>"Wal, be the powers!" muttered Terry Clark, hastily rising to his feet, +as did Fred; "the spalpeen that plays that trick on me has got to fight +it out."</p> + +<p>And he began taking off his coat and spitting on his hands, to show that +the matter could only be settled by a bout at fisticuffs. Deerfoot had +extended his hand to Fred and he smiled at the combative Irish lad, who +put up his fists and began dancing about him in the most belligerent +fashion.</p> + +<p>"Give him a trial," whispered Fred, with a laugh.</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot loves his brothers; he can not hurt them."</p> + +<p>"If ye can git the bist of mesilf," said Terry, who was still sawing the +air and hopping about as though the ground had become hot; "I'll think +more of ye than iver before, bein' that I think more of ye now than I +ever can, and I defy ye to sit your gun aside and git the bist of me in +any way."</p> + +<p>"Go for him," urged Fred, knowing that the Irish boy, strong and active +as he was, had no chance with the Shawanoe; "he thinks he is<span class="pagenum"><a name="p370" id="p370">370</a></span> your +master when you don't use your weapons. If you will give him a lesson, +it will do him good."</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot will try to be a teacher to my brother," said the Shawanoe +gravely, handing his gun to Fred, and following with his knife and +tomahawk, that he might have no weapons except such as nature gave him. +Then he threw some wood on the fire, so that the space immediately +surrounding them was as light as noonday. Finally, every thing being +ready, he proceeded to "go for" Mr. Terence Clark in a truly aboriginal +fashion.</p> + +<p>Now, it must be borne in mind that, though there was and could not be +the least ill feeling between the youths, yet each was resolutely +resolved to overcome the other in the most emphatic manner at his +command. Terry did not mean to batter the handsome face of his dusky +friend, but to tap it so smartly that he would feel it. The naturally +combative lad was an adept with his fists, and he meant to strike +Deerfoot often enough to convince him of his inferiority. Then he would +rush in, seize the young warrior and throw him to the ground,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p371" id="p371">371</a></span> repeating +it several times, until his antagonist cried, "Hold! Enough!" Fred +Linden was to play the part of referee, and decide which was the better +man. Thus you see the match bore some similarity to those of the present +day, in which the victor is declared to be the one who in a certain +number of rounds gains the advantage of the other.</p> + +<p>"As I am to be the boss of this business," sald Fred, with the keenest +zest, "let me explain the terms: Each one is to strike the other as +often as he can, the blows to be sharp enough to be felt pretty plainly, +but not enough to cause any injury. I will let this go on until one of +you has enough, or until I am satisfied of the superiority of one over +the other. After that you are to have a wrestling match. When I call for +you to stop, you must do so, no matter how anxious you may be to go on. +Is that understood?"</p> + +<p>"The terms are agraaable to mesilf," said Terry; "it is sittled that +there's to be no bettin' on the match."</p> + +<p>"I have no objection to your betting if you wish, but inasmuch as you +haven't a cent and<span class="pagenum"><a name="p372" id="p372">372</a></span> Deerfoot never did such a thing as bet in all his +life, I don't think there will be any trouble about holding the stakes."</p> + +<p>"There ain't to be any foul blows in this," added Terry, who showed that +he knew more than most of his friends about the "Irish champions" and +the cause that made them champions of England and Ireland.</p> + +<p>"What do you mean by foul blows?" asked the puzzled Fred.</p> + +<p>"Hits below the belt. What I wished to observe, howiver, is that we +ain't to re-<i>cog</i>-nize such things as foul blows in this fight for the +championship of Louisiana. Aich one is to git the bist of the ither in +the bist way he can. The rule, Deerfut, is for such pugilists to shake +hands before beginnin' to try to knock aich ither out."</p> + +<p>And Terry extended his hand, which the young warrior gravely shook, for, +as you can well understand, this was something to which he was +altogether unaccustomed. He knew, however, the nature of the contest +between himself and his doughty Irish friend, and he entered into it +with the calm confidence with<span class="pagenum"><a name="p373" id="p373">373</a></span> which he would have engaged Tecumseh +himself in a fight to the death with knives.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot did not put up his hands after the manner of a pugilist, nor +did he even close them, but fixing his eyes on those of Terry (just as +he always did in his deadly fights with his antagonists), he began +softly circling about him, like a cat searching for a chance to leap +upon his prey.</p> + +<p>This did not disconcert Terry, whose pose would have been pronounced +excellent by any one competent to judge. The left arm and foot were +advanced, the right fist being held across and just in front of the +breast, ready to take advantage of the first opening that presented +itself.</p> + +<p>As Deerfoot circled around Terry, the latter moved around him, each on +the alert for a chance.</p> + +<p>"Moind yer eye," Terry was kind enough to say; "it's a pity to sp'il +such a handsome face, but a sinse of dooty will not allow me to thrifle, +and so here goes!"</p> + +<p>With that he made a creditable lunge with his left, instantly following +it with his right<span class="pagenum"><a name="p374" id="p374">374</a></span> hand, and leaping back to avoid a counter. He did not +strike Deerfoot nor did he receive a blow in return.</p> + +<p>"Ye are quick on yer faat and very good at dodgin', but it is an +obligation ye owe to yersilf and to Ameri-<i>ca</i> to show whither thim foin +purty hands can hit——"</p> + +<p><i>Rap, whack, spat!</i> The Shawanoe smote one cheek of Terry, then the +other, and then his mouth, the blows being so quick that they seemed to +be simultaneous. At the moment they were delivered, the Irish lad could +not see that the young warrior had stirred. He appeared to be moving in +his cat-like way around him, but beyond reach of Terry's own tough +fists. Seeing that he must force matters, he made a furious rush for his +antagonist.</p> + +<p>You must not set down Terry Clark as an awkward fellow who went into the +contest without any skill. His father in his younger days was one of the +best fighters in the north of Ireland, and he had taught considerable of +his science to his only son, who gave an exhibition of what he could do +when he smote the Winnebago that was swinging the cow-bell.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p375" id="p375">375</a></span> There was +not a lad anywhere near his years in Greville whom he could not master.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot knew nothing of the modern rules of self-defense. His +superiority lay in his unequaled dexterity and quickness. It was that, +as you will recall, which enabled him to win so many victories over foes +who were his superior in every other respect.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p376" id="p376">376</a></span> +<a name="AMERICA_VERSUS_AMERICA_7414" id="AMERICA_VERSUS_AMERICA_7414"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXXVI.</h2> +<h3>AMERICA VERSUS AMERICA.</h3> +</div> + +<p>Terence Clark gathered himself for another rush and blow at the +Shawanoe, when the latter with a quickness which the eye of Fred Linden +could hardly follow, ducked under the arm of the Irish lad and again +struck him a resounding blow with the flat of the hand, first on one +side of the face and then on the other. Terry wheeled and returned the +blows with skill. Once his hand grazed the black hair that was dangling +about Deerfoot's head, and several times he touched the nodding +feathers, but strive as much as he might, he could not reach the fellow +himself.</p> + +<p>Now that the combat may be said to have opened, it went through to the +end without halt or break. Here, there, everywhere dodged and struck the +Shawanoe, while Terry was always just too late to catch him. Deerfoot<span class="pagenum"><a name="p377" id="p377">377</a></span> +might have inflicted considerable injury upon his plucky antagonist, had +he struck him with his closed hand, but he always used his open palm. +Some of the blows resounded like pistol shots. Having delivered all that +he wished, Deerfoot doubled up his left hand so that only the index +finger was extended. With this he punched the right and left ribs of +Terry, then his chest, and then actually flipped each side of his nose, +easily dodging the blows which the half angered Irish lad aimed at him +in return.</p> + +<p>Suddenly Terry turned his back on his foe and deliberately struck +several times at vacancy. Then he dropped his hands and walked back by +the fire, saying, with a shake of his head:</p> + +<p>"I've enough! ye could bate the divil and his uncle."</p> + +<p>Fred Linden was sitting on the ground shaking with laughter. He had not +seen any thing for a long time that pleased him so much. He had observed +Terry in more than one fight with the boys at home and he knew he was an +ugly customer, as full of grit as a bull dog, but the Shawanoe struck +him fully a dozen times,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p378" id="p378">378</a></span> while the Irish lad with all his skill +desperately put forth never once touched him. The discomfiture of the +brave Irish lad was complete.</p> + +<p>No witness of the bout, however, could have failed to admire the skill +and pluck of Terry. He acquitted himself well and kept up the struggle, +even after he was convinced that he could do nothing with his alert +antagonist. Then, when Deerfoot began to trifle with him, he turned +around as I have shown and struck the empty air.</p> + +<p>"Why did you do that?" asked Fred, as the three stood by the fire +discussing the incident.</p> + +<p>Terry passed his open hand over his cheeks, which were red and smarting +from the sharp taps of Deerfoot, and closing one eye and scratching his +head, made answer:</p> + +<p>"I had been sthrikin' at Deerfut until I obsarved that ivery time I +sthruck <i>at</i> him I didn't hit him; so thinks I to mesilf, I will see +whither I can hit him by tryin' not to hit him; so I sthruck where I +knowed he wasn't, thinkin' he was there."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p379" id="p379">379</a></span></p> + +<p>"Well, I must declare Deerfoot the winner."</p> + +<p>"I can't deny that he is; I throw up the sponge and extind to him the +best wishes for himself and family."</p> + +<p>Smiling in a way that left no doubt of his relish of the incident, +Deerfoot warmly shook the hand of his friend, whose brave fight had +increased his admiration of him.</p> + +<p>"My brother is brave," said he admiringly; "perhaps he can lay Deerfoot +on his back; Deerfoot will rejoice if he can do so."</p> + +<p>"Be the powers! but that suits me," exclaimed the delighted Terry; "I +forgot we were to have a wrestling match; Fred, ye will be koind enough +to sarve as riferee again; we'll take side holts and it'll be the bist +two out of thraa."</p> + +<p>Terry was warranted in feeling more confidence in this test of skill. He +had failed—as he knew he would always fail—in a sparring contest, for +the reason that Deerfoot was so quick that he could not touch him; but +one of the necessities of a wrestling match is that the contestants +shall first seize each other. Terry believed that he had as much +physical strength<span class="pagenum"><a name="p380" id="p380">380</a></span> as Deerfoot, and if he once got a fair hold, he would +not let go until he downed him.</p> + +<p>Terry being right and Deerfoot left handed, each was able to secure his +most effective grip. So, standing side by side, in the old fashioned +style, with a dusky left arm around the white neck and a white arm +around the dusky neck, they began the struggle.</p> + +<p>In this match, as before, Deerfoot allowed his antagonist to dally with +him awhile before he took the aggressive. Passing him over his hip Terry +gave Deerfoot such a violent fling that a pang of fear shot through him, +lest he had broken the Shawanoe's neck; but though he shot headlong out +of the grasp of the Irish lad, the Shawanoe landed lightly on his feet +and instantly leaped back and closed with Terry again.</p> + +<p>"I'll fetch ye this time," he muttered between his compressed lips; "ye +shan't git out of me hands till ye's down flat on yer back and mesilf +layin' a-straddle of ye. There's a difference between boxin' and +sparrin' and I shall taich ye the same, as me grandmither—"</p> + +<p>Both went down that instant, but the Shawanoe<span class="pagenum"><a name="p381" id="p381">381</a></span> was on top. His +antagonist could not have fallen flatter had he been dropped from the +roof of a house.</p> + +<p>"Mark the first fall for Deerfut," called out Terry, hastily clambering +to his feet, the Shawanoe extending his hand to help.</p> + +<p>This result weakened the confidence of the Irish lad in himself, that +is, so far as concerned his opponent. He reflected that many of the +Indians are skillful wrestlers, and while Deerfoot had had no training +in boxing, he had in the other art. Such a cool headed athlete would be +sure to learn fast. Terry recognized the peculiar flirt by which he had +been turned off his feet as the very trick he had played successfully on +his playmates at home, but which he never dreamed was known to Deerfoot.</p> + +<p>The Irish lad tried every possible lock, twist and turn upon his rival, +but he could not get him off his feet. It seemed to Terry that he +whirled in the air when almost on the ground, and that if he had been +dropped head downwards from the height of a rod, he would alight on his +feet.</p> + +<p>Fred saw Deerfoot, who was carefully watching<span class="pagenum"><a name="p382" id="p382">382</a></span> his antagonist, smile, +and he knew what was coming. So deftly that, for the life of him, the +spectator could not see how it was done, Terry went over again as "flat +as a flounder." Not only that, but to the astonishment of the victim as +well as of the witness, the Shawanoe remained erect, so that he +literally flung his antagonist to the ground and looked smilingly down +upon him.</p> + +<p>"Ye can baat the baaters," exclaimed Terry, rising to his feet, and +shaking hands with his victor. "I niver met any one who could down me in +that sthyle. I don't know how ye did the same, but I haven't any doubts +that ye done it, as me great uncle remarked whin the cannon ball took +off his head."</p> + +<p>With the same shadowy smile Deerfoot looked inquiringly at Fred Linden.</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot thinks maybe his brother would be glad to lay him on the +ground?"</p> + +<p>"I'll be hanged if I don't try it," laughed Fred, springing to his feet, +and instantly but cautiously closing arms with the graceful warrior.</p> + +<p>"My brother can not throw Deerfoot," said<span class="pagenum"><a name="p383" id="p383">383</a></span> the latter; "but the heart of +Deerfoot would be glad if he would tell him how he would like to +fall—on his shoulders, or side, or back."</p> + +<p>"I wouldn't like to fall at all; but if you think you can get me on my +shoulders, just try it; that's all."</p> + +<p>"It shall be as my brother wishes."</p> + +<p>The words seemed yet in the mouth of Deerfoot when Fred felt himself +sailing through space, and the next instant he landed on his shoulders +with a shock that Terry declared made the ground shake.</p> + +<p>As before, Deerfoot himself did not fall, but looked smilingly down on +his prostrate friend as he began climbing to his feet again.</p> + +<p>"Now, if my brother wishes to fall on his back, it shall be so."</p> + +<p>"I've little doubt that you will not do just as you say you will; I only +ask that you wait till I say I am ready; you did the last before I had +time to prepare."</p> + +<p>"Ye bitter not ax him to wait," said Terry, who rolled over on the +ground in the exuberance of his mirth, at the sight of his big<span class="pagenum"><a name="p384" id="p384">384</a></span> friend +going down before the lithe, willowy Shawanoe; "for since he's bound to +do what he says, the sooner ye are out of yer suspinse, the sooner ye'll +be out of it."</p> + +<p>"Be kind enough to attend to your own affairs," said Fred stiffly; +"Deerfoot and I are running this show."</p> + +<p>"It looks as if Deerfut had charge of the whole of it," was the comment +of Terry, who broke into laughter again; "and whin he is done ye'll +agraa with me."</p> + +<p>Once more the arms passed over each other's neck. Fred resolved that +whatever came, he would not be taken by surprise this time. He was +stronger than Terry and he had thrown him more than once. He could not +understand, therefore, why he should not at least give the Shawanoe a +struggle. He braced his feet, with every muscle strained, and every +faculty on the alert.</p> + +<p>"I am ready," said he; "do your best."</p> + +<p>"On which side shall Deerfoot throw his brother?"</p> + +<p>"On my right side, and as hard as you can."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p385" id="p385">385</a></span></p> + +<p>Now, you will see the difficulty of the task, for Fred had his right arm +tightly locked over the neck of Deerfoot, so that that side was guarded +by the body of the warrior himself. It would seem, that if Fred should +fall on either side it could only be on the left. Manifestly if it +should be the right, the Shawanoe could not go down with him. He must +bring him to the ground and escape from beneath him before he fell.</p> + +<p>He did it. For a second or two the contestants stood motionless. Then, +like a flash, Deerfoot slipped from the grasp of his friend, dropped +down in a stooping posture almost to the earth, holding the right hand +of Fred firmly with his left (this was to prevent him using that hand to +save himself), and then by a quick dart to the left, he carried both +feet of his opponent off the ground, and Fred fell squarely on his right +side, his conqueror straightening up as he went down.</p> + +<p>"I would be obleeged," said Terry, throwing back his head with laughter, +"if yees will be koind enough to till me who is runnin' the show about +this time."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p386" id="p386">386</a></span></p> + +<p>Fred was chagrined at the ease with which Deerfoot had overthrown him, +and it was not lessened by the honest compliment which the young warrior +gave to his skill. Both Fred and Terry had been pretty well jarred, for +they were downed with such amazing suddenness that it could not be +otherwise; but neither referred to it and they could only praise the +wonderful ability of their friend.</p> + +<p>"I tell you," said Fred, seating himself on the ground beside the other +two, after the flurry was over, "all this proves that skill is worth +more than strength. I am quite sure that I am as strong as you, +Deerfoot, but I don't believe that Terry and I together could lay you on +your back. When I had my arm around your neck, I suspected you would try +to slip out, and I squeezed you pretty hard. You slid out so quickly +that at the moment you were down at my heels, I thought I had you fast."</p> + +<p>"I'm thinkin' that the nixt thing we should try is a race; Fred can +outrun me and I'll agraa that he will outrun Deerfut, that is, if ye'll +allow me to make the conditions."<span class="pagenum"><a name="p387" id="p387">387</a></span></p> + +<p>"What would they be?" asked Deerfoot, Looking gravely down upon his +friends.</p> + +<p>"The race should be for a hundred yards, and Deerfut must give Fred +ninety-five yards start, though to make it sure enough, maybe it ought +to be ninety-six or siven."</p> + +<p>"Then you would require about ninety-nine, according to the same +calculation," said Fred.</p> + +<p>"Ye's are right," replied Terry, to whom it seemed that no athletic feat +was impossible for the Shawanoe; "nayther yersilf nor mesilf have a +right to be mintioned in the same day with him."</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p388" id="p388">388</a></span> +<a name="THE_LAST_CAMPFIRE_7663" id="THE_LAST_CAMPFIRE_7663"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXXVII.</h2> +<h3>THE LAST CAMP-FIRE.</h3> +</div> + +<p>It seemed to strike all three of the friends at the same moment that +they had shown a strange forgetfulness of the occasion. A sudden impulse +had led them into a test of skill, that had continued fully a quarter of +an hour, during which there was no thought on the part of any one of the +gravity of their situation.</p> + +<p>But a little while before, both Fred Linden and Terry Clark were in +distress on account of their friends, while their own position +(believing as they did that there were Winnebagos in front as well as in +the rear), ought to have driven away all inclination for sport or +amusement. One of their strongest desires was the presence of Deerfoot, +that they might have his counsel and help. Here he was, and no reference +had been made to the subjects uppermost in their minds. Now that he took +his seat<span class="pagenum"><a name="p389" id="p389">389</a></span> near them by the camp-fire, as if to invite their confidence, +they quickly returned to the all important business.</p> + +<p>First of all, they asked for his experience since their separation the +night before. He gave only a part of it. He told nothing about his +conflict with the Wolf and his companion, which resulted in the death of +both, but said that he had kept watch of the Winnebagos until morning, +when he saw them start for the camp in the mountains. He learned from +their signaling that they had other warriors in the neighborhood, and +there could be no doubt that an attack was intended upon the Hunters of +the Ozark. Nevertheless the Shawanoe kept in their vicinity, until they +approached the open prairie of which mention has been make. Then he +decided to pass them and join his young friends.</p> + +<p>Feeling no doubt that the latter were following the right trail (several +examinations which he made satisfied him that they were doing so), he +left it altogether, and took a shorter route across the country. He was +so familiar with it that he could easily do this. His intention<span class="pagenum"><a name="p390" id="p390">390</a></span> was to +strike the main path again at the crossing, where they had such a narrow +escape from the cyclone; but he calculated that by nightfall they would +be a considerable distance beyond, and he wished to test their +watchfulness when left to themselves. So he came back to the trail about +half way between that point and the creek which they had crossed by +means of the canoe. He saw from an examination of the ground that he was +ahead of them, so he sauntered forward, firing off his gun where a turn +in the path made it seem to come from one side instead of in front of +them. He did this as he explained with a view of warning them to keep +their eyes open. It soon began growing dark and he kept on until he +reached the stream, where he decided to wait and see what they would do.</p> + +<p>He was as surprised as they when they brought forth the little canoe and +pushed themselves across by means of the pole which Fred Linden himself +cut. He followed them, easily wading the stream. After that he indulged +in a little diversion with which you are familiar.<span class="pagenum"><a name="p391" id="p391">391</a></span></p> + +<p>"Wasn't it strange, Deerfoot," said Fred, "that we should have found +that canoe?"</p> + +<p>He nodded his head to signify that he thought it was.</p> + +<p>"Have you any idea how it got there?"</p> + +<p>"He who owned the boat hid it under the bushes."</p> + +<p>"But there are no Indian villages within a great many miles of this +place—is that not so?"</p> + +<p>He gave another affirmative nod.</p> + +<p>"Have you any idea of who the owner can be?"</p> + +<p>A third affirmative nod followed.</p> + +<p>"Who is he?" asked Fred in astonishment.</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot."</p> + +<p>"What! Does that little canoe belong to <i>you</i>?"</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot made it and hid it under the bushes: why did not my brothers +use the paddle?"</p> + +<p>"We hunted all round, but could not find it."</p> + +<p>"It was within reach of my brother's hands; it was covered with leaves."</p> + +<p>"And so the boat is yer own?" repeated<span class="pagenum"><a name="p392" id="p392">392</a></span> Terry; "why that looks as if ye +lived somewhere in this neighborhood; is such the case, owld boy?"</p> + +<p>The question did not seem to please the Shawanoe. He was sitting +directly in front of his young friends, who looked earnestly in his +face. He made no answer to Terry's question, but continued looking among +the coals, as if he was pondering some other matter that had thus been +brought to mind. Fred shook his head at Terry as a warning that he +should not repeat his query, and the latter was wise enough not to do +so; but the friends concluded from that moment that the wandering young +Shawanoe made his home at no great distance from where all three were at +that moment sitting in the wilderness. And they were right.</p> + +<p>A minute later, Deerfoot raised his head and signified that he wished to +know in turn what had befallen them since they parted company +twenty-four hours before. You will admit that each had a stirring story +to tell and he told it. The Shawanoe first listened to Terry's account +of his ride on the back of the wounded buffalo,<span class="pagenum"><a name="p393" id="p393">393</a></span> and, when it was +finished, he quietly remarked to his young friend that he had done well.</p> + +<p>Though he showed no emotion, it was clear to both boys that he felt the +most concern in the experience of Fred Linden. He said nothing until the +narrator was through, including the account of the cyclone. Deerfoot had +heard the noise made by the latter, but he was so far removed from its +path that he saw none of its fearful effects, and in fact cared little +about it, for he had seen the same thing more than once before.</p> + +<p>But that which interested him was the account of Fred Linden's meeting +with the Winnebago horse thieves. This was the first knowledge he +received that any of their enemies were mounted on animals. Deerfoot had +turned off the main trail so early in the day that he missed them +altogether. When he came back to the path, near where the three were in +camp at that moment, and he examined the ground for signs of the +footprints of the boys, there were none that had been made by the hoofs +of horses. They had struck the trail further to the north, taking a +different<span class="pagenum"><a name="p394" id="p394">394</a></span> course from the camp where they had stolen the animals.</p> + +<p>Fred blushed under the warm compliments of Deerfoot on his coolness, +bravery and skill in the presence of the three Winnebagos. You will +agree that it was a daring exploit indeed, which would have done credit +to a veteran frontiersman. It could not have been otherwise to draw such +warm praise from the Shawanoe.</p> + +<p>But the compliments could well be deferred to some other season. The +fact that three Indians had stolen the same number of horses from the +Hunters of the Ozark, and then had ridden leisurely away to meet their +friends, showed that they had great confidence in themselves, doubtless +caused by the belief that they were safe against any attempt to recover +the property.</p> + +<p>"Deerfoot," said Fred, after there had been a full exchange of +experiences; "we stopped here only because we could not keep to the +trail in the darkness. Don't you think it best that we should now go on, +since you will not have the same trouble that we did?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="p395" id="p395">395</a></span></p> + +<p>He shook his head in the negative.</p> + +<p>"It is not far to the camp of my brothers; the Winnebagos are a long +ways back on the trail; they will not come up with us; my brothers have +a chance to sleep; they may have no chance when they reach the cabin; +let them sleep now."</p> + +<p>The natural inference from this remark was that he believed nothing more +was to be apprehended from the Winnebagos, so long as our three friends +were on their way to the cabin of the Hunters of the Ozark. The danger +would now be transferred to that point.</p> + +<p>"Is it not likely that some of the red men are between us and our +friends?" asked Fred, as though their guide had not thought of every +contingency.</p> + +<p>"There is none," was the quiet answer, and then he added the +explanation. The Winnebagos, as soon as they had captured the horses, +had mounted them and ridden off to meet Black Bear and the rest, so as +to combine with them in the attack upon the cabin in the mountains. +Being so few in numbers, they did not dare<span class="pagenum"><a name="p396" id="p396">396</a></span> stay in the neighborhood, +but were certain to come back with the others.</p> + +<p>The theft of the animals was no part of the original plan of the red +men, and was therefore what may be considered poor generalship, since it +was likely to draw attention to the presence of hostiles and to put the +Hunters of the Ozark on their guard.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot made no such remark at the time, but he afterward expressed his +regret that he had not joined Fred and Terry earlier in the day, so that +he could have been with them when they met the horse thieves. Had he +done so, there can be no doubt that they would have recaptured every one +of the animals, even if they had had to shoot each thief from the back +of his stolen steed. Such a result would have changed the whole course +of the events that followed.</p> + +<p>Since the Shawanoe advised them to stay where they were until morning, +the natural query of the lads was as to the degree of danger they ran. +They had thought there was little to be feared from Indians, but after +the fire was started, both had misgivings—afterward intensified<span class="pagenum"><a name="p397" id="p397">397</a></span> no +doubt by the little trick played upon them by Deerfoot.</p> + +<p>He assured them that there was nothing to be feared from Indians. There +was and would be none near them through the night. They were at a safe +distance from the trail, so that if any one should pass back or forth he +could not possibly catch a glimpse of the camp.</p> + +<p>"I never dispute a man's sintimints," said Terry, "onless it happens to +disagraa with me own, so I'll say ye are right because we think the same +way; but it's within me own ricolliction that whin ye enj'yed the honor +of our coompany night before last, ye kipt guard all the night; +Frederick and mesilf will now return the coompliment and take charge of +the honors oursilves. If ye have any disputation that ye want to inter +into, we'll sittle it by maans of a wristling match."</p> + +<p>Deerfoot was inclined at first to act as sentinel, just as he had done +before, but he had already declared that there was nothing to be feared, +and his friends were so in earnest that he could not well refuse their +request. He would have preferred that they should gain all<span class="pagenum"><a name="p398" id="p398">398</a></span> the sleep +they could, so as to lay up a stock, as may be said, against what was +likely to come at the cabin, but he yielded. He agreed to their wishes, +and in doing so, indulged in one of his smiles, the depth of whose +meaning neither of the youths fully comprehended. In fact it simply +meant that he understood their ability in that respect better than they +did themselves.</p> + +<p>And so, after reading his Bible, a portion of it aloud, he lay down upon +the blanket of Terry, as he did two nights before, and soon fell asleep.</p> + +<p>"I'm glad to obsarve the same," remarked Terry; "for the good lookin' +spalpeen must be in naad of slumber. I say, Fred, did ye iver saa the +loikes of him? We must git him to run a race and jump and swim and stand +on his head and show jist what he can do. I'm glad as I say to obsarve +that he is aslaap, for he must naad the same. I say, Fred, let's stay +awake till daylight, so as to fool him."</p> + +<p>"I am glad to do that in return for the watch he kept over us the other +night; but if you and I undertake to sit up at the same time we shall<span class="pagenum"><a name="p399" id="p399">399</a></span> +fail. So I'll lie down and sleep awhile. When you find yourself getting +drowsy, wake me up and then I shall be able to keep my eyes open until +morning. In that way Deerfoot may have a whole night of rest."</p> + +<p>"I'm agraaable to the same."</p> + +<p>The plan was carried out, that is, a part of it, Fred Linden soon +dropped asleep, and, within an hour, Terry Clark did the same. When +Deerfoot threw his blanket off his face and assumed the sitting +position, he saw just what he expected to see and he allowed them to +slumber peacefully until daylight.</p> + +<hr class="major" /> +<div style="margin: auto; text-align: center; padding-top: 1em; padding-bottom: 1em"> +<span class="pagenum"><a name="p400" id="p400">400</a></span> +<a name="CONCLUSION_7897" id="CONCLUSION_7897"></a> +<h2>CHAPTER XXXVIII.</h2> +<h3>CONCLUSION.</h3> +</div> + +<p>The awaking of the boys was of the most pleasant character. The sky had +cleared and the sunlight penetrated between the branches from which the +autumn leaves were fast falling. The crispness which is felt at that +season of the year, stirred the young hearts and enlivened the spirits +in spite of the serious situation in which all three found themselves.</p> + +<p>The odor of broiling fish was snuffed by the lads, and nothing could +have been more delicious and appetizing. They were very hungry, and the +night before they supposed they would have to wait indefinitely for +their morning meal, but they opened their eyes to find that Deerfoot had +provided the most toothsome breakfast that could be imagined.</p> + +<p>In the early morning light, fully two hours before the sun appeared, +Deerfoot crossed the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p401" id="p401">401</a></span> stream in his own canoe, and, taking the trail, +ran several miles at the highest speed. While he did not go far enough +to see the camp-fire of the main war party of Winnebagos, he did not +pause until certain that they had stayed in camp all night and would not +cross the stream where the boys lay asleep until the forenoon was half +gone. So the Shawanoe hastened back, and dropped a short distance down +stream in his canoe, having obtained his paddle, to an eddy where it +took but a few minutes for him to coax a half dozen fish from the cool, +clear depths, and these were just browning to a turn when the boys +opened their eyes.</p> + +<p>Fred and Terry looked in each other's faces and laughed. They knew what +an absurd failure they had made. They had promised to watch while +Deerfoot slept, and then left him to act as sentinel until morning.</p> + +<p>"It was your fault," whispered Fred, hunting in his pocket for the +package of salt and pepper which survived, despite the wetting it had +received; "why didn't you wake me up, as I told you to do?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="p402" id="p402">402</a></span></p> + +<p>"How could I wake ye up when I was aslaap mesilf?" was the pertinent +query of Terry; "I think I was only a half minute behind yersilf in +beginning me swate dreams."</p> + +<p>"Even if you had roused me," said Fred, "I suppose I would have dropped +to sleep the same as you; no one can keep awake (unless it is Deerfoot) +while sitting on the ground. Well, I am sure I shan't say any thing +about it if <i>he</i> doesn't."</p> + +<p>"Let us shake on that," whispered Terry, stealthily extending his hand.</p> + +<p>Deerfoot acted as though unaware that any such lapse had occurred. The +browned fish were spread on the green leaves, and Fred sprinkled the +seasoning upon the portions to be eaten by himself and Terry; the +Shawanoe preferred none on his.</p> + +<p>"If nothing unexpected happens," said Fred, "we will arrive at the cabin +to-day."</p> + +<p>The Shawanoe inclined his head by way of answer.</p> + +<p>"When will the Winnebagos that are following us come to this stream?"</p> + +<p>Deerfoot pointed to a portion of the sky<span class="pagenum"><a name="p403" id="p403">403</a></span> which the sun would reach in +about three hours from that time.</p> + +<p>"The Winnebagos are together; there may be a few coming from different +parts of the wood, but Black Bear has most of his warriors with him, and +he feels strong enough to destroy the cabin and our brothers who are +there."</p> + +<p>"There are three there now, and when we join them there will be six. If +father and the rest have fair notice of their coming, they ought to be +able to put every thing in good shape for a defense. It won't take them +long to gather enough food to last for weeks, but how about water?"</p> + +<p>"They have no water; our brothers know not why they should have it."</p> + +<p>The Shawanoe meant to say that the men, seeing no reason why they should +collect any store of water within their primitive structure, never did +so. It was at their door, and, when they wished to drink, they had but +to stoop down and drink. Believing no such emergency as now threatened +could arise, they failed to make any provision against it.</p> + +<p>"I've been thinkin'," said Terry, "that<span class="pagenum"><a name="p404" id="p404">404</a></span> bein' as how we started from +Greville to j'in the Hunters of the Ozark, with the idaa of spindin' the +winter with the same, that from the time we started we were mimbers of +the same, but timporarily separated by a wide stritch of woods; what are +yer own idaas?"</p> + +<p>"I am not sure that I understand what you are trying to get at, but if +you mean to say that we may call ourselves two of the Hunters of the +Ozark, I see no objection if we are a few days behind the rest in +reaching the beaver runs."</p> + +<p>"Oblige me by tistifying to the same," said Terry, rather effusively, +shoving his hand toward his friend, who suspended operations with the +fish long enough to salute him.</p> + +<p>The breakfast was quickly finished, and the boys helped each other with +their knapsacks, caught up their guns and followed Deerfoot as he led +the way back to the trail. He did not hint any thing about their failure +to keep guard for him the night before, though they felt sure that they +would hear from him at some time not very far distant.</p> + +<p>When they found themselves following the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p405" id="p405">405</a></span> path that had become so +familiar, they glanced furtively behind, half expecting to hear the +Winnebago war whoop and to see the warriors rushing after them; but not +a living soul beside themselves was in sight, and the quiet assurance of +their leader very nearly removed all such fear from them.</p> + +<p>"Are there any more streams to cross?" asked Fred, a moment after they +started along the trail.</p> + +<p>"There are none."</p> + +<p>"That is good, and since we are several hours in advance of the Indians, +we ought to be able to reach the cabin in time to give them warning, +that is, if they are in need of it."</p> + +<p>"How can they help being in need?" asked Terry.</p> + +<p>"The horses were turned loose to look after themselves, and though I +can't know for some time how it is, it seems to me that it could well +happen that they would not miss the animals for several days and +possibly not for a week or two."</p> + +<p>The best ground for doubting that the Hunters of the Ozark were aware of +the theft of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p406" id="p406">406</a></span> horses was the fact that there had been no pursuit. +Those men, it is safe to say, would not have stayed idle had they known +that three vagabond Indians were astride of their property and riding to +the northward. With the three fleeter animals at command, they would +have been after them in a twinkling: they would not have been obliged to +wait till they met Fred Linden before receiving some rifle shots.</p> + +<p>Fred was confirmed in this theory by Deerfoot, who declared that such +was his explanation of the failure of the hunters to pursue the thieves.</p> + +<p>For two hours the trail which they were following steadily ascended, +until they were considerably higher than when they left camp in the +morning. The undergrowth was abundant, and the wood in some places was +so dense that they could see only a short distance on either hand. The +trail was sinuous, winding in and out among the rocks in a way that +would have bewildered any one not used to such traveling.</p> + +<p>At last they reached the ridge of the elevation<span class="pagenum"><a name="p407" id="p407">407</a></span> up which they had been +climbing, and found themselves on the margin of a plateau or rather +valley, beyond which rose the rugged, precipitous Ozarks. Since the +ground sloped away from them, in the direction of the mountains, their +view was extended over many square miles of forest, stream and natural +clearing, to the mountain walls beyond, looking dim and soft in the +distance, with the hazy air between.</p> + +<p>"Do my brothers see the gleam of the water yonder?" asked Deerfoot, +pointing to a winding stream, large enough to be called a river, though +it was half hidden by the woods. Its course was in the main at right +angles to the trail which the boys had been following, though, at times +it seemed to run straight toward and then away from them.</p> + +<p>The youths answered that they could not very well look in the direction +indicated by their friend, without seeing the stream to which he +directed their attention.</p> + +<p>The Shawanoe placed himself so that he stood in front of the two.</p> + +<p>"Now," said he, "let my brothers follow<span class="pagenum"><a name="p408" id="p408">408</a></span> Deerfoot's finger and tell me +what they see."</p> + +<p>Pointing well to the right, he slowly swung his index finger toward the +left, until he had described about a quarter of a circle.</p> + +<p>Since it was not easy for the two to look exactly at the point meant, at +the same time, Terry Clark first tried it. Removing his cap, he closed +one eye and carefully peered along the extended arm of the Shawanoe as +though it was a rifle which he was about to aim and fire.</p> + +<p>"What is it?" asked Fred, a moment later, with some impatience over the +plodding deliberation of his companion.</p> + +<p>"I obsarve a big lot of traas, some rocks, some water and a claarin' +where ye could raise a big lot of praties, and—and—and—"</p> + +<p>"I see what you mean!" exclaimed Fred in some excitement; "right in the +middle of the clearing stands a large cabin made of logs."</p> + +<p>"It's mesilf that obsarves the same," added Terry, replacing his cap and +looking inquiringly at the Shawanoe, who let his extended<span class="pagenum"><a name="p409" id="p409">409</a></span> arm fall as +he faced about and said: "That is the home of my brothers; that is the +cabin of the Hunters of the Ozark."</p> + +<p>"Hurrah!" called out Terry; "we're purty near there."</p> + +<p>"But we don't know how matters stand," said Fred; "even Deerfoot can not +tell whether they are all alive or dead."</p> + +<p>"I know bitter than that," remarked Terry, appealing straight to the +Shawanoe, who, without directly answering the question, notified them of +an interesting fact: a thin column of smoke was rising from the cabin.</p> + +<p>"That shows that some one is in there," said the Irish lad, "but whither +he is white or rid, I don't s'pose the Shawanoe, with all his smartness, +can tell even at this distance."</p> + +<p>"My brother speaks truth," said Deerfoot; "our brothers may be well and +they maybe dead and the Winnebagos may have built the fire to lure us to +them: we shall soon know."</p> + +<hr class='minor' /> + +<p>Here for the present we must pause, for we have already filled the space +assigned to us; but we propose soon to tell you all about the<span class="pagenum"><a name="p410" id="p410">410</a></span> +adventures of Deerfoot, Fred and Terry, and of their friends the Hunters +of the Ozark, whom they were trying to help. The story in which this +will be related will appear under the title of</p> + +<p class='center'><span class="smcap">"THE CAMP IN THE MOUNTAINS.</span>"</p> + +<hr class='full' /> + +<h2>FAMOUS STANDARD<br />JUVENILE LIBRARIES.</h2> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>ANY VOLUME SOLD SEPARATELY AT $1.00 PER VOLUME</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>(Except the Sportsman's Club Series, Frank Nelson Series and Jack Hazard +Series.).</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>Each Volume Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth.</p> + +<hr class='minor' /> + +<p class='center'>HORATIO ALGER, JR.</p> + +<p>The enormous sales of the books of Horatio Alger, Jr., show the +greatness of his popularity among the boys, and prove that he is one of +their most favored writers. I am told that more than half a million +copies altogether have been sold, and that all the large circulating +libraries in the country have several complete sets, of which only two +or three volumes are ever on the shelves at one time. If this is true, +what thousands and thousands of boys have read and are reading Mr. +Alger's books! His peculiar style of stories, often imitated but never +equaled, have taken a hold upon the young people, and, despite their +similarity, are eagerly read as soon as they appear.</p> + +<p>Mr. Alger became famous with the publication of that undying book, +"Ragged Dick, or Street Life in New York." It was his first book for +young people, and its success was so great that he immediately devoted +himself to that kind of writing. It was a new and fertile field for a +writer then, and Mr. Alger's treatment of it at once caught the fancy of +the boys. "Ragged Dick" first appeared in 1868, and ever since then it +has been selling steadily, until now it is estimated that about 200,000 +copies of the series have been sold.</p> + +<p style='text-align:right'>—<i>Pleasant Hours for Boys and Girls</i>.</p> + +<hr class='dashed' /> +<h2><a name="HENRY_T_COATES_COS_POPULAR_JUVENILES" id="HENRY_T_COATES_COS_POPULAR_JUVENILES"></a>HENRY T. COATES & CO.'S POPULAR JUVENILES.</h2> + +<p>A writer for boys should have an abundant sympathy with them. He should +be able to enter into their plans, hopes, and aspirations. He should +learn to look upon life as they do. Boys object to be written down to. A +boy's heart opens to the man or writer who understands him.</p> + +<p style='text-align:right'>—From <i>Writing Stories for Boys</i>, by Horatio Alger, Jr.</p> + +<hr class='minor' /> + +<p class='adtitle'>RAGGED DICK SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>6 vols. <span class="smcap">By Horatio Alger, Jr.</span> $6.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Ragged Dick.</td><td>Rough and Ready.</td></tr> +<tr><td>Fame and Fortune.</td><td>Ben the Luggage Boy.</td></tr> +<tr><td>Mark the Match Boy.</td><td>Rufus and Rose.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>TATTERED TOM SERIES—First Series.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>4 vols. <span class="smcap">By Horatio Alger, Jr.</span> $4.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Tattered Tom.</td><td>Phil the Fiddler.</td></tr> +<tr><td>Paul the Peddler.</td><td>Slow and Sure.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>TATTERED TOM SERIES—Second Series.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>4 vols. $4.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Julius.</td><td>Sam's Chance.</td></tr> +<tr><td>The Young Outlaw.</td><td>The Telegraph Boy.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>CAMPAIGN SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Horatio Alger, Jr.</span> $3.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Frank's Campaign.</td><td>Charlie Codman's Cruise.</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan="2" style='text-align:center'>Paul Prescott's Charge.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>LUCK AND PLUCK SERIES—First Series.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>4 vols. <span class="smcap">By Horatio Alger, Jr.</span> $4.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Luck and Pluck.</td><td>Strong and Steady.</td></tr> +<tr><td>Sink or Swim.</td><td>Strive and Succeed.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>LUCK AND PLUCK SERIES—Second Series.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>4 vols. $4.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Try and Trust.</td><td>Bound to Rise.</td></tr> +<tr><td>Risen from the Ranks.</td><td>Herbert Carter's Legacy.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>BRAVE AND BOLD SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>4 vols. <span class="smcap">By Horatio Alger, Jr</span>. $4.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Brave and Bold.</td><td>Jack's Ward.</td></tr> +<tr><td>Shifting for Himself.</td><td>Wait and Hope.</td></tr> +</table> +<p class='adtitle'>NEW WORLD SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Horatio Alger, Jr.</span> $3.00</p> +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Digging for Gold.</td><td>In a New World.</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan='2' style='text-align:center'>Facing the World.</td><td></td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>VICTORY SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Horatio Alger, Jr.</span> $3.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Only an Irish Boy.</td><td>Victor Vane, or the Young Secretary.</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan='2' style='text-align:center'>Adrift in the City.</td><td></td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>FRANK AND FEARLESS SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Horatio Alger, Jr.</span> $3.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Frank Hunter's Peril.</td><td>The Young Salesman.</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan='2' style='text-align:center'>Frank and Fearless.</td><td></td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>GOOD FORTUNE LIBRARY.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Horatio Alger, Jr.</span> $3.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Walter Sherwood's Probation.</td><td>The Young Bank Messenger.</td></tr> +<tr><td>A Boy's Fortune.</td><td></td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>RUPERT'S AMBITION.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>1 vol. <span class="smcap">By Horatio Alger, Jr.</span> $1.00</p> + +<p class='adtitle'>JED, THE POOR-HOUSE BOY.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>1 vol. <span class="smcap">By Horatio Alger, Jr.</span>. $1.00</p> + +<hr class='dashed' /> + +<h2><a name="HARRY_CASTLEMON" id="HARRY_CASTLEMON"></a>HARRY CASTLEMON.</h2> + +<hr class='minor' /> + +<p class='adtitle'>HOW I CAME TO WRITE MY FIRST BOOK.</p> + +<p>When I was sixteen years old I belonged to a composition class. It was +our custom to go on the recitation seat every day with clean slates, and +we were allowed ten minutes to write seventy words on any subject the +teacher thought suited to our capacity. One day he gave out "What a Man +Would See if He Went to Greenland." My heart was in the matter, and +before the ten minutes were up I had one side of my slate filled. The +teacher listened to the reading of our compositions, and when they were +all over he simply said: "Some of you will make your living by writing +one of these days." That gave me something to ponder upon. I did not say +so out loud, but I knew that my composition was as good as the best of +them. By the way, there was another thing that came in my way just then. +I was reading at that time one of Mayne Reid's works which I had drawn +from the library, and I pondered upon it as much as I did upon what the +teacher said to me. In introducing Swartboy to his readers he made use +of this expression: "No visible change was observable in Swartboy's +countenance." Now, it occurred to me that if a man of his education +could make such a blunder as that and still write a book, I ought to be +able to do it, too. I went home that very day and began a story, "The +Old Guide's Narrative," which was sent to the <i>New York Weekly</i>, and +came back, respectfully declined. It was written on both sides of the +sheets but I didn't know that this was against the rules. Nothing +abashed, I began another, and receiving some instruction, from a friend +of mine who was a clerk in a book store, I wrote it on only one side of +the paper. But mind you, he didn't know what I was doing. Nobody knew +it; but one day, after a hard Saturday's work—the other boys had been +out skating on the brick-pond—I shyly broached the subject to my +mother. I felt the need of some sympathy. She listened in amazement, and +then said: "Why, do you think you could write a book like that?" That +settled the matter, and from that day no one knew what I was up to until +I sent the first four volumes of Gunboat Series to my father. Was it +work? Well, yes; it was hard work, but each week I had the satisfaction +of seeing the manuscript grow until the "Young Naturalist" was all +complete.</p> + +<p style='text-align:right'> +—<i>Harry Castlemon in the Writer.</i><br /> +</p> + +<hr class='minor' /> + +<p class='adtitle'>GUNBOAT SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>6 vols. <span class="smcap">By Harry Castlemon.</span> $6.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Frank the Young Naturalist.</td><td>Frank before Vicksburg.</td></tr> +<tr><td>Frank on a Gunboat.</td><td>Frank on the Lower Mississippi.</td></tr> +<tr><td>Frank in the Woods.</td><td>Frank on the Prairie.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>ROCKY MOUNTAIN SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Harry Castlemon.</span> $3.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Frank Among the Rancheros.</td><td>Frank in the Mountains.</td></tr> +<tr><td>Frank at Don Carlos' Rancho.</td><td></td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>SPORTSMAN'S CLUB SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Harry Castlemon.</span> $3.75</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>The Sportsman's Club in the Saddle.</td><td>The Sportsman's Club.</td></tr> +<tr><td>The Sportsman's Club Afloat.</td><td>Among the Trappers.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>FRANK NELSON SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Harry Castlemon.</span> $3.75</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> + <tr> + <td>Snowed up.</td><td>Frank in the Forecastle.</td><td>The Boy Traders.</td> + </tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>BOY TRAPPER SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Harry Castlemon.</span> $3.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> + <tr> + <td>The Buried Treasure.</td><td>The Mail Carrier.</td><td>The Boy Trapper.</td> + </tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>ROUGHING IT SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Harry Castlemon.</span> $3.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>George in Camp.</td><td>George at the Wheel.</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan='2' style='text-align:center'>George at the Fort.</td><td></td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>ROD AND GUN SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Harry Castlemon.</span> $3.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Don Gordon's Shooting Box.</td><td>Rod and Gun Club.</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan='2' style='text-align:center'>The Young Wild Fowlers.</td><td></td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>GO-AHEAD SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Harry Castlemon.</span> $3.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Tom Newcombe.</td><td>No Moss.</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan='2' style='text-align:center'>Go-Ahead.</td><td></td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>WAR SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>6 vols. <span class="smcap">By Harry Castlemon.</span> $6.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>True to His Colors.</td><td>Marcy the Refugee.</td></tr> +<tr><td>Marcy the Blockade-Runner.</td><td>Rodney the Overseer.</td></tr> +<tr><td>Rodney the Partisan.</td><td>Sailor Jack the Trader.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>HOUSEBOAT SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Harry Castlemon.</span> $3.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>The Houseboat Boys.</td><td>The Young Game Warden.</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan='2' style='text-align:center'>The Mystery of Lost River Cañon.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>AFLOAT AND ASHORE SERIES.</p> + + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vols. <span class="smcap">By Harry Castlemon.</span> $3.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>Rebellion in Dixie.</td><td>The Ten-Ton Cutter.</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan='2' style='text-align:center'>A Sailor in Spite of Himself.</td></tr> +</table> + +<p class='adtitle'>THE PONY EXPRESS SERIES.</p> + +<p class='adsubtitle'>3 vol. <span class="smcap">By Harry Castlemon.</span> $3.00</p> + +<table class='adv' summary='book list'> +<tr><td>The Pony Express Rider.</td><td>Carl, The Trailer.</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan='2' style='text-align:center'>The White Beaver.</td></tr> +</table> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Hunters of the Ozark, by Edward S. 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0000000..893ed87 --- /dev/null +++ b/22646.txt @@ -0,0 +1,8653 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Hunters of the Ozark, by Edward S. Ellis + +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: The Hunters of the Ozark + +Author: Edward S. Ellis + +Release Date: September 17, 2007 [EBook #22646] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HUNTERS OF THE OZARK *** + + + + +Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net + + + + + +[Illustration: "Terry heard distinctly the footsteps of the warrior."] + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +THE +HUNTERS OF THE OZARK. + +BY +EDWARD S. ELLIS + +Author Of "Young Pioneer Series," "Log Cabin Series," +"Great River Series," Etc., Etc. + +Philadelphia: +Henry T. Coates & Co. + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +Copyright, 1887, +by +PORTER & COATES. + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +CONTENTS. + +CHAPTER. PAGE. + + I.--AN ESTRAY, 5 + II.--THE TINKLE OF A BELL, 15 + III.--AN ABORIGINAL PLOT, 25 + IV.--A PARTY OF THE THIRD PART, 34 + V.--A FRIEND IN NEED, 44 + VI.--FRED LINDEN RECEIVES A MESSAGE FROM THE OZARK CAMP, 54 + VII.--THE HUNTERS OF OZARK, 64 + VIII.--A WELCOME ACQUAINTANCE, 74 + IX.--A MISHAP, 84 + X.--A STRUGGLE FOR LIFE, 94 + XI.--TRAMPING SOUTHWARD, 104 + XII.--A STRANGE ANIMAL, 114 + XIII.--A TROUBLESOME VISITOR, 124 + XIV.--A WELCOME ALLY, 134 + XV.--"DEERFOOT WILL BE SENTINEL TO-NIGHT," 144 + XVI.--AROUND THE CAMP-FIRE, 154 + XVII.--A SUSPICIOUS SOUND, 164 + XVIII.--LIKE A THIEF IN THE NIGHT, 174 + XIX.--SHAWANOE AND WINNEBAGO, 185 + XX.--ANOTHER NIGHT VISITOR, 195 + XXI.--THE CAMP OF THE WINNEBAGOS, 205 + XXII.--"KEEP TO THE TRAIL," 215 + XXIII.--AN INFURIATE SHAWANOE, 225 + XXIV.--THE DEFIANCE, 236 + XXV.--THE SIGNAL FIRE, 245 + XXVI.--ON THE EDGE OF THE PRAIRIE, 257 + XXVII.--A MORNING MEAL, 269 + XXVIII.--A STRANGE RIDE, 281 + XXIX.--A YOUNG HUNTER'S STRATEGY, 293 + XXX.--TERRY FINISHES HIS RIDE, 305 + XXXI.--THE DEVIL'S PUNCH BOWL, 316 + XXXII.--THE TERROR IN THE AIR, 328 + XXXIII.--FRED LINDEN AWAKENS TO AN ALARMING FACT, 340 + XXXIV.--THE CANOE, 352 + XXXV.--AMERICA VERSUS IRELAND, 364 + XXXVI.--AMERICA VERSUS AMERICA, 376 + XXXVII.--THE LAST CAMP-FIRE, 388 + XXXVIII.--CONCLUSION, 400 + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + + + + +THE HUNTERS OF THE OZARK. + +CHAPTER I. + +AN ESTRAY. + + +One day in the autumn Terence Clark came to the house of Frederick +Linden and urged him to join in a hunt for a cow that had been missing +since the night before. The latter got the consent of his mother and the +two lads started on a search that proved to be the most eventful one +they had ever known. + +A few words in the way of explanation must be given at this point. The +date of the events I have set out to tell was toward the close of the +last century, and the scene the south-western part of the present State +of Missouri, but which was then a part of the vast territory known as +Louisiana. Though the town of St. Louis had been settled a good many +years before, there were only a few pioneers scattered through the +almost limitless region that stretched in every direction from the +Mississippi. Here and there the hunters and trappers were often absent +from their homes for months at a time, during which they suffered much +exposure and hardship. They slept for weeks in the open woods, or when +the severity of the weather would not allow this, they found refuge in +caves or hollow trees. Then, when enough skins had been gathered to load +their pack-horses they started on the long tramps to the French trading +post on the Mississippi. They followed faintly marked paths or trails +that converged from a score or hundred different points until they +reached the Father of Waters, where the peltries were soon sold and the +proceeds, too often, squandered within the succeeding few hours. + +At the date of which I am speaking, a small settlement known as Greville +stood in the south-western section of the large State of Missouri, as it +is now known. The first cabins were put up only a few years before, and +the settlers, including men, women and children, numbered about two +hundred. Near the center of the straggling settlement stood a rude but +strong blockhouse to be used for refuge in the event of an attack by +Indians. As yet this emergency had not arisen, for the red men in that +section were far less warlike and hostile than those in Ohio and +Kentucky. + +The father of Fred Linden was one of the hunters and trappers who made +regular visits to the wild section near the Ozark Mountains for the +purpose of gathering furs. He never had less than two companions, and +sometimes the number was half a dozen. As you are well aware, the furs +of all animals are in the finest condition in wintry weather, since +nature does her best to guard their bodies from the effects of cold. +Thus it came about that the party of hunters, of whom I shall have more +to say further on, left Greville in the autumn of the year, and as a +rule were not seen again until spring. Since they entered a fine, +fur-bearing country, these trips generally paid well. One convenience +was that the hunters were not obliged to go to St. Louis to sell them. +An agent of the great fur company that made its headquarters at that +post, came regularly to Greville with his pack-horses and gave the same +price for the peltries that he would have given had they been brought to +the factory, hundreds of miles away. He was glad to do this, for the +furs that George Linden and his brother hunters brought in were not +surpassed in glossiness and fineness by any of the thousands gathered +from the four points of the compass. + +Among the daring little band that made these regular visits to the Ozark +region was an Irishman named Michael Clark, who had had considerable +experience in gathering furs along the Mississippi. It was at his +suggestion that Greville was founded, and one-half of their periodical +journeys thus cut off. On the year following, Clark was shot and killed +by a prowling Indian. Since his wife had been dead a long time, the only +child, Terence, was thus left an orphan. The lad was a bright, +good-natured fellow, liked by every one, and he made his home with the +family of one of the other hunters named Rufus MacClaskey. The boy was +fifteen years old on the very day that he walked over to the cabin of +Fred Linden and asked him to help him hunt for the missing cow. + +The family of George Linden, while he was away, consisted of his wife, +his daughter Edith, fourteen, and his son Fred, sixteen years old. All +were ruddy cheeked, strong and vigorous, and among the best to do of the +thirty-odd families that made up the population of Greville. + +"Has the cow ever been lost before?" asked Fred, as he and the Irish lad +swung along beside each other, neither thinking it worth while to burden +himself with a rifle. + +"Niver that I knows of, and I would know the same if she had been lost; +we're onaisy about the cow, for you see that if this kaaps on and she +doesn't come back I'll have to live on something else than bread and +milk and praties." + +"Our cow came back just at sunset last night." + +"And so did them all, exciptin' our own, which makes me more onwillin' +to accipt any excuse she may have to give." + +"Let me see, Terry; Brindle wore a bell round her neck, didn't she?" + +"That she did, and she seemed quite proud of the same." + +"Did you make hunt for her last night?" + +"I hunted as long as I could see to hunt; she wasn't missed, that is +till after they got home. Whin I found that I didn't find her I started +to find her; but I hadn't time to hunt very long whin it got dark and I +had to give it up." + +"And didn't you hear any thing of the bell?" + +"Do ye think that if I heard the bell I wouldn't have found the cow? Why +was the bell put round her neck if it wasn't to guide friends? I +listened many a time after it got dark, but niver a tinkle did I hear." + +"That is queer," said Fred half to himself; "for, when no wind is +blowing and it is calm, you can hear that bell a long ways; father has +caught the sound in the woods, when the Brindle was all of a mile off. I +wonder whether she could have lost the bell." + +"I've thought of that, and said to meself that it might be also that she +had become lost herself in trying to find it." + +Fred laughed. + +"She hardly knows enough for _that_; and, if she found the bell she +wouldn't know what to do with it; but if that leathern string around her +neck had broken, it may be that she is close by. A cow after losing one +milking is apt to feel so uncomfortable that she hurries home to be +relieved; but what's the use of talking?" added Fred, throwing up his +head and stepping off at a more lively pace; "we've started out to find +her and that's all we have to do." + +Perhaps a dozen acres had been cleared around the little town of +Greville. This had been planted with corn, potatoes and grain, though +scores of unsightly stumps were left and interfered with the cultivation +of the soil. Beyond this clearing or open space extended the immense +forests which at one time covered almost the entire face of our country. +On the south side of the town and distant a furlong wound a creek, which +after many shiftings and turnings found its way into the Mississippi and +so at last into the Gulf of Mexico. The course of this stream was so +winding that it extended on two sides of the town and ran in a westerly +direction, exactly the opposite of that it finally had to take in order +to reach its outlet. + +As a rule, it was about twenty feet wide with a depth of from one or two +to six feet. It was subject to tremendous overflows which sometimes +tripled its volume and increased its width to that of a river. At such +times a series of enormous rocks through which the creek at "low tide" +lazily wound its way, lashed the turbid current into a fury somewhat +like that seen in the "whirlpool" below Niagara. Could you have stood on +the shore and looked at the furiously struggling waters, you would have +been sure that even if a man were headed up in a barrel, he could not +have lived to pass through the hundred yards of rapids, though there was +reason to believe that more than one Indian had shot them in his canoe. + +Terry Clark told his friend that his search of the night before and of +the morning following had been to the north and west of the settlement, +so that it was hardly worth while to continue the hunt in that +direction. The cows sometimes stood in the water, where so much +switching of their tails was not needed to keep away the flies, and, +though there was quite a growth of succulent grass on the clearing, the +animals often crossed the creek and browsed through the woods and +undergrowth on the other side. + +The boys were inclined to think that the brindle had taken that course +during the afternoon and had actually gone astray,--something which a +quadruped is less likely to do than a biped, though the former will +sometimes make the blunder. There was nothing unreasonable in the theory +that the bell had fallen from her neck and that the owner therefore +might be not far away. + +At intervals, Terry shouted "_Bos! bos! bos!_" the Latin call which the +cow sometimes recognized, though she generally paid no attention to it. +It was the same now, possibly due to the fact that she did not hear the +call. + +Reaching the edge of the stream, the boys began walking along the bank +toward the left and scrutinizing the spongy earth close to the water. +If the missing animal had crossed the creek she could not have failed to +leave distinct footprints. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +THE TINKLE OF A BELL. + + +The examination of the shore of the creek had lasted but a few minutes, +when Terry Clark, pointing to the moist earth at their feet, called out +in some excitement: + +"Do ye mind that now?" + +There, sure enough, were the footprints of a cow that had entered the +stream from the same side on which the boys stood. The impressions could +be seen for some distance in the clear water, which in the middle of the +stream was no more than a yard deep, and they were plainly observed +where the animal had emerged on the other side. + +"I don't suppose there is any difference in the tracks of cows, but I +guess, Terry, that we are safe in making up our minds we are on the +trail of Brindle." + +"I'm thinking the same," replied the other, who was not only looking +across the creek, but into the woods beyond, as though he expected to +catch sight of the cow herself; "though it may be the one that crossed +there isn't the one that we're after." + +Fred Linden was asking himself whether there was not some way in which +they could reach the other side without going to the trouble of removing +their shoes and leggins, and hunting a shallow portion, or allowing +their garments to become saturated. He exclaimed: "Why didn't I think of +it? There's our canoe!" + +A number of these frail craft were owned in Greville, and Fred had a +fine one himself, which was only a short distance off. Three minutes +later the two reached it. + +The barken structure was moored by means of a long rope to a tree a +considerable distance from the water, so that in case of one of those +sudden rises that sometimes took place, it would not be carried away by +the freshet. The boat was quickly launched, and a few strokes of the +paddle carried the two to the opposite bank of the stream. + +"I wonder whether there is any danger of a rise," remarked Fred, as he +carried the rope to a tree twenty feet distant and made it fast to a +limb; "there was a good deal of thunder and lightning last night off to +the east." + +"But the creek doesn't come from that way," said the surprised Terry; +"so what is the odds, as me father said he used to ask when the Injins +was on all sides of him, and a panther in the tree he wanted to climb, +and he found himself standing on the head of a rattlesnake." + +"The creek winds through every point of the compass, so it doesn't make +much difference, as you say, where it rains, since it is sure to make a +rise; the only question is whether the rain was enough to affect the +creek so that it will trouble us." + +"If it was goin' to do that, wouldn't it have done so before this?" was +the natural question of his companion. + +"That depends on how far away the rain was." + +The boys were not idle while talking. The canoe was soon made fast, and +then they resumed their hunt for the estray. They were not skillful +enough in woodcraft to trace the animal through the forest by the means +that an Indian would have used, but they were hopeful that by taking a +general direction they would soon find her. If she still had the bell +tied around her neck, there was no reason why they should not be +successful. + +But while walking forward, Fred Linden asked a question of himself that +he did not repeat aloud. + +"Has she been stolen?" + +This query was naturally followed by others. It certainly was +unreasonable to think that a cow would leave her companions and +deliberately wander off, at the time she was milked twice daily. She +would speedily suffer such distress that she would come bellowing +homeward for relief. If she really was an estray, she had missed two +milkings--that of the previous night and the morning that succeeded. + +It was certain, therefore, that if she was stolen, the thief had +attended to her milking. But who could the thief be? That was the +important question that Fred confessed himself unable to answer. + +There had been occasional instances of white men who had stolen horses +from the frontier settlements, but the lad could recall nothing of the +kind that had taken place in that neighborhood; all of which might be +the case without affecting the present loss, since it was evident that +there must be a first theft of that nature. + +But, somehow or other, Fred could not help suspecting that the red men +had to do with the disappearance of the animal. I have intimated in +another place that Greville had never been harmed by the Indians, who +were scattered here and there through the country, for there was no +comparison between them and the fierce Shawanoes, Wyandottes, +Pottawatomies and other tribes, whose deeds gave to Kentucky its +impressive title of the Dark and Bloody Ground; but among the different +bands of red men who roamed through the great wilderness west of the +Mississippi, were those who were capable of as atrocious cruelties as +were ever committed by the fierce warriors further east. + +What more likely, therefore, than that a party of these had stolen the +cow and driven her away? + +There were many facts that were in favor of and against the theory; the +chief one against it was that if a party of Indians had driven off one +cow, they would have taken more. Then, too, the soft earth that had +revealed the hoof tracks ought to have shown the imprint of moccasins. + +You will see, therefore, that Fred could speculate for hours on the +question without satisfying himself. He was sorry that he and Terry had +not brought their guns with them, and was half inclined to go back. It +was not yet noon, and they had plenty of time in which to do so. + +"Terry," said Fred, turning suddenly about and addressing his friend, +who was walking behind him, "we made a mistake in not bringing our +guns." + +The Irish lad was about to answer when he raised his hand in a warning +way and said: + +"Hist!" + +Both stood as motionless as the tree trunks about them, all their +faculties centered in the one of hearing. + +There was the low, deep roar which is always heard in a vast wood, made +by the soft wind stealing among the multitudinous branches, and which is +like the voice of silence itself. They were so far from the creek that +its soft ripple failed to reach them. + +"I don't hear any thing," said Fred at the end of a full minute. + +"Nor do I," said Terry. + +"Why then did you ask me to listen?" + +"I was thinkin' be that token that we might hear something." + +"What made you think so?" + +"The tinkle of a bell." + +"What!" exclaimed the amazed Fred, "are you sure?" + +"That I am; just as I was about to speak, I caught the faint sound--just +as we've both heard hundreds of times." + +"From what point did it seem to come?" + +His friend pointed due south. + +"Strange it is that ye didn't catch the same." + +"So I think; it may be, Terry, that you are mistaken, and you wanted to +hear the bell so much that the sound was in your fancy." + +The lad, however, would not admit this. He was sure there had been no +mistake. Fred was about to argue further when all doubt was set at rest +by the sound of a cow-bell that came faintly but clearly through the +forest. + +"You are right," said Fred, his face brightening up; "we are on the +track of old Brindle sure enough. It's mighty strange though how she +came to wander so far from home." + +"She got lost I s'pose," replied Terry, repeating the theory that had +been hit upon some time before. + +"It may be, but it is the first instance I ever heard of, where an +animal lost its way so easily." + +The boys were in too high spirits, however, to try to explain that which +puzzled them. The cow was a valuable creature, being the only one that +belonged to the family with whom Terence lived, and who therefore could +ill afford her loss. + +The friends had pushed perhaps a couple hundred yards further when +Terry called to Fred that he was not following the right course. + +"Ye're bearing too much to the lift; so much so indaad that if ye kaap +on ye'll find yersilf lift." + +"Why, I was about to turn a little more in that direction," replied the +astonished Fred; "you are altogether wrong." + +But the other sturdily insisted that he was right, and he was so +positive that he stopped short, and refused to go another step in the +direction that his friend was following. The latter was just as certain +that Terry was amiss, and it looked as if they had come to a deadlock. + +"There's only one way to settle it," said Fred, "and that is for each of +us to follow the route he thinks right. The cow can't be far off and we +shall soon find out who is wrong. The first one that finds Brindle shall +call to the other, and he'll own up what a stupid blunder he has made." + +"Ye are speakin' me own sentiments," replied Terry, who kept looking +about him and listening as if he expected every moment that the cow +herself would solve the question. Fred Linden read the meaning of his +action, and he, too, wondered why it was that when both had plainly +caught the tinkle of the telltale bell, they should hear it no more. +Strange that when it had spoken so clearly it should become silent, but +such was the fact. + +Little did either suspect the cause. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +AN ABORIGINAL PLOT. + + +The boys tried the plan of Fred Linden; he swerved slightly to the left, +while Terry Clark made a sharp angle to the right. They never thought of +getting beyond hearing of each other, and, but for the plentiful +undergrowth they would have kept in sight. They had taken but a few +steps when Fred looked around and found that he was alone. He could hear +his young friend pushing his way among the trees, and once or twice he +caught snatches of a tune that he was whistling--that being a favorite +pastime of the lad when by himself. + +"It's curious how he could make such a blunder," thought Fred, with a +smile to himself; "he will go tramping around the woods only to find +that he was nowhere in the neighborhood of the cow. Ah, the storm is not +yet over." + +He was looking to the eastward, where the sky, as he caught a glimpse of +it among the treetops and branches, was as black as if overcast with one +huge thunder cloud. + +"It was there it raged so violently last night, and the rain is falling +in torrents again. We shall find the creek a river when we go back." + +The sturdy youth pressed on fully two hundred yards more, when the old +suspicion came back to him. There was something wrong. When he could not +explain some things he was satisfied that it was because there was an +element of evil in those things--something that boded ill to both him +and his friend. + +"I have traveled far enough since hearing that bell to pass a long ways +beyond it," he said, compressing his lips and shaking his head; "and if +that was Brindle that rang it the first time, she would have done it the +second time." + +Twice before Fred fancied he heard something moving among the +undergrowth a short distance in advance, and a little to one side. The +noise was now so distinct that he could no longer deceive himself; +there was some specific cause for it. + +"I guess Terry has worked over this way, finding what a mistake he has +made--no! by gracious! it isn't Terry!" + +Fred started in alarm, confident that it was an Indian that was moving +through the wood. It will be admitted that there was cause for his fear, +if such should prove to be the case, for he was without any firearms +with which to defend himself; but while he stood meditating whether he +should turn and take to his heels, he caught enough of a glimpse of the +object to make out that it was a quadruped instead of a biped. + +This was a great relief, though it did not remove all fear, for he was +not in form to meet any of the wild beasts that one was liable to run +against at any time. The next minute, he broke into a hearty laugh, for +that which he saw was the lost cow, quietly browsing on the tender +herbs, as though just turned loose by her owner. + +"Well, that is funny," said the youth, walking hastily toward her; "this +proves that I was right. You are a pretty one, old Brindle, to lead us +on such a chase!" + +The cow, hearing the voice and footsteps, stopped cropping, and with her +motionless jaws dripping with leaves and buds, started at Fred as if she +wasn't sure of his identity. She knew enough, however, to see that he +was a friend, and so resumed her feeding. + +Assuring himself that she was the estray, Fred looked at her bag to see +the condition of that. It was only moderately full, proving that she had +been milked later even than the preceding night. + +Fred Linden had approached close enough to place his hand on the +handsome creature, when he noticed--what indeed he knew before--the bell +was not fastened to her neck; that explained why, after hearing the +sound, it was heard no more. + +"The cord has broken just after the tinkle, and let the bell fall to the +ground; no wonder that it was not heard again. Some one has been kind +enough to give Brindle a milking." + +The words were yet in the mouth of Fred when he received a shock that +for a moment held him speechless; a long distance to the right he +caught the sound of the cow-bell! + +It was precisely the same that he and his friend had noticed, and since +the bell of Brindle was gone, there could be but one meaning to the +signal; it was made by some one for the purpose of drawing the boys into +a trap. + +Without pausing to think over the dozen questions that came with this +conclusion, Fred set off at the most hurried pace possible to warn his +friend of his peril. + +"He has no suspicion of any thing wrong, and is sure to do the very +thing that he ought not to do." + +Fred Linden was right in this conclusion. It can be readily understood, +why no thought of peril should enter the brain of the Irish lad, who was +never so sure that he was right and Fred wrong when the two parted to +take different routes in search of the cow. + +"It's a bright lad--is Fred," said Terry, "but there isn't any law that +I knows of by which he is to be right ivery time and Mr. Terence Clark +wrong. I'm going straight for the point where the tinkle of the bell +came from." + +The same thought puzzled him that puzzled Fred Linden; after walking +more than the whole distance that first intervened, the cow was still +invisible. There was nothing in the fact that when she had strayed so +far from home, she should keep on in the same direction. + +"It may be that she has heard something about the Pacific Ocean, and has +set out to see for herself whither the reports are correct," was the +quaint thought of the Irish lad, as he pushed vigorously through the +undergrowth, which was dense enough to turn him aside more than once and +compel him to keep his wits about him to prevent going astray +altogether. + +Now and then he paused, naturally expecting (as did Fred), that he would +hear more of the bell; but it is not necessary to say that, like his +companion, he was disappointed. He had fixed the point whence came the +noise so firmly in his mind, that he could not go wrong, though a boy of +less experience in the woods would have been sure to do so. + +Now, if any of you lads have ever driven cows or sheep, around whose +necks bells were hung, you have noticed the natural fact that they have +a sound peculiar to themselves. Referring particularly to cows, you may +have observed the _jangle_, _jangle_, made by the motion of the head in +cropping the grass, varied now and then by the confused jumble caused by +the animal flinging her head over the back of her neck or fore part of +the body to drive away the insects plaguing her. There is a certain +regularity in all this which will continue for hours, and that may be +said to be produced by the natural action of the animal, and which is +altogether different from that made by the swaying motion of the hand. + +But Terry Clark inherited a sharpness of wits from his parents, and, +while pushing forward among the trees and undergrowth, it struck him +that there were several curious features about the matter. + +"It was a mistake, as Fred said," he thought more than once, "that we +did not bring our guns with us." + +Then the second sound of the cow-bell fell upon the ear of Fred Linden; +Terry was within a hundred feet of the point whence it came, and he +could not have heard it more distinctly had he been standing on the spot +himself. The noise was so peculiar that a flood of misgiving overwhelmed +him. The _tinkle_, _tinkle_, _tinkle_, was so regular that nothing was +plainer than that no living quadruped could have made the sound. + +"That was not the cow," whispered the startled Terry; "she has more +sinse than to do any thing of the kind, as me uncle used to obsarve whin +he was accused of kaapin' sober; but I'll find out by the same token +what it all means." + +Since he had no firearms with which to defend himself, and since he was +sure he was threatened by danger, he ought to have hastened homeward; +but his curiosity would not permit him to do so. + +He advanced with all the caution possible, parting the obstructing +bushes in front and stepping as lightly on the carpet of leaves as +though he were a scout entering the camp of an enemy. He often stopped, +listened and peered, not only in front and the sides, but to the rear. +Whatever might take place, he did not intend to be surprised. + +He had advanced a couple of rods in this manner, when a faint sound from +the bell caught his ear, but was instantly suppressed, as though some +one had stopped at the instant he started to sway it. Faint as was the +tinkle, however, he was able to locate the precise point whence it came, +and after a little hesitation he moved toward it. + +All at once he caught sight of a figure in a crouching position, +stepping softly among the trees and undergrowth. He stood still, and a +moment later was able to distinguish the figure of an Indian warrior, +bending slightly forward, advancing inch by inch and holding the cow-bell +in his hand. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +A PARTY OF THE THIRD PART. + + +The Indian warrior whom Terry Clark saw advancing stealthily through the +undergrowth, cow-bell in hand, was a frightful object. His head and +shoulders were bent forward, and he was stepping slowly and silently, +while he glanced from right to left, as if searching for some object, or +awaiting the occurrence of an expected event. His face was daubed with +black and red paint, his long hair, as coarse as that of a horse's tail, +dangled about his shoulders and alongside his neck, so that his eyes, +when staring through it, seemed to be blazing among so much tangled +brush. The ordinary hunting shirt, fringed in front, inclosed his chest, +and was gathered at the waist by a sash or belt into which were thrust +his hunting knife and tomahawk. The usual breechcloth, leggins and +moccasins completed his dress. + +He carried a fine rifle in his left hand, in a trailing position, while +a powder horn and bullet pouch were supported by a string passing over +his shoulder. He was what may be called a thoroughly equipped warrior, +without taking into account the cow-bell, which was suspended by the +thumb and fingers of the right hand. It was thus he must have grasped +the implement when he caused it to give out the sound that caught the +ear of Fred Linden and Terry Clark. But at the moment the Irish lad saw +him, and for some minutes after, he held the bell in such careful poise +that it gave no sound at all. + +The Indian probably suspected his imitation of the action of the animal +was so poor that it was likely to cause distrust, and therefore he was +sparing in resorting to the stratagem. + +Now, nothing can be clearer than that if the warrior was in such a plain +view of Terry Clark, the latter was equally exposed to his eye. The +Indian was moving in his guarded fashion over a course at right angles +to that followed by the lad, who was quick to realize his peril. He knew +that every second he remained thus exposed he was likely to be seen. He +had hardly taken a glance of his enemy, when he stooped so that his +knees almost touched the ground, and moved as noiselessly and quickly as +he could to the nearest tree, behind which he took shelter. + +This tree was an oak, large enough to hide two such boys, standing side +by side, so that the youth felt secure for the time. + +"Ah, if I only had me gun," was the regret that naturally came to him; +"I would quickly settle with the spalpeen that stole old Brindle, and +now wants to run away wid me." + +It will be admitted that the situation of Terry was peculiar, for he was +quite close to the warrior, who, there was every reason to believe, was +hunting for him, and who was so nigh that there was imminent danger of +discovery. It might be asked why the redskin should have taken this +course, for in some respects it had more than one absurd feature. If he +wanted to kill a white person, all this maneuvering with a cow-bell was +ridiculous, while his conduct from first to last was in some respects +unreasonable. The best explanation was that which was made sometime +afterward by a person, who as yet has not been introduced to the reader, +but who, when he does appear, will be admitted to be the best judge. I +allude to Deerfoot the Shawanoe. + +The Indian with the cow-bell was a Winnebago warrior, whose home was a +long ways to the northward, but who had gone thither in company with +several others on what may be called a tour of investigation. The +driving off of the cow was probably an inspiration of the moment. The +Indians kept her until they had got all the milk they wanted, first +removing the bell so that her friends could not recover her until they +were through. The stratagem which I have been describing was an +afterthought. None of the Winnebagos except the one who tried the plan +would have any thing to do with it, though they were willing enough that +every white person in the settlement of Greville should perish, if the +same could be brought about without risk to them. + +Left to himself, the Winnebago decided to make a prisoner of whomsoever +should be sent to find the cow. He had reason to believe that this +person would be a youth, and since every thing was so quiet in that +section, he was not likely to be armed. Hence, it would be an easy +matter to decoy him a goodly distance from the settlement, when the +warrior could pounce upon, make him a prisoner and compel him to go with +him. After the couple were far enough from the settlement the lad could +be put to death, if his captor or the party to which the captor +belonged, should so elect. + +Terry Clark had stood behind the sheltering tree for perhaps five +minutes, when he became aware of an alarming fact: the warrior with the +bell was slowly approaching him. The faint tinkle that it gave out once +or twice told this, and when finally the lad ventured to peep around the +side of the tree, the sight was a startling one. The Indian had risen +almost to the upright posture, and holding the gun and bell as +described, was moving directly toward the oak behind which the boy +stood. Moreover at the moment the latter took the cautious look, the +visage of the Indian showed that he was looking straight at the tree. + +"By the powers!" gasped Terry, "but the spalpeen observed me, and I'm +thinkin' that he saw me before I did him." + +It was not at all unlikely that such was the case. The Indian may have +felt sure of his victim, and so he indulged in a little by-play, as a +cat often does with a mouse. Such a cruel proceeding was characteristic +of his race. + +The belief that this was the case placed Terry Clark in a most trying +position. He was without the means with which to defend himself, and in +fact was hopeless. It was useless to try to run away, for if the warrior +could not overtake him at once, he could bring him down with his rifle. + +You know how rare a thing it is for an Irishman to submit meekly, even +when there is no hope in resistance. Terry muttered: + +"If he lays hands on me, there's going to be a fight; I wish Fred was +near, that he could see that I git fair play." + +No person could have been more in earnest than was the Irish lad. + +"I'll wait till his head comes round the corner of that tree and then +I'll give him a whack that'll tumble him over on his back, afore he +knows what's the matter wid him; then I'll amuse myself wid hammerin' +him after he is down till I git tired and then I'll take his gun and +knife and tomahawk and the bell and make him walk before me to the +sittlement." + +The lad had just gone over in his mind this roseate programme, when a +soft tinkle told him that the Winnebago was within a few steps of the +tree; and at the same moment that the youth made this interesting +discovery, another still more astonishing one broke upon him. + +Just fifty feet away and behind a trunk very similar to the one that +sheltered the lad, stood a second Indian warrior. His position was such +that he was in plain view of Terry, though the Winnebago could not see +him except when the latter should approach quite close to the shelter of +the boy. The strange Indian was closely watching the hostile one, and, +with that remarkable intuition that sometimes comes to a person in grave +crises, Terry was convinced that he was an enemy of the Winnebago, +though whether a friend of the youth was not so certain. + +In his amazement, the lad for the moment forgot his own danger and gave +his attention to the stranger, who was the most striking looking warrior +he had ever seen. He seemed to be about eighteen or twenty years of age, +and was the picture of manly grace and beauty. + +He had long, luxuriant black hair which hung about his shoulders, being +gathered by a loose band at the neck, so as to keep it from getting in +front of his eyes. In the crown of this natural covering were thrust +three stained eagle feathers, while there were two rows of colored beads +around the neck. The fringed hunting shirt which reached almost to his +knees was of a dull, yellow color and the sash or belt around the waist +was of a dark red. A small but handsome bracelet encircled his left +wrist, and the fringes of his leggins were of varied and brilliant hues, +as were the beaded moccasins that incased his shapely feet. A tomahawk +and knife were in his girdle, while he held a finely ornamented rifle in +his right hand, the manner in which he manipulated the weapon showing +that he was left-handed. + +The face was strikingly fine, the nose being slightly aquiline, the +cheek bones less prominent, and the whole contour more symmetrical than +is generally the case with his race. There was something in the +situation that evidently amused him, for Terry saw him smile so +unmistakably that he noticed his small and regular white teeth. + +It was plain that he was watching the movements of the Winnebago, though +he said nothing, and made no gesture to the lad, whose wondering look he +must have understood. Be that as it may, the sight of the strange +Indian, and the belief that he was an enemy of the other with the +cow-bell, inspired the Irish lad with a courage that he would not have +known had the other warrior been absent. + +"He's waiting to see how I condooct mesilf when the spalpeen lays hands +on me," thought Terence; "he won't have to wait long." + +The youth was right. The crouching Winnebago, doubtless feeling that he +had no immediate use for the bell that had served him so well, dropped +it to the ground beside him, and holding only his rifle in hand, stepped +forward with the same cat-like tread that had marked his advance from +the first. He knew that his victim was shrinking behind the trunk of the +oak, and he was having his own peculiar sport with him. + +So intense was the attention of Terry that he heard distinctly the +footsteps of the warrior, who a moment later was close enough to touch +the tree with his hand, had he been so minded. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +A FRIEND IN NEED. + + +Terry Clark, the Irish lad, placed his right foot behind the left, his +weight equally supported on both, and stood as rigid as iron, with both +fists clinched and half raised, in the attitude of one holding himself +ready to use nature's weapons to his utmost ability. + +He heard the soft moccasin press the layer of brown autumn leaves, and +the next moment the point of a knobby, painted nose came slowly in sight +around the side of the trunk, followed by the sloping forehead, the +hideous face and the shoulders of the warrior, whose right hand was held +so far to the rear with the gun that it was the last to come into view. + +As the Winnebago caught sight of the white-faced boy, his countenance +was disfigured by a grin that made it more repulsive than before. + +"Oogh! brudder!--oogh!--Yenghese--" + +Just then Terry Clark let fly. He was a lusty lad, and he landed both +fists, one after another, squarely in the painted face, with such force +that the warrior was knocked completely off his feet. He went over +backward as though from the kick of a horse; but, contrary to the hopes +of his assailant, he did not let go of his gun. Had he done so, the +youth would have caught it up and shot him before he could regain his +feet. + +The blow was most presumptuous, and would have insured the death of the +one who gave it but for the intervention of the second Indian, who +seemed to take but a couple of bounds from the tree near which he was +standing when he landed on the spot. The infuriated Winnebago was in the +act of clambering to his feet, when he caught sight of the lithe, +graceful warrior, standing only a couple of steps away, with loaded +rifle pointed at him. + +"Dog of a Winnebago," he said in a voice slightly above an ordinary +tone; "if he harms the pale face, he shall die!" + +There are some expressions so forcible that they can not be made more +so. The young Indian spoke in the lingo of the Winnebago, whose totem he +had recognized, but his posture, erect on his feet, with his cocked +rifle in such a position that he had only to pull the trigger to send +the bullet through the bronzed skull before him;--all this required no +words of explanation. The Winnebago grasped the situation, and, to use +the homely expression common at this day, he saw that the other "had the +drop" on him. + +The Indian, though larger, older, heavier and stronger, was taken at +such disadvantage that he ceased his effort to rise, and looked up at +his conqueror with a helplessness so grotesque that under other +circumstances it would have caused a smile. Indeed, Terry Clark did +indulge in a slight laugh, for he saw that it was safe to do so; the +Winnebago was on the ground before his master. + +"If ye want me to ring the old coow-bell, I'll be glad to obleege, for +the performance looks as if a little moosic would give tone to the same. +Howsumever, I'll step back and let this good looking young gintleman run +the show." + +Thereupon Terry withdrew several paces and watched the proceedings with +a depth of interest that can be fully understood. + +The look of the Winnebago, who was half reclining on his side, +supporting his body with the hand that grasped his gun, plainly +indicated the question that came from his lips. + +"Why does my brother look with evil eyes on the Wolf, who has come from +the lodges of the Winnebagos? Are not all red men brothers?" + +"Deerfoot is a Shawanoe, whose warriors have consorted with those of the +Winnebagos; but Deerfoot has left his lodge beyond the Mississippi and +lives alone in the woods. He will not hurt the brave Winnebago who +fights men, but he slays the Wolf that bites the children of the pale +faces, that have never harmed him." + +Possibly the Wolf was inclined to argue the matter with the Shawanoe, +who had caught him at such disadvantage; but the manner and words of +Deerfoot showed that he was in no mood for discussion. + +"What does my brother want?" asked the Winnebago, in a voice that +proved all fight had left him. The most, indeed, that he ventured to do +was gently to rub his forehead and nose, where the fists of the sturdy +Terry Clark had landed. + +"Let the Wolf rise to his feet, but when he does so, his gun must lie on +the ground." + +This was a harsh order, but there was no help for it; the Indian +hesitated a moment, and then, black and scowling, he slowly assumed the +upright posture, and, folding his arms across his chest, looked in the +face of the bright-eyed Deerfoot, to signify that he was awaiting his +next command. + +"The Wolf shall now turn his face away from Deerfoot." + +The Winnebago obeyed the order as promptly as if he were a soldier +undergoing drill. + +"Let my brother now raise his eyes, until he sees the beech with the +white trunk," said Deerfoot, using the word "brother" for the first +time. + +The object to which he alluded was perhaps fifty yards distant, the +light color of the bark showing only here and there among the branches +and undergrowth that happened to be less frequent than in other +directions. The Wolf signified that he recognized the tree to which his +conqueror referred. + +"Now let my brother run; when he reaches the beech he can leap behind +it, and it will shield his body; if my brother is slow Deerfoot may fire +his gun and Wolf will never bite again." + +The Winnebago wanted no explanation of this threat. It was hard for him +to depart, leaving his rifle, but it was harder for him to lose his +life, and he did not hesitate as to the choice. He made one tremendous +bound that carried him a dozen feet, and then sped through the wood like +a frightened deer. When he had passed half of the intervening distance, +he seemed to fancy that he was not making satisfactory time for the +Shawanoe, who, he doubtless imagined, was standing with leveled gun, +finger on the trigger. He therefore began leaping from side to side, so +as to disconcert the aim of the dreaded Deerfoot. In the hope also of +further confusing him, he emitted several frenzied whoops, which added +such grotesqueness to the scene that Terry Clark threw back his head +and made the woods ring with laughter. + +"I never saw a frog hop about like that, which beats any show." + +Deerfoot did not have his rifle cocked or in position. The moment the +Wolf started, he saw how great his fright was, and, lowering the flint +of the weapon, he rested the stock on the ground and watched the antics +of the fugitive. The Shawanoe, unlike most of his race, had a vein of +humor in his composition. When Terry broke into mirth, he too laughed, +but it was simply a smile, accompanied by a sparkle of his bright eyes +which showed how much he enjoyed the scene. + +The moment the Wolf arrived at the beech, he darted behind it, and for +the first time looked over his shoulder. The sight could not have been +reassuring, for he continued his frenzied flight until the keen ear of +the Shawanoe could no longer hear him threshing through the wood. + +By this time Terry Clark had made up his mind that whoever the new +arrival might be, he was a friend. The Irish lad had not been able to +understand any of the words that passed between the two, though their +actions were eloquent enough to render much explanation unnecessary. But +a person who treated the Winnebago in such style could not feel +otherwise than friendly toward the one in whose behalf the interference +was made. Terry blushed a little as he walked forward and reached out +his honest hand. + +"If it's all the same to ye, I'll be glad to give that purty hand of +yours an owld-fashioned shake, such as a fellow sometimes gits when he +catches the chills an' faver." + +Deerfoot looked at the jolly lad with an odd expression, as he gave him +his hand, which, I need not say, was shaken with enthusiasm. The young +Shawanoe smiled in his own shadowy way and returned the pressure warmly. + +"My brother is happy," said he when the salute was finished; "it makes +the heart of Deerfoot glad that he could be his friend." + +"Ye were a friend indade, though ye'll admit, Deerfut, that I toppled +over the spalpeen in foine style, now didn't I?" + +"The Wolf who is a Winnebago, fell as though the lightning struck him." + +"How is it," asked Terry with no little curiosity, "that ye, who are as +full-blooded an Injin as the Winnebago, can talk the English with almost +as foine an accint as meself?" + +"Deerfoot has lived among the pale faces; when he was a small child he +went with the Shawanoes to harm the white men, but they took him +prisoner; they treated him kindly, and told him about God, who loves all +His children, whether they be white or red, or the color of the night; +they showed him how to read books, and to make his name and words on +paper, so that others might read." + +"Can ye read and write?" asked the astonished Terry. + +Deerfoot smiled and nodded his head. + +"Well, well, that bates ivery thing!" said Terry, who instantly repeated +the absurd belief of many of his race, by adding, "I didn't s'pose that +an Injin could learn." + +Without replying to the last remark, the Shawanoe, looking the lad +steadily in the eye, said, "Deerfoot has a message for Fred Linden; does +my brother know him?" + +"Do I know him?" repeated Terry; "I know the same better than I know +mesilf; he started wid me to hunt the coow, and I rickons that he can't +be very fur away." + +"He's coming," quietly said Deerfoot, looking off to the left of Terry, +as if about to salute a new arrival. The Irish lad wheeled in his quick +way, but his sharp eyes caught no glimpse of his approaching friend. + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +FRED LINDEN RECEIVES A MESSAGE FROM THE OZARK CAMP. + + +As soon as Fred Linden discovered the deception respecting the cow-bell, +he made all haste toward the point whence came the sound, in the hope of +warning Terry in time to save him from treachery. You will understand +how quickly events passed when told that, although he came almost +directly to the spot, he did not reach it until Deerfoot the Shawanoe +asked for him. This wonderful Indian, of whom I shall have considerably +more to tell, heard the coming of the lad whom he had never seen, before +either the eye or ear of Terry Clark could detect his approach. + +As may well be supposed, Fred Linden was amazed at what met his eyes. +The sight of Terry in friendly converse with a strange Indian was the +opposite of what he expected to see. He slackened his hurried walk and +looked inquiringly at Terry. The latter could talk fast when he chose, +and the few sentences he rattled off as his companion came up made the +matter tolerably clear. + +While the questioning and talk were going on, Deerfoot stood leaning on +his long gun and gazing with a certain natural dignity at the two +friends. He said nothing nor did he appear to show any special +curiosity, though had any one studied his countenance, he would have +seen that he was watching Fred Linden. He had said that he carried a +message to him, and it was no more than natural that he should wish to +know something about him. + +As for Fred himself he did not try to hide his profound interest in the +remarkable warrior who had appeared at such an opportune time, but of +whom he had never before heard a word. He knew that the settlers along +the frontier often found valuable allies in the friendly Indians, and he +concluded that this red man was one of those who, having been maltreated +by his own people or kindly used by the whites, had given his loyalty to +the latter; for in the brief narrative of Terry Clark, he had time only +to tell the leading facts about the rescue of himself. Just then, +therefore, the Irish lad knew more about Deerfoot than did the American. + +But it takes only a little time for such a group to become acquainted +with each other. A general handshaking followed, and it happened more +than once that all three were talking at the same moment. Had any one +been able to translate the expression of Deerfoot's countenance, he +would have seen that he was pleased with both the lads whom he now met +for the first time. There was a rollicking good nature, a cheery courage +and ever bubbling hopefulness about Terry that were contagious, and like +so much sunshine that went with him wherever he went. + +Fred Linden was of that manly mold and rugged appearance that he would +have drawn favorable attention wherever he might be. + +Such a lad in these days would have been picked out as a born athlete, +one who was capable, with proper training, to become a first-class ball +player, oarsman or boxer. He was a swift runner, a strong leaper, an +expert rifle shot, and his rugged frame and rough, outdoor life gave +him an endurance that few men could surpass. He was as tall as Deerfoot, +with broad shoulders, muscular arms and legs, clear, keen eyes, a fine +chest and a symmetrical frame. + +The clothes of the two boys, it is hardly necessary to say, were of +homespun, for a hundred years ago it would have been hard for them to +procure any other kind of goods. The short coat was somewhat like those +used to-day by bicyclists, reaching only a short distance below the +waist, where the girdle was fastened in front. The trowsers, of the same +material, reached to the knees, below which were the hunting leggins, +common along the border. Then came the warm, woolen stockings and thick, +heavy shoes, while the head was surmounted by a woolen cap, made by the +deft fingers at home, and without any pattern. It was soft, and having +no forepiece, sat on the head in whichever position it happened to be +first placed. In this respect it resembled the valuable sealskins of the +present day. The coats of the lads were open in front, and within were +the pockets, which they used as required, the trowsers also being +provided with a couple of these prime necessities. + +When the rattling conversation had gone on for several minutes, Terry +ran a few steps and picked up the bell that the Indian had placed on the +ground. The string which had held it about the neck of the animal was +missing, having probably been cut by the knife of the impatient Wolf. + +"I'll take the same back home wid me and put it on Brindle if I iver +maat her; I shouldn't be so 'stonished that I couldn't spake if I should +find that the spalpeen had killed her." + +"No," said Fred, "she isn't harmed; I found her off yonder, cropping the +buds and leaves, as innocently as though she hadn't done any thing wrong +in leading us on this long chase. I started her toward home, and if she +keeps up the gait she must be pretty near there by this time." + +This was good news to Terry, for the loss of the animal would have been +serious to the family of Mr. MacClaskey, her owner. The Irish lad had +hardly picked up the bell when Deerfoot pointed to the gun lying on the +ground, where it had been left by the Wolf. + +"That belongs to my brother." + +The delighted Terry could hardly believe what was told him, and he stood +looking doubtfully at Deerfoot, as if suspecting he had heard him amiss. + +"It was you who captured the gun, Deerfoot, and so, if it belongs to any +one, ye are the spalpeen." + +The Shawanoe looked down at his own handsome weapon and shook his head. +He had no need of any other weapon. Besides, this singular youth could +not have conscientiously taken it. He did not feel justified in keeping +it for his own use, no matter if in sore need of such a weapon; but, +since the Winnebago had made his demonstration against Terry Clark, and +was compelled to leave the gun behind, when he was permitted to go, it +seemed proper that the prize should fall into the hands of the Irish +lad. + +What gave special propriety to the act was the fact that, although Fred +Linden was the owner of a fine gun, Terry had none. When his father +lost his life, his rifle was never recovered, and though there was one +in the family of MacClaskey, the youth had no claim upon it. He longed +for such a weapon, with a longing that it would be hard to understand. +The prize, therefore, was appreciated to its full value. He picked it up +with an embarrassed grin, which quickly became natural when he turned it +over in his hands and saw what an excellent piece it was. + +"More than likely it belonged to a white man in the first place," said +Fred; "so it is right enough that it should come back to one of his own +race." + +"It's loaded," said Terry, slightly raising the hammer and noticing the +powder in the pan. Then he brought the gun to his shoulder and pointing +it at the white trunk of the beech, which partly showed through the +intervening branches and undergrowth, he said: + +"If the spalpeen should peep out from behind that tree, I'm thinkin' I +could hit him a harder blow than when I landed me two fists on his +mug." + +"The Winnebago is a long ways off," said Deerfoot, with a shake of his +head; "he may meet my brother some day, but it will not be in this +place." + +The young Shawanoe having learned all that was to be learned about his +young friends, now reached his hand in the breast of his hunting shirt +and drew out a small, closely-printed Bible, from between the leaves of +which he took a piece of paper that had been folded several times. He +glanced at the superscription, as if to make sure it was right, and then +handed it to Fred, who, as may be supposed, took it with astonishment. +He recognized the penciled writing as that of his father. + +Parting the folds, he read the following: + + MY DEAR FRED: + + You know that when we left home there were three of us, Hardin, + Bowlby and myself. There are three of us still, but Bowlby + considers himself of no account for some weeks to come, because of + a hurt to his foot which will prevent his getting around for a long + time. Such being the case, I have concluded, now that I have the + chance, to send for you to join us. You are old enough and strong + enough to make a full hand, and you can give us good help. Since we + have all the animals, you will come afoot, but you will find no + trouble in keeping to the trail, which has been traveled often + enough to make it plain. It is no more than a hundred miles from + Greville to our camp at the foot of the Ozark Mountains, so you + ought to have no difficulty in reaching here in the course of three + or four days. Love to your mother and Edith. + + I send this by a young Shawanoe warrior, called Deerfoot. He is the + most remarkable Indian I ever knew. I shall have a good deal to + tell you about him when you reach here. + + YOUR FATHER. + +"Deerfoot bids his brothers good-by," said the young Indian, offering +his hand, when he saw Fred had finished reading his letter; "he hopes +that he shall see them again." + +"It won't be our fault if he doesn't," was the cordial response of Fred +Linden, in which Terry heartily joined him. After a few more pleasant +words they parted, Deerfoot following in the footsteps of the fleeing +Winnebago, while the others moved to the northward in the direction of +the creek. They turned aside a little from the direct course so as to +hunt for Brindle, that Fred had seen, but she was not found. To their +delight, however, they saw her footprints on the edge of the creek, +proving that she had gone home with the directness of one who felt +remorse for wandering from the straight path. She had swum the stream, +and was doubtless before the MacClaskey cabin at that moment. + +But standing close to the edge of the creek, the boys became aware of a +hard fact: it had not only risen with great rapidity during the last +half hour, so as to become a rushing torrent, but it was still rising so +fast that it was extremely dangerous for the boys to try to cross it in +the canoe. Indeed, they hesitated to make the attempt, but finally +concluded to do so. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +THE HUNTERS OF OZARK. + + +I must tell you how it was that Deerfoot the Shawanoe came to bring the +important letter of George Linden to his son Frederick. + +It has already been stated that it was the custom of a party of hunters +and trappers to leave the settlement of Greville in the autumn of each +year and spend most of the cold weather among the streams at the foot of +a certain part of the Ozark Mountains. At that period, the fur bearing +animals abounded in the section, as they were found in hundreds of other +portions of the vast area known under the general name of the Louisiana +Territory. You must bear in mind that there were thousands of square +miles that had not been trodden by a white man, and so sparse were the +Indian villages that large portions of the country remained to be +visited even by them. + +Beaver, otter, foxes, bears, and buffaloes were the chief animals that +were afterward driven west by the advancing tide of civilization, until +the agents of the Missouri and Western Fur Companies were forced to do +most of their work in the far west and north-west, where they came in +collision with that vast monopoly known as the Hudson Bay Company, +which, until recent years, not only trapped and hunted throughout +Oregon, but along the Pacific coast as far south as California. + +George Linden, Rufus Hardin and James Bowlby composed the party who, in +the autumn of the year of which I am writing, rode each a horse a +hundred miles to the south of the frontier settlement of Greville, and +pitched their tent at the foot of the Ozark range. Beside the animals +ridden, each hunter took a pack-horse to help bring back the peltries +that were to be gathered during the cold weather. As a matter of course, +they were provided with guns and plenty of munitions, and indeed with +every necessity for their limited wants. They had spent several winters +there and knew what was before them. They had hunted and trapped for +years in other parts of the great west, and more than once had made the +long journey to the post of St. Louis to dispose of their furs, a +necessity that, as I have explained, was removed by the annual visit of +the agents with their long train of pack-horses to gather up the +peltries. + +And so, without giving any of the interesting particulars of the ride +southward from Greville, let us take a look at the little party gathered +at their primitive camp in the wild Ozark region. + +The six horses had been relieved of their burdens on reaching the place, +and were turned loose to crop the grass that was plentiful in many +places. Although there was snow now and then through the winter, there +was hardly enough to cause any suffering on the part of the animals. +When the storms, however, were violent or prolonged, the hardy beasts +were provided with some of the stores of dried grass that was kept in +stock, as may be said. In case that gave out they could make shift with +the cottonwood and other trees, whose bark was not lacking in succulent +qualities. + +Although a tolerable shelter could have been found in any one of the +numerous caves within reach, the hunters preferred to erect a rough +cabin, that was almost strong enough to withstand a cyclone. The keen +axes enabled them to trim off the interfering limbs, and they were +joined at the corners so well that very little, if any, rain or snow +could force its way through. Other logs and branches were laid across +the top and ends fastened to the logs beneath by means of withes, so +that the roof was not likely to be carried away unless the cabin itself +went with it. + +On the top of the roof was a thick layer of branches and leaves, packed +so closely that little moisture could find its way through. There were +no windows, for none was needed. The single door in front was large +enough to allow free egress and ingress. At night, when there was a +possibility that some curious wild animal might come snuffing around, +the door was closed by means of a framework of thick limbs, also +fastened together with withes, swinging on leathern hinges, and made +secure by a brace leaning against it from the inside. + +Within this structure were stored their supplies, and the blankets on +which they slept were spread upon the bare ground. Their slumber was +sweeter, too, than it would have been had they stretched themselves on +"downy beds of ease," for health and weariness are two soporifics which +art can never supplant. + +The traps and appurtenances used in their toil were never taken away +from the place, for there was no call to do so. Such repairs as were +needed from time to time were made in the cabin or on the spot, as the +necessity arose. The rifles, of course, furnished the food needed, while +an abundance of fish could be taken at any time from the streams in the +neighborhood. + +A diet solely of flesh and fish is not acceptable to any one. Therefore, +among the supplies annually brought to the cabin, were a quantity of +coarse flour, meal, sugar, coffee, salt and tea. It may be said, that in +one respect they were like modern campers out, except that they took the +wrong season of the year for what so many boys consider the acme of +enjoyment. + +There was little in the appearance of the three men to call for special +description. All were in middle life, strong, rugged, and inured to +hardship. Linden was rather tall, his face covered by a heavy beard in +which not a gray hair had yet appeared. Hardin was fully as tall, with +shoulders somewhat bent, and his scant, dark beard was plentifully +sprinkled with gray. Bowlby was short and stocky in appearance. When in +the woods he allowed his black beard to grow all over his face, but at +home he was always smooth-shaven. He was of a swarthy complexion, +inclined to be silent, and often moody, but like his companions he was +brave, industrious and patient, holding a strong dislike of all Indians, +though not inclined to go to any unjustifiable length in his feelings. + +The dress of the three men was similar to that of Fred and Terry, which +has already been described. No one of them knew any thing about the +modern overcoat or cloak. If there should come a spell of unusually +severe weather, they had only to wrap a blanket or buffalo robe about +the shoulders when compelled to visit the traps or remain long +outdoors. Should it become necessary to kindle a fire within the cabin +for the sake of warmth, a broad, flat stone was removed from an opening +in the roof directly over the blaze, and the smoke, if so inclined, +found its way to the clear air outside. The cooking was done under the +adjoining trees. Of course it was of the most primitive character, but +it suited, and that is all that is necessary. + +The hunters reached their cabin about the middle of the forenoon of an +autumn day. They had eaten their regular morning meal, and they got to +work without delay. The horses were unloaded and turned adrift, the +stores safely housed, the blankets spread on the floor of simple earth +in the cabin, and then the men scattered to look after their traps. This +was a large job, for the implements had to be examined and many of them +slightly repaired, after which they must be carried long distances and +set. + +These traps were of the ordinary pattern, such as have been in general +use for hundreds of years. The iron jaws was forced wide apart and kept +in place by a catch, which was sprung by a slight pressure on the broad, +flat portion in the middle. The trap being carefully hidden from sight, +the unsuspecting animal had hardly time to rest one paw on this plate, +when the fierce jaws, impelled by steel springs of prodigious strength, +came together with the suddenness of lightning, and the animal, whatever +he be, was in a grip from which there was no escape. + +You can understand the care required to set these traps so that they +would do their work. The beaver is highly intelligent, and quick to +detect the signs of man's presence. Nothing can tempt him to venture +where he sees that his worst enemy has been before him. The fox is the +synonym of cunning, and will often outwit the shrewdest trapper. He will +walk around the trap and stealthily secure the bait without harm to +himself. One of those animals has been known to reach forward and spring +the implement, jerking back his paw quickly enough to escape the sharp +teeth. A fox, too, when caught in a steel trap will sometimes gnaw off +the leg just above where it is imprisoned, and afterward go through +life with little inconvenience on three legs. You may be sure that he is +never caught again in that fashion. + +It was easy to see where the sagacious beavers were in the habit of +leaving the water and climbing the bank. The trap was carefully placed +below the surface out of sight, and often it had no bait at all, for it +would seem that the bait itself was liable to awaken the suspicion of +the beavers. Occasionally, however, when it was desirable to attract +them to the spot, an oily odoriferous substance obtained from the animal +itself was smeared over the ground near the bank. + +The otters were scarcer than the beavers, but were hunted much in the +same manner. For foxes and fur-bearing animals that roamed the the +woods, the steel trap was baited with such food as they were fond of +(which was about every thing), and they were so numerous through that +part of the territory that the hunters had little difficulty in securing +what was wanted. + +At the end of the second day all the traps were in position, and the +three friends were grouped on the outside of the cabin smoking their +pipes and talking over the outlook for the winter, which all agreed was +favorable. + +The bison or buffaloes, of which mention has been made, were found in +the open spaces or prairies where there was plenty of grass. No such +multitudinous herds were seen as have been gathered in later years on +the western prairies, but there were enough to make very lively hunting +for the trio, who had shot and skinned several while on their way to the +beaver runs. + +Within a half hour's walk of the camp was a beaver dam fully half a mile +wide, built with astonishing skill and strength. The backwater flooded +the country for many square miles, and gave the remarkable animals just +the place they wanted for their curious huts, of which I shall have +something to tell you further on. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +A WELCOME ACQUAINTANCE. + + +On the fourth day after the arrival of the hunters at their cabin, the +accident of which Mr. Linden made mention befell Bowlby. It was early in +the morning, when the three were making their round of visits to the +traps. Since no two inspected the same ones, they were quite widely +separated from each other. Bowlby was walking over a rocky stretch of +land alongside the creek when a loose stone turned under his foot, +giving his ankle such a wrench that when he tried to stand he found he +could not bear the least weight on it. It was one of those hurts that +are more painful and troublesome than a fractured limb. + +"Here's a pretty go," he growled, as he sat down on the ground, his face +contorted with pain; "it'll be a long time before I'll be able to stand, +and the boys will have to bring one of the hosses here or else carry me +home. _Hello!_" + +He shouted at the top of his voice, feeling no alarm, for he knew that +his friends would come to his relief before long, even if they did not +hear his voice; but then he reflected, as he sat on the ground beside +the two beavers that he had killed and was carrying to his home, that he +was in bad form if a wild animal should assail him, or there should +happen to be a hostile Indian prowling in the vicinity. He had left his +gun at the cabin, as was his practice, since he needed all his strength +to bring in the products of the traps. + +He was startled, therefore, after his third shout; an Indian warrior, +fully armed, walked out of the wood and came toward him; but his signs +of peace, and more than all, the words he uttered, removed his fears. + +"My brother suffers; Deerfoot will help him to his cabin." + +"If that's so," said the greatly relieved Bowlby, "you're just the chap +I'm waiting for. We'll leave these beavers here for the others to come +after, and if you'll let me lean on your shoulder I guess I can hobble +back; but I'll have to lean heavy," he added, looking doubtfully at the +Indian, "and you ain't much more than a likely lad." + +"Let my brother try me," said Deerfoot, with a smile. + +The disabled hunter did try him, often compelled, as he was, to bear to +such an extent upon his new friend that it may be said the latter +sustained half his weight. The progress was slow, and when they reached +a small stream of water, Bowlby sat down and allowed the young Shawanoe +to bathe the inflamed limb. Great relief was felt. + +During this labored walk homeward, the two naturally talked a good deal +together and learned much about each other. Deerfoot said that he had +often hunted through the surrounding country, and he told why it was he +had found it necessary to leave his tribe on the other side of the +Mississippi. He said that he had spent more than one night in the +deserted cabin of Bowlby and his friends during the summer months, when +he found himself belated in the vicinity, and he once shot a wolf that +was resolved on entering against his protest. It was his intention to +make a call upon the hunters, and if they needed his aid, he was glad to +give it in the way of helping trap or shoot game. You need not be told +that though James Bowlby felt an innate dislike of the American race, +there was now one exception: henceforth he was the sworn friend of +Deerfoot the Shawanoe. + +Linden and Hardin had got back from making their rounds, and were +wondering what could have delayed their friend, when they saw him +limping painfully on one foot, and supported by a fine looking young +Indian warrior. Their astonishment was great, for they could not +understand what it meant. Linden hastened to the help of Bowlby, but he +waved him aside and said no one could do as well as Deerfoot. + +While Hardin went out to bring in the two beavers that had been taken +from the traps by Bowlby, the latter was assisted to a seat on the log +in front of the cabin. Then Deerfoot insisted on giving attention to the +injured limb. It had swollen a great deal since he bathed it. There was +nothing in the cabin in the way of ointment or liniment, but Deerfoot +hastened into the wood and soon came back with the leaves of some plant +whose virtues seemed to be well known to him. These were wrapped in a +piece of linen, which the establishment managed to afford, and pounded +to a pulp, and then the poultice was gently applied to the inflamed +ankle. Bowlby declared that it felt better at once, but his face +lengthened when Deerfoot told him that it would be a moon, or several +weeks, before he would fully recover the use of his limb. + +"That will make us short-handed, and we need every one," said Mr. +Linden; "I wish Fred was here to give us help." + +"I think I can ride my hoss to Greville," said Bowlby, "and bring him +back with me." + +"That is hardly worth while." + +"Where is the home of my brother?" gently asked Deerfoot. + +"At the settlement of Greville, about a hundred miles to the north." + +"Deerfoot knows where it is," he replied; "he will take a message for +his brother, for his footsteps lead him that way." + +"You're a mighty clever Indian; I will be ever so much obliged to you," +said Linden; "I will write a few lines to my boy, which will explain our +trouble, though I have no doubt you could take the message just as well; +but it is such an unexpected one that the boy might doubt it unless it +was in my own writing. See?" + +The Shawanoe nodded his head to signify that it was all clear to him. +Linden passed within the cabin, where he hurriedly wrote the few lines +that are already known to the reader, folded the paper, and wrote on the +outside: + + "FREDERICK LINDEN, + Grevil." + +He then handed it to Deerfoot, saying: + +"There is no special hurry, and if you are in the neighborhood of +Greville, and can make it convenient to leave that at my house, it will +be a great kindness to me." + +"If the Great Spirit does not will different it shall be in his hands +before the setting of three more suns, but," added Deerfoot, looking at +the superscription on the back of the paper, "has not my brother made a +mistake?" + +"What do you mean?" + +"When Deerfoot writes the word 'Greville,' he adds two letters more than +does my brother; perhaps, though, Deerfoot is wrong." + +No pen can describe the amazement that appeared on the faces of Linden +and Bowlby. Here was a young Indian teaching a white man old enough to +be his father how to spell in the English language! Was the like ever +known? + +For a full minute neither of the hunters spoke. They were sitting on the +log, while Deerfoot was standing in front of them. He held his rifle in +his right hand and the folded piece of paper in his left, while he +looked inquiringly down in the faces of the two men, whose mouths and +eyes were open, as though they could not believe the evidence of their +own senses. Finally, with a deep sigh, Linden slowly rose to his feet-- + +"Well, by gracious! if that don't beat every thing! Do you mean to say +that you can read _writing_? Impossible!" + +[Illustration: "For a full minute neither of the hunters spoke."] + +Then, as if still in doubt, he reached out and took the paper. Drawing a +stump of a lead pencil from his pocket he completed the word properly, +opened the paper, and handing it back to the Indian, said: + +"Let's hear you read _that_." + +"My brother writes so that any one can read his words," observed the +young Shawanoe by way of introduction, and then in a low, soft voice he +read the brief note from beginning to end. + +Bowlby, who had not yet spoken, seemed unable to express his emotions. +Unable himself to read, the attainment of the Indian was almost past +belief. As the best thing, therefore, that he could do, he solemnly +reached out his hand to Linden and shook it with great earnestness. +Settling painfully back on the log, he nodded his head several times as +if he was almost overcome, as indeed was the case. + +I should state at this point that although Linden had not seen fit to +make it known, he had heard of Deerfoot the Shawanoe long before. He +knew of some of his exploits in Kentucky, as well as those of later +years on the western bank of the Mississippi (which are told in the +"Young Pioneer" and the "Log Cabin Series"), but he had never met the +youth, nor had he ever heard or suspected that he knew how to read and +write. Taking hold of his arm, he asked: + +"Where in the name of all that is wonderful did you learn that? When I +wrote to Fred that I would tell him some things about you I did not know +of the most extraordinary of all--that which I have just seen. Sit right +down here, between me and Jim, and let us know all about it." + +Deerfoot held back, but yielded, and finally answered in his modest way +the numerous questions with which he was plied. Bowlby had managed to +find his tongue, and his queries were about twice as numerous as those +of his companion. By the time that Deerfoot had time to rest, Hardin +came back, and there was little left to tell. + +The Shawanoe had captured the Hunters of the Ozark. They insisted that +he should stay to dinner with them, and he did so. Then he was badgered +to enter into a shooting match. All were fine marksmen, and Linden was +the best shot in Greville. Using his own rifle, Deerfoot beat every one +of them. Then he exchanged weapons and allowed the crippled Bowlby to +rest his piece, and the Shawanoe beat all three just as badly as before. +They were delighted, and slapping him on the back, asked him to spend a +week with them, but he shook his head. + +The sun was already beyond the meridian, and there were reasons for his +departure which he could not explain. They liked him too well to insist, +though they made him promise that on the first chance he would make them +a visit. Then Deerfoot gravely pressed hands with all and quickly +disappeared in the woods, taking the trail that led toward Greville. You +have already learned about his meeting with Terry Clark and Fred +Linden. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +A MISHAP. + + +Fred Linden and Terry Clark were alarmed when, on their way home, they +came to the creek across which they had paddled only a short time +before. It was then the comparatively shallow stream that was scarcely +an obstacle in their path; now it was a rushing torrent, whose volume +was increasing with great rapidity. The sinuosities of the creek had +caused it to gather in a large part of the rain that had fallen some +miles away, and its usual boundaries were overflowed. + +It was well that Fred had tied his canoe to the tree that was quite a +distance from the stream, for had he not done so it would have been +swept away like an egg shell. As it was, the water had reached the base +of the tree, while the boat was bobbing up and down almost in a straight +line with the course of the creek, as though it was tugging to get +loose. + +"My gracious, Terry!" said Fred, "this is a little worse than I +expected; it is going to be hard work to get across." + +"Ye are right for once," added the other, gravely shaking his head; +"them rapids are a little closer than I loike." + +"It seems to me," added Fred, who was unwilling to admit that he was +afraid to try the task, "that I have gone over the creek when it was +just as high and rapid, and have crossed at this place, too." + +"Who swung the paddle?" + +"Father did once and Mr. Bowlby at another time." + +"Did ye iver manage the paddle yersilf when the creek got onto one of +its tears?" + +"I don't remember that I have, but that has been only because the need +did not arise; I am not afraid to try it, even if you are." + +"Who said I was afraid?" demanded Terry; "I'm riddy to hop into the boat +and sway the paddle mesilf, and I'll do it, too." + +He stepped into the water, which was up to his shoe tops, and began +drawing in the rawhide rope which held the frail boat from breaking +away. His companion laughed and said nothing until the canoe was at +their feet and drawn up on the land away from the rushing current. + +"Don't be quite so touchy, Terry; that boat belongs to me and I can +handle the paddle better than you; anyway I shall try to take us to the +other side, and all that you have to do is to keep those limbs and trees +from capsizing us." + +The time occupied in pulling the boat to the spot had given the Irish +lad a chance to regain his usual good nature, and he made no protest +against the decision of his companion, though Terry was no unskillful +handler of the paddle himself. + +The creek was probably over a hundred feet wide, and the roiled current +abounded with limbs and trees that swung up and down, sometimes out of +sight and then popping up again, as though they were frolicking in the +swift waters. It would require a strong arm and a cool head to force the +birchen craft through these obstacles to the shore on the other side. +It must be admitted, too, that it was a piece of imprudence on the part +of the lads, who would have been wiser had they quietly waited where +they were until the overflow exhausted itself. A stream that rises so +fast subsides with the same quickness, and long before nightfall the +creek would shrink to proportions that would take away all peril to any +one in paddling across. + +They would have been compelled to go a long distance up stream before +finding a place where the crossing was easier, and it would have been +almost impossible to drag the canoe thither. They would have held fast +to one end of the rope and allowed it to dance through the rapids, so as +to allow them to make the passage below, where the great peril was +removed, had they not known that the chances were ten to one that it +would be snatched from their grasp, thus shutting them out altogether. + +Looking up and across the sloping clearing, the cabins forming the +settlement of Greville could be seen at no great distance. From several +of the stone chimneys the smoke was curling lazily upward, and now and +then glimpses could be caught of persons moving hither and thither, but +no one appeared to be looking in the direction of the creek, or if any +one was doing so, he saw nothing of the two boys standing on the further +shore and debating with themselves the best course to follow. At any +rate no one would think they were unable to take care of themselves. + +Both Fred and Terry knew that there was but one prudent plan to follow; +that was quietly to wait where they were until near night, by which time +all danger would be gone. But neither proposed the course nor made +mention of it. It is natural for youth to be rash, and there was a +semblance of timidity in such a shrinking back that was repellent to +American and Irish lad alike. And so you will understand how it was that +each showed an eagerness to enter into the contest with the angry +current. + +You will see, too, how foolish they were, when I tell you that during +the few minutes they stood by the tree to which the rope had been tied +discussing the situation, they saw the proof that the creek was +subsiding. There was a perceptible lowering of the surface, as was shown +by the soiled line against the trunk of the tree. Even Terry, when he +looked down, observed that he was not standing in quite as deep water as +he was a few minutes before. No danger, however, of his making mention +of it. + +It took but a minute or so to untie the long thong that was wrapped +about the limb, and then, as Fred was on the point of flinging the coil +into the bottom of the boat, the end of which was drawn up on the bank, +and to take up the paddle and push off, Terry, with some excitement, +caught his arm and said: + +"Plase wait a minute, will ye?" + +"What for?" + +"I'll not be gone long; howld the boat only for a twinkling." + +He ran a dozen steps or so from shore to where was the stump of a tree +that had probably been splintered by a thunder-bolt, and around which +sprouted a number of bushes that were dense enough to hide a large +object within. Carefully parting these, Terry laid down his rifle and +the bell, and then as carefully smoothed the undergrowth in place. Then +he hurried back. + +"There are plinty of lads about me own size," said he, "but there's only +one gun that belongs to me, and if the canoe should upsit and both of us +get drowned I want to be sure and save me gun." + +Fred smiled at this Irish-like explanation, but he was glad that Terry +had left the gun on shore. It was safely hidden until he should wish to +get it again, while its presence in the canoe would be the worst kind of +encumbrance. The new owner was so charmed with his prize that he would +think more of saving that than of saving the boat. It was clear that the +task of Terry in fighting off the rushing timber would be almost as +difficult as that of guiding it across the swift stream. + +"In with you!" said Fred to Terry, who carefully seated himself near the +bow of the canoe and took up the long pole that lay in the bottom and +projected some distance over the end of the boat. Fred Linden gave it a +vigorous shove, landed in the stern, caught up the paddle, and +instantly began his struggle. + +You will see the difficulty and danger of his task, and must therefore +join with me in condemning the lack of judgment showed by both. They had +to paddle more than a hundred feet across a furious torrent in which +were scores of uprooted trees, wrenched-off limbs, and craggy stumps, +all speeding downward with great swiftness and force. The course of the +boat being at right angles to these objects, must bring it in collision +with some of them, at the great risk of overturning or shattering the +canoe, that was not calculated to withstand any such blows. + +And yet, though the task was a hard one, there was little doubt that the +two lads could make their way across, provided they were given enough +time in which to do so; but there were the rapids, so near that their +roar was plainly heard. In case of an overturn or accident, the two +would be swept among them. It was the same, on a smaller scale, as if a +person should start to row across Niagara River, just above the falls, +where by vigorous work he could make the passage, provided he did not +drop a stroke on the way. You will say that any one making such an +attempt placed little value on his own life. + +Fred Linden used his paddle after the manner of an Indian--that is, he +dipped the broad end first on one side of the boat and then on the +other. The paddle was not widened at each end, as is sometimes the case, +the one who wields it using the sides alternately and with great +rapidity. In calm water such a light structure as an Indian canoe can be +driven with great speed, and I have no doubt that the youths would have +made a speedy passage had it not been for the interference of the +floating objects to which I have referred. + +Ten feet from land Fred was forced to back water suddenly to avoid a +jagged stump that danced in front like a bull getting ready to charge, +and finally did strike the bow with a thump that startled both the +occupants. + +"Me pole slipped off the side of that," Terry explained, as he +brandished the stick in front on the lookout for the threatening +waste-wood; "have a care that ye don't drive the boat agin something +that is stronger than the boat itsilf." + +By coolness, alertness and strength, Fred fought his way in safety until +probably one-third of the distance was passed. Then he saw the great +blunder he had made in trying to cross while the current was so high. +The constant fighting with the floating stumps and trees caused them to +lose so much ground--or rather water--that they were drifting +frightfully close to the rapids, whose roar grew plainer every moment. +But he had gone so far that it was as safe to keep on as to turn back, +and so he dipped the paddle and swung it with renewed vigor. + +"Look out!" he called to Terry, who in parrying the rush of a stump a +couple of yards in advance, did not notice one that was coming broadside +on, its presence betrayed by a tiny branch that protruded a few inches +above the surface like the fin of a shark. Fred did his utmost to avoid +it, but he was too slow, and a second later the pointed log not only +struck the side of the canoe, but capsized it. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +A STRUGGLE FOR LIFE. + + +The partly sunken log crashed into the side of the canoe with such +suddenness that the craft was overturned and ruined, and the occupants +struggling in the water, before either had time to utter more than a +single exclamation. + +But they were powerful swimmers, and, but for the nearness of the +rapids, they could have afforded to laugh at their mishap. As it was, +Terry Clark shouted, as he blew the muddy water from his mouth: + +"What a sinsible young gintleman I was to lave me gun on the other +side." + +"We both would have been much more sensible had we left ourselves +there," rejoined Fred, who was struggling with might and main for the +land in front; "there's no time, Terry, to waste in talk; we've got to +swim as never before, for nothing else will save us." + +The other seemed to rouse to his peril, for he made the only wise +response he could--which was putting forth every atom of strength and +skill that he possessed in the effort to breast the furious torrent. + +It is singular how often the slightest advantage turns the scale for +life or death. At the moment the canoe was smashed and capsized Terry +Clark was seated some six or eight feet nearer the shore toward which +they were paddling than was Fred Linden, and this difference remained +when the two went into the water and began swimming. The Irish lad was +fully as skillful as the other, and he did not lose an inch of the gain +thus given him. + +They were near the middle of the stream when the catastrophe took place. +Of course they would have done better had they been without any +clothing, but there was no time to remove any of that, and beyond +question the two made the most gallant kind of a fight for life. + +Fully aroused to his peril, Terry swam with amazing power, his lips +compressed and his eyes fixed on the land in front, which seemed quite +near, and yet was never so hard to reach. The lad had proven by repeated +tests that he could swim faster on his left side then in any other +position. He quickly flung himself over and used his arms and legs like +one who knew fully the stake for which he was contending. + +By this recourse he actually gained on Fred, who continued to breast the +water with all the strength at his command. Terry was hopeful, and now +that he was fully roused, he did not waste his strength in shouting to +his companion. As he advanced in his crab-like fashion, he frequently +flirted his face around so as to look in front, and thus to keep aware +of his progress. + +"I'm doing well, and will make it," was his thought; "I hope Fred will +be as fortynate as mesilf." + +An important point was gained by swimming on his left side; his face was +turned up stream, and he caught sight of the floating timber quicker +than when advancing with his face toward the land. Thus it came about +that he saw a plunging tree, or log, similar to that which had +destroyed the canoe, and when it was fully as close to him. + +Like a flash, Terry dove, intending to pass clean under it. He could not +know any thing about the portion beneath the surface, and was a little +startled when he found himself among leaves and a lot of small branches; +but he swam with the same vigor and skill when below as when above the +surface, and quickly fought his way through, rising on the other side a +considerable distance nearer land. + +But he gasped with terror, for during the brief period he lost a great +deal more than he gained. A furtive glance to the left showed him the +mist and spray flying high in air, as the muddy waters were tossed to +and fro by the rocks below: he was fearfully close to them. + +But he was also close to land, and he saw his chance; indeed, his only +one. A tree growing out toward the creek curved downward so that the +lower part of the trunk was within a few inches of the water. A short +time before the current had washed against it, but was now falling away +from it. + +The portion which inclined downward like a bow was several feet from +shore, and some distance below him. It will be seen, therefore, that the +thing for him to do was to bend all his efforts toward reaching that. If +he could advance far enough to allow the current to sweep him beneath, +or quite close to the tree, he could grasp it and save himself. + +"That's what's got to be done," was his conclusion the instant he saw +the crooked tree; "or it's good-by to Terry Clark and his rifle." + +He would succeed; he saw it the next moment. The curving tree seemed to +be sweeping up stream with frightful swiftness, but at the right second +Terry, by a supreme effort, threw himself partly out of the water, and +flinging both arms around the trunk, which was no more than six inches +in diameter, he held fast. + +The strain was great, and he felt his fingers slipping over the shaggy +bark, but he held on like grim death, and by a skillful upward hitch of +his body, locked his fingers above the trunk, and was safe; he was then +able to hold double his own weight. + +His next move was to throw his feet around the trunk, when it was an +easy matter for him to twist himself over on top, where he was as secure +as lying on his own trundle bed in the cabin at home. + +The instant his own safety was secured his whole soul was stirred by +anxiety for Fred Linden, who, he knew, was placed at more disadvantage +than he. Since he was further from shore than was he, and since the +latter had been able to save himself only by a hair's breadth, it was +clearly beyond the power of Fred to escape in the same manner--though it +might be that there was some other remote chance for him. + +The first glance that Terry cast over the muddy waters showed him his +friend, swimming manfully for shore, but so far out in the stream that +it was impossible for him to reach it before passing into the grip of +the rapids. + +"It's no use," called out Fred, in a voice in which there was no tremor +or shrinking; "I'm bound for the rapids, and here goes." + +And deliberately facing about, he swam coolly in the direction of the +boiling waters as though he were bathing in a still lake. + +"Be the powers, but he is plucky," muttered Terence, thrilled by the +sight; "if he can get through there alive, I'll be proud of him!" + +The rapids, of which I have made mention several times, were caused by a +series of irregular rocks, extending a hundred yards, in the space of +which the stream made a descent of a dozen or twenty feet. At ordinary +times the creek wound languidly around these obstructions, forming many +deep, clear pools of water, that afforded the best kind of fishing. +There was so much room for the current that there was no call for it to +make haste. + +But you can understand how different it was when the creek was swollen +by violent rains. It then dashed against the rocks, was thrown back, +plunged against others, whirled about and charged upon still others, by +which time it was a mass of seething foam, with the spray flying high in +air, and a faint rainbow showing through the mist when the sun was +shining. After fighting its way between and around and over these +obstructions, the current emerged at the bottom one mass of boiling foam +and dancing bubbles, which continued for several hundred feet before +the effects of the savage churning that the water had received could be +shaken off. + +Now, it would be idle to say that these rapids were as dangerous as the +famous whirlpool below Niagara Falls; for it would not only be untrue, +but it would shut me out from taking Fred Linden safely through them: +for I am bound to do that, since he is too good a fellow to sacrifice at +this early stage of my story, and you would not forgive me for doing so. + +But all the same the danger was great, and was enough to cause the +bravest man to shrink from attempting the passage. Fred would have been +glad to shrink from going through, but since that was beyond his power +he did the wisest course--faced about and kept his wits with him. + +There was one consolation--the suspense could last but a few moments; he +was sure to emerge from the lower falls within the space of a minute, +whether alive or dead. + +The first object that caught his eye was his broken canoe. Naturally it +was but a short distance below him, though it had gained a little while +he was struggling so hard to make land. It was turned on its side, +spinning sometimes one way and then whirling the other, according to the +whim of the current; then sea-sawing up and down, until all at once it +shot upward like a huge sturgeon, which sometimes flings its whole +length out of the water. + +Another point must be named that was gained by this facing about of Fred +Linden. Since he was going with the current he kept pace with every +thing else that was afloat, and he was therefore in no danger from the +trees and branches that had caused him so much, and, in fact, nearly all +his trouble. + +At the moment he was about to enter the boiling rapids he found himself +partly entangled in the branches of a large uprooted tree that was +dancing about in a crazy fashion. + +"This may help to shield me from being dashed against the rocks," was +his thought, as he seized hold of a thick limb close to the point where +it put out from the trunk; "at any rate I don't see that it can make +matters any worse." + +The act of Fred Linden in grasping the limb saved his life. The next +moment he was whirled hither and thither, half strangled with foam, head +now in air, now beneath the surface, his body grazing the jagged rocks +by the closest possible shave, and all the time shooting forward with +dizzying rapidity, until at last he emerged into the calmer water below +as well and hearty as he ever was in all his life. + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +TRAMPING SOUTHWARD. + + +An ejaculation of thankfulness escaped Fred Linden when he found himself +floating in the comparatively still water below the rapids, and he knew +that although he was pretty well bruised, none of his bones was broken. +He let go of the limb of the tree that had served him so well, and +flirting the water from his eyes, struck out with his old time vigor for +the shore, toward which he had started in the canoe. + +When Terry Clark saw his friend go spinning into the whirlpool, he +scrambled back from the trunk of the tree, on which he had found refuge, +and ran at full speed down the bank. Fast as he went, he was just in +time to see Fred swimming through the foaming waters toward the land. + +"Give me yer hand!" called out the delighted youngster; "there isn't +any body in the wide wurruld that could bate that onless it is mesilf, +and I couldn't do it." + +"Whew!" exclaimed Fred, as he laboriously clambered up the steep bank; +"that was the biggest lot of swimming and diving crowded into the space +of a minute or two that I ever knew; I wouldn't like to take such a trip +each day." + +"And I'm thinkin' that it'll be a few days after this whin we try it +agin," added Terry, delighted to see his loved comrade before him +unharmed; "I jist give up when I seen you plunge in among the rocks, and +was wonderin' how your father and mother and sister Edith would faal +when I should be luggin' your dead body home." + +"I'm thankful that you haven't _that_ to do," said Fred with an +earnestness that could not be mistaken; "but come, the clothes of us +both are dripping, and we can't get away any too soon." + +It was not far to walk, and a few minutes later they reached the other +side of the clearing, where the cluster of cabins stood. The first +living object on which their eyes rested was Brindle, lying on the +ground and chewing her cud with an air of contentment which belongs +exclusively to her kind, or rather kine. + +The boys laughed and Terry said: + +"If she had such a thing as conscience she wouldn't be takin' things in +that aisy style, after givin' us a duckin' that come nigh bein' our last +one." + +"You are right, Terry, but what did you do with that bell that Deerfoot +took away from the Winnebago?" + +"I lift it wid my gun on the other side of the creek; I didn't want it +tollin' our funeral knell all the time we was goin' through the rapids +and splittin' the rocks to pieces by bangin' our heads agin them." + +"It is just as well, for the creek will be so low that there will be no +danger in crossing it to-morrow, and you can get the bell again; well, +here we are at home." + +The boys separated, and at the same moment, each entered the cabin where +he lived. They were only a short distance apart. Several men and a +number of the lads, some older and some younger than the two in whom we +are interested, were moving about, and looked curiously at the dripping +figures. A couple asked an explanation of Fred, but he laughingly +answered that he would tell them after he had got dry, and immediately +disappeared in his own house. + +Mrs. Linden and Edith, her daughter, who was two years younger than +Fred, looked up in surprise when they saw the state of the lad. + +"Terry and I started to paddle across the creek, that is higher than +usual, and were overturned by a tree that stove in the side of the boat +and gave us a ducking." + +Having heard this explanation his folks seemed to feel no more curiosity +about it. The lad passed into his room, he being one of those fortunate +ones who had two complete suits of clothing, with the exception of cap +and shoes. It took him but a short time to effect the change, when he +reappeared, placing his foot and head gear near the fire, where they +would soon dry. + +The home of Fred Linden may be taken as a type of the best that were +found on the frontier. As a matter of course, it was made of logs, with +a stone chimney so huge that it projected like an irregular bay window +from the rear. The fire-place took up the greater part of one side of +the house, where the immense blocks of oak and hickory not only diffused +a cheery warmth through the lower portion, but sent fully one-half the +heat up the enormous throat of the chimney. + +The large room, which served for parlor, sitting and dining room, was +furnished simply, but comfortably, with plain chairs, a bench, +spinning-wheel, a rocking-chair, table, a few cheap pictures and the +indispensable cooking utensils. There was no stove, every thing being +prepared in the fire-place. At that day, as you well know, no one had +ever dreamed of using coal as an article of fuel, and the old-fashioned +stoves were exceedingly few in number. Carpets, of course, were not +thought of, though the rough floor was kept clean enough to serve as a +table for food. + +A rifle rested on two deer prongs over the mantel-piece, and there +seemed to be any number of knick-knacks about the room, though it would +have been found that nearly every one had a distinct use in the +household. + +Two rooms were connected on the same floor with the larger apartment. +One of these served as the sleeping quarters for the parents when Mr. +Linden was at home, and the other for Edith, while Fred occupied the +loft, which had the rafters for a ceiling, and extended over half the +lower floor. During the absence of the father, Edith and her mother used +one room, while Fred had the other. + +Noon had passed when the son came home, and his substantial dinner of +venison--procured some days before by Fred himself--brown bread, +potatoes, butter and milk, were awaiting him. Taking his place at the +table, he ate as only a rugged, growing boy of sixteen can eat. + +He made no further mention of the dangerous adventure that had just +befallen him, but gave the full particulars of Terry Clark's encounter +with the Winnebago Indian, who stole the bell from the cow, and tried to +have a little sport at the expense of the boy. It was an interesting +story, and mother and daughter listened with rapt attention. Edith, who +was a bright girl, and very fond of her brother, asked many questions +as to how the Winnebago looked, what he said, and whether he really +meant to kill poor Terry. Then her interest suddenly transferred itself +to Deerfoot, and she plied Fred with all sorts of queries, until he +laughingly told her that she was asking them two and three times over, +and really he had nothing more to tell. + +Then Fred drew out the moist and soiled bit of paper that he had taken +from his other clothes, and which contained the message of his father. +This, of course, caused a sensation, for it made known the fact that the +son was to join his parent for several months. It would be supposed that +this would cause some inconvenience, but in such a primitive community +all were neighbors, and the chores and work that would have been done by +Fred Linden would be cheerfully attended to by others. It was not until +many years afterward, when the settlements became towns, that the social +distinctions between families were formed. + +During all the conversation, after it had been agreed that Fred should +start alone on a hundred mile journey through the wild forest, nothing +was said about such a thing as the personal danger attending it. And +that, too, directly on the heels of the Winnebago's attempt on Terry +Clark. The habit of self-reliance was taught to the children of the +pioneers at such an early age, that their parents felt no solicitude, +where in these times they would have been tortured by anxiety, and, no +doubt, with abundant reason. + +Mrs. Bowlby was told of the mishap that had befallen her absent lord, +when she was asked by Edith to come over in the evening, but she was +assured that there was no cause for alarm, and so she felt none. She +wrote a letter to her husband, as did the wife of Hardin, and Fred's own +mother. These constituted all the extra luggage that he was to take, for +it would have been oppressive to load him with any thing in the nature +of a burden when the hunters had been absent only a few days. + +The decision was that Fred should make his start at early dawn the next +day. It was his purpose to reach camp on the fourth day; that would be +only an ordinary tramp for a rugged youngster like him, and he was +confident that he would have no trouble in keeping to the trail that had +been ridden over so recently by his friends. + +The little personal articles, as they may be called, which the lad would +require, were mostly the same as those of his father, and could be +utilized by the son. Such, as from the nature of things, could not +answer for both were tied into a compact package with his linen and +strapped over his shoulders with a thick blanket. His powder horn and +bullet pouch were not forgotten. An extra flint for his rifle was placed +in his pocket, and the weapon, which belonged to the lad himself, was +slung over his shoulder after the manner of a professional hunter. Then +making sure that nothing had been left behind, Fred gave his sister and +mother a warm hug and kiss apiece, called to them a jaunty good-by, and +set his face toward the Ozark mountains. + +It had become known that he was to start on quite a lengthy journey, and +those who were astir at that early hour called their hearty good wishes +to the lad, who was popular with all. Fred looked for Terry, and seeing +nothing of him, shouted his name as he passed by his door, but receiving +no response, concluded that he was still asleep. + +The heart of the boy was light as he strode at a rapid pace across the +clearing. He felt no inconvenience from the bruises received the day +before, during the passage of the rapids, and his natural buoyancy +caused him to look upon the tramp through the woods as a school boy +views his long expected vacation. There was no fear of any peril in the +stretch of unbroken forest that opened before him. It was fortunate +indeed for his peace of mind that he did not know what was awaiting him +in the dark arches and labyrinths of the almost interminable +wilderness. + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +A STRANGE ANIMAL. + + +When Fred Linden reached the creek where he had met with his stirring +adventure the day before, he could not help smiling. It had shrunk to +its usual volume, and was winding along as lazily as usual, the only +sign of the violent freshet being the _debris_ left along the bank and +the slightly roiled appearance of the current. + +The pioneers had so many occasions to cross this stream of water that +they had made several attempts to put up a rude but strong bridge; but +no matter what pains they took, they could never erect a structure +strong enough to withstand the furious freshets which, as you can well +understand, were often resistless. + +The result, therefore, was a reliance upon the canoes, some of which lay +on one side of the stream and some on the other; but a surprise awaited +young Linden. Seeing no boat in sight, he walked along the shore in +quest of one, for he was resolved to keep out of the water as long as he +could, though a lad on the frontier makes far less ado about dripping +garments than you or I. + +That which surprised him was the sight of a long, uprooted tree which, +coming down the creek, when the water was rapidly falling, had swung +around in such position that the roots caught fast in the clayey soil on +the bank, and the limbs were imbedded in the sand and mud on the other +shore. The result was as good a bridge as a foot traveler could want. + +"That will do until there comes another rise," he said, as he carefully +stepped upon the limbs, using them to reach the trunk, along which he +walked across the water, leaping to the ground on the other side. + +He stepped off with his elastic gait, keeping so close to the path that +he and Terry had taken the day before that he caught sight of the bushes +around the splintered trunk of the tree where the rifle captured from +the Winnebago had been hidden. + +"He'll be over early to get his prize," thought Fred; "for it is beyond +all worth to him. If it wouldn't make him feel so bad I would plague him +a little by hiding it." + +He parted the bushes and peered within. The first object on which his +eye fell was the battered old cow-bell that had played such a curious +part the day before, but he saw nothing of the gun itself; a brief but +hurried search convinced him that it was gone. + +"That will break Terry's heart," said he to himself; "he never owned a +gun, and now, to lose such a handsome one when it has been in his +possession only a brief while, will grieve him as much as the loss of a +dear friend." + +Just then young Linden caught the faint but clear notes of some one +whistling. He had but to listen a second or two, when he recognized it, +as he did the hearty laugh that followed. Looking to his right, he saw +Terry himself standing but a few paces away, and, so to speak, in his +"war paint." Bullet pouch, powder-horn, bundle on his back, and, more +than all, the splendid rifle was there. The round, chubby face, clear +eyes, and pug nose of the Irish lad seemed to radiate delight as he +made an elaborate salute to his friend, and, with mock gravity, doffed +his hat and scraped his foot along the ground. "Why, Terry," said the +delighted Fred, asking the useless question, "what is the meaning of +this?" + +"I'm going wid ye to the camp in the Ozark Mountains; do ye think I +could rist aisy, knowin' that ye had to travel such a long distance wid +no one to take care of ye?" + +"Well, now, that just pleases me more than I can tell you," said the +overjoyed Fred, slapping him on the shoulder; "there isn't any one in +the wide world whose company I want as bad as yours; I lay awake half of +last night trying to get up some plan by which I could have you with me, +but I couldn't think of any, and had to give it up. Father sent only for +me, and I didn't suppose that Mr. MacClaskey would spare you. Tell me +how you managed it." + +A quizzical expression came upon the face of the Irish lad, who, leaning +on his rifle, took off his hat and scratched his head for a few seconds +before answering. + +"Wal, bein' it's yersilf, Fred, I don't mind sayin' that it took some +strategy, as I suppose Deerfut would call it. Last night, after we had +eat our supper, and the chores were done wid, and Mr. MacClaskey had +took his seat by the fire and lit his pipe, and Mrs. MacClaskey had +started her spinning-wheel a-hummin', and the children had been packed +off to bed, I told the folks the whole story. I managed it in such a +style that the owld gentleman, who, you know, has spint two winters in +the mountains, said it would make the folks out there desprit short of +hands. I observed, in me careless way, that such was the case, and that +Mr. Linden had sent word to ye that he wanted ye to come, and, from +things that I knew, me own prisence would give great satisfaction to +sartin parties. Ye understand that I had yersilf in me eye, though I +didn't think there was nade of making it all plain how it was. + +"Wai, the owld gintleman wouldn't listen to me goin' away, but I managed +it so well that after awhile he kind of remarked that if the folks +wanted me, he'd no objection to me goin', as he belaved that I would +make more there than I would at home. + +"_That_ was the p'int," added Terry, with a wink, as he replaced his +cap; "and there was where me genius showed itself; I spoke about the big +lot of furs that had to be gathered, and how much money the hunters +would make, and what a chance there was for a risin' young man of +industrious habits. The owld gintleman took it in, and at last said, +bein' as I had the new gun, why he didn't know but what I might give it +a trial. + +"Wal, that was all I wanted. I started to run over last night to tell +ye, but afore I got to yer house I thought of this 'cute plan of +s'prisin' ye. I got all ready last night, ate breakfast airly, and was +down here and had me gun just as I observed ye makin' yer way across the +clearin' toward this spot." + +And so it came about that on this beautiful sunshiny day in autumn, Fred +Linden and Terry Clark set out, each with ammunition and loaded rifle, +for a hundred mile tramp toward the wild region of the Ozark Mountains. +The air was crisp and cool, and every thing joined to give them a +buoyancy of spirits such as falls to the lot only of rugged, growing +boys in bounding health. + +The two, however, had seen enough of life in the woods to know that the +sunshine and clear air would not last. They might continue until they +reached camp, but more than likely clouds, rain, chilly weather and +possibly a flurry of snow would overtake them. Winter was at hand, and +though, as I have shown, they were in quite a temperate clime, it was +subject to violent changes, as trying as those in a much more northern +latitude. + +Besides, the trail, although distinctly marked, did not lead over any +thing like even ground all the way. Long before they could reach the +vicinity of the camp the character of the country told of the wild, +rocky region, covering thousands of square miles, and known as the Ozark +Mountains. No route could lead to such a distance through an unsettled +country without crossing a number of streams, and passing through +regions that were any thing but attractive to the traveler. + +All this, however, gave just the element of danger and difficulty to the +enterprise that was one of the most delightful features to the young +lads, who stepped off with swinging gait to the southward. Had the +journey been smooth and even, it would have lost the major part of its +charms. + +The boys carried enough with them to give them all they were likely to +need in the way of food for twenty-four hours. It would have been little +trouble to take enough to last through the four days; but there was +something unprofessional in such a course which caused their souls to +rebel. The magnificent forest contained plenty of game, and they would +have been poor sportsmen, indeed, had they confessed by their action +that they distrusted their ability to procure it. + +The trail over which the two walked, Fred slightly in advance, was +marked with such distinctness by the hoofs of the six horses that had +passed along it in Indian file but a short time before that it was no +trouble for the boys to recognize it, nor were they likely to have any +difficulty in keeping to it throughout the whole distance. + +It was a little past noon, when they reached a small brook whose +current was so cold and clear that they took a long draught from it, and +then sat down and ate their simple lunch. They felt little fatigue, and +as a goodly number of miles remained to be traveled, according to the +schedule of Fred Linden, they leaped lightly across the waste and were +soon under way again. + +"Do you know," said Fred, later in the afternoon, "that I've been +thinking we have not paid enough attention to one or two important +matters." + +"What are they?" + +"I don't know what has become of Deerfoot, and we may not see him again; +but we know enough of him to understand that whatever he says is worth +remembering. Now, he told us yesterday that that Winnebago, from whom he +took that rifle, belonged to a party of those warriors, and it seems to +me that if they are anywhere, it is between us and the camp, and we are +likely to see more of them." + +"I'm of the same opinion with yersilf, but jest now there is somethin' +else that gives me concern." + +"What is that?" asked the surprised Fred, stopping and turning around. + +"Some person or animal has been followin' us for the last half hour. +I've heard it more than once, and it ain't fur off this very minute." + +The two boys stood still and looked over the trail along which they had +been traveling. Fred Linden's fear was that Terry had discovered the +presence of some of the very Winnebagos whom he dreaded, but he was +mistaken. That which they saw was not a person, but a strange animal of +such fierce mien and hostile intent that they instantly looked to their +rifles, knowing that a savage fight was inevitable. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII. + +A TROUBLESOME VISITOR. + + +There is no reason to discredit the truth of the accounts given by +hunters in the west of wild beasts of prodigious activity, strength and +ferocity, and that, belonging to no distinct class of animals, are a +mixture of the fiercest. Trappers and explorers in the wild regions of +the Rocky Mountains, sometimes meet a beast to which they have given the +expressive name of "Indian devil," whose power and daring are such that +a party of veteran hunters have been known to withdraw from a section +frequented by him, simply to avoid a fight. While the stories about them +may be exaggerated at times, there is no doubt that such animals exist, +and there is good reason to hold them in dread. + +The beast that Fred Linden and Terry Clark saw in the path before them +resembled a panther more than any animal they could call to mind. It +might have been described as a cross between a tiger and panther, had +that been possible. Fred had heard his father speak of those creatures +that were detested and feared, and he was sure that they were going to +have trouble with this one. How fortunate that each boy held a loaded +gun in his grasp! + +The action of the hybrid was as peculiar as his appearance. He seemed to +have been trotting quietly along the trail with his nose down, as though +following the scent, when he became aware that his game had stopped, and +were surveying him with some interest. The beast also came to an abrupt +halt and threw up his head, as though he was equally curious to learn +something about the party of the first part. + +Standing thus, with his nose quite high in the air, it struck both boys +that he showed a resemblance to a wolf as well as a panther. He was +larger than either, and there could be no doubt that he was amazingly +muscular, active and courageous. + +Thus stood the opposing parties, as they may be called, for a full +minute. Each looked steadily at the other, the space between them being +no more than fifty yards. Had it been less, both boys would have fired +at him, but they were afraid that such wounds as they could inflict +would only rouse his fury. One of the most marked peculiarities of the +"Indian devil" is his toughness, some of the stories in this respect +being almost incredible. + +All at once the beast seemed to be overcome with disgust for the two +youngsters. He whisked squarely about and trotted away, showing a bushy +fox-like tail that almost swept the ground. + +"I call that an insoolt!" exclaimed Terence Clark, bringing his gun to +his shoulder, taking quick aim and letting fly, before his companion +could object. He insisted that he had hit the animal, but it is likely +he was mistaken, for it gave no sign of being touched, trotting with the +same even step until it passed from sight around a bend in the path. + +"I hit him hard," insisted Terry, who proceeded to reload his piece; +"there's no doubt of the same." + +"If you had done so, he would have given some evidence of it, but there +was not the slightest." + +"Ye know that such creatures are tough," coolly remarked Terry; "and the +bullet has glanced off his side as from a rock." + +"If I could believe that," said the other, "I would hide somewhere until +he went away, for it would be only a waste of powder and ball to shoot +at him." + +"Hasn't he gone off? What are ye talking about?" + +"Gone away? Yes; for awhile, but we are not done with that beast yet; we +shall have trouble with him." + +"If we keep our guns loaded and our powder dry, we'll open on him, and +if we can't kill him we'll fill him with so much lead that he won't be +able to travel fast, and we'll bid him good-by and walk from him." + +The boys waited a few minutes, thinking possibly that the strange +creature would show himself again, but he did not appear, and they +turned about and resumed their journey. + +They were now on one of the best stretches of the trail. The ground was +even, there were no bowlders or rocks in the path to make walking +difficult, and the undergrowth, which in some places was quite an +obstruction, did not interfere. By the middle of the afternoon, Fred was +confident they were twenty miles at least on the road, and he said that +if they came upon an inviting place, they would go into camp for the +night. The package which each carried on his back was wrapped in a +blanket that could be used to lie upon by the fire, or in severe +weather, though they would have cared little had they owned nothing of +the kind. + +Their good spirits continued, and they were walking at a leisurely pace, +when a rustling in the bushes on the left caused them to look in that +direction. There stood the strange beast, not fifty feet away, head +erect, and staring at them with the same inquiring look that he showed +some time before. + +"I wonder how he likes a side view of us," said Terry, partly amused, +but somewhat frightened; "I think he is close enough for us to fetch him +this time." + +Fred was inclined to give him a shot, but he felt some doubt, and while +he was considering the question, the beast whisked about and vanished +like a flash. + +"He is a strange animal," said Fred, lowering his gun, which he was in +the act of raising; "and I am more satisfied now than ever that we shall +have trouble with him. The first time that we gain a fair shot, that is, +like we had just now, let's tumble him over. He may be as daring and +tough as the hunters say, but there isn't any animal tough enough to +withstand a couple of well-aimed bullets." + +"I agree wid ye--that is, after one was fired. That shot of mine was +well aimed and struck, but it takes somethin' more to bring him down, as +a colored friend of mine once said when a house tumbled over on his +head." + +"You saw how spry a creature he is, and if he should happen to drop down +upon us from the branch of a tree, those sharp claws of his would play +the mischief with us." + +Since there was no place in sight that suited for camping, Terry +reloaded, and they kept on. After the fright they had received, you may +be sure they maintained a close watch of the wood in every direction. As +yet they had seen no game from which to procure food, but they wanted +to go into camp near a spring or stream of water. The latter is +generally looked upon as one of the indispensables by a party of +campers, and it was not likely that the youths would have to travel far +before finding what they wanted. + +The sun had not yet dropped below the horizon when they struck the very +spot. There were the bubbling brook, lined by mossy banks, the small +open space, the tall column-like trunks; and the heavy overhanging +boughs, which, late though it was in the season, would allow but few +drops of a shower to find their way through. The air was cool, but there +were no signs of a storm. + +"There couldn't be a better place," said Fred, when he had noted all the +points; "here is every thing that a party can want, except it be supper, +which they ought to bring with them." + +"And somebody has been here ahead of us," added Terry, kicking apart the +ashes at the base of a large tree; "there's where the fire was +kindled." + +"No doubt it is where father and the rest of them spent the first night +after leaving home: that shows that we have made good progress, and, if +no accident happens, we shall arrive on time." + +"There is no need of our hurryin', as I understood that a gintleman once +obsarved whin they were goin' to hang him; if we are two or three days +late in gettin' there, what's the odds?" + +"None--though this fine weather can not last long, and when it is over, +I should like to be at the end of our journey, where we shall have good +shelter. I wonder what has become of the wild beast?" + +"Be the powers! but there he comes!" + +The words had hardly passed the lips of the startled Terry Clark, when +the strange animal was seen in the path in front of them, in precisely +the same position as when first noticed. He had evidently passed around +to the front, as though determined to study the boys from every point of +view. He seemed to have been standing for some minutes before discovered +by the boys, and was now observed approaching, as the Irish lad had +announced. + +He did not gallop or trot, but walked slowly, just as though having made +up his mind to take a select meal off the youngsters, he was going to do +so with the deliberation of an epicure that extracts the fullest +enjoyment from his delicacies. + +There was something unnerving in the sight of the frightful animal +approaching in this noiseless fashion, his jaws parted just enough to +show his long, white teeth, but giving utterance to no growl, or +threatening act, beyond the mere advance itself. His large, round eyes +had a phosphorescent glow, and the long, sinewy body and limbs were the +repository of a strength and activity that might well make a veteran +hunter timid about encountering him. + +"By gracious!" said Fred Linden; "we're in for it now; he doesn't mean +to wait for us to attack him, but is coming for us." + +"If I was called on to make a wager," said Terry, as cool as ever, "that +would be the view that I would take of the same." + +"You fire first and I will follow; take good aim, and send your bullet +right between the eyes." + +There was no time to spare, for the beast at that instant was within a +dozen yards. Terry Clark brought his rifle to his shoulder, sighted +quickly, and pulled the trigger. + +That he struck the creature was proven by his snarling growl and slight +upward leap; but instead of stopping, he broke into a gallop and came +straight on. + +Then Fred Linden aimed and fired, but he also failed to check the +advance of the animal. + + + + +CHAPTER XIV. + +A WELCOME ALLY. + + +Fred Linden, like his companion, aimed directly between the eyes of the +strange beast, and, like him, he struck the mark; but both shots only +served to awake the irrestrainable ferocity of the animal, which, with +another rasping howl and parted jaws, bounded toward them. Since both +weapons were discharged, and they had no other firearms, the boys were +almost helpless, and it may be said their enemy was upon them. + +"Run!" called out Fred, wheeling about and leaping toward a tree, behind +which he took refuge; but sturdy Terry had no thought of turning away +from such a foe. Throwing one foot back so as to steady himself, he +seized his fine rifle with both hands, near to the muzzle, and held it +so as to use it as a club or shillaleh. + +The brute was so close that he had no more than time to gather his +strength, and swing the heavy stock with might and main, when the animal +bounded at him straight from the ground. + +There was a "dull thud," as it may be called, and the stock crashed +against the side of the beast's head, knocking him a couple of yards to +the left, and almost at the feet of Fred Linden; but in point of fact +the blow did no harm except to thwart the creature for a second or two. + +He was now snarling, and gave utterance to one or two peculiar barking +sounds like a dog or wolf. His eyes were ablaze, and there could be no +doubt that his fury was at white heat. Crouching for an instant, he made +a bound for Terry, before he had time to balance himself to deliver his +second blow with the same power as the first. + +Fred Linden could not stand still and see his companion torn to shreds +in that fashion. He leaped from behind the tree, with his gun also +clubbed, and hastened to strike with all his might; but he was too +late. + +It was a curious fact, not understood at the moment, that the savage +creature, although he leaped straight at Terry, passed fully two feet +over his head, and that, too, when the lad was standing erect, and +braced to deliver his second blow. + +Striking on his belly, several paces beyond, the beast rolled over and +over, clawing, snapping, snarling, and beating the air, with +lightning-like blows. The leaves and dust flew in all directions, and +the foam which he spat from his jaws was flecked with blood. + +He continued rolling and struggling until he was a rod distant, and then +suddenly stopped, stone dead. + +In the excitement and swirl of the moment both Fred and Terry were +conscious that their guns were not the only ones that were fired. At the +instant the brute was in the act of rising from the ground a second time +for his leap, the sharp report of another rifle was heard. The peril was +so imminent that the lads could give no attention just then to any thing +but the immediate business in hand; but now, seeing their fearful foe +was dead, they knew that it was the third bullet that had done it, and +they glanced around to see who their friend was. + +No one was in sight, and they advanced to the carcass, which they were +somewhat timid about touching, even though convinced that it was beyond +the power of doing any more harm. They saw that both of their bullets +had struck the skull, though not at the precise points at which they +aimed. One had passed near the right eye of the nondescript, and must +have inflicted serious injury, but its toughness would have enabled it +to keep up the fight, and to have slain both of the boys before they +could have reloaded and fired a second time. + +A little search showed where the fatal wound had been given. Just in +front of the fore leg the lead had entered and gone through the heart. +No animal, so far as known, amounts to any thing after his heart has +been torn in twain, though he may live and move for a time. + +"I tell you, Terry, that I don't believe there is another beast in the +country that, after receiving two bullets in the head, like that, could +make such a fight." + +"I begs to corrict ye," said the other; "it was three shots, for do ye +not mind that I bored a hole through him when we first made his +acquaintance?" + +"So you claimed, but you haven't explained how it was that such a shot +could be made without leaving any wound?" + +"It may have healed up since then," suggested the Irish lad, who knew as +well as his companion that the first bullet did not touch the beast. + +"I hadn't thought of that," meekly observed Fred; "but there is one +thing certain, that if that last shot hadn't been fired, it would have +been the last of us: where could it have come from?" he asked, looking +around and finding the answer to his question in the sight of Deerfoot +the Shawanoe, who came from behind a clump of bushes on the other side +of the small stream. + +Fred uttered an exclamation of delight when he recognized the graceful +young warrior, who was holding the stock of his gun in his left hand, +with the barrel resting idly in the hollow of his right arm. Fred +jumped across the brook, with hand extended to greet him. + +"I'd rather see you than any person in the world," was the truthful +exclamation of the youth: "when you gave me the letter yesterday I +thought what a splendid trip this would be if Terry would go with me, +and behold, he has come! I would have liked to have you too but I didn't +dare say so, for I didn't think it was possible: but ever since we +started I have felt that we only lacked _you_ to make the party +complete. Now, ain't I glad to see you, and how are you, old fellow?" + +The lad in his boisterous way wrung the hand of Deerfoot and slapped him +on the shoulder; then laughed, and shook hands again with an enthusiasm +that left no doubt of the cordiality of his welcome. + +As for Deerfoot, he showed a gentle dignity that was never absent. His +faint smile lit up his handsome face, and he was pleased with the +pleasure of the others. + +"Deerfoot has seen the faces of his brothers not many times, but it +brings sunshine to his heart to meet them again." + +Then his countenance was crossed by an expression of gravity like an +eclipse passing over the face of the sun. + +"Is my brother ill, that he suffers so much?" + +This question referred to Terry Clark, Deerfoot looking over the +shoulder of Fred at the Irish lad behind him. Fred heard a curious +noise, and turned to learn what it meant. His friend had leaned his gun +against the nearest tree, so as to give his limbs free play, and was +flinging his arms aloft, and dancing a jig with a vigor that made it +look as if his legs were shot out, and back and forth, by some high +pressure engine. Now and then he flung his cap aloft, and, as it came +down, ducked his head under and dexterously caught it. His mouth was +puckered up most of the time, while he whistled with might and main, +though the energy of his general movements shut out all resemblance to a +tune. Occasionally he stopped whistling and broke into snatches of song +which, from the same cause, could not be identified. + +Fred Linden laughed. He was demonstrative, but not so much so as Terry. +Looking sideways at Deerfoot, he saw his eyes sparkling and the corners +of his mouth twitching. Rarely had he been amused as much as he now was +by the extravagant manifestations of the Irish lad, for whom he had +formed a strong regard. + +Deerfoot and Fred having turned their glances toward Terry, the latter +appeared to catch sight of them for the first time. With a whoop he +flung his hat higher than ever in the air, caught it with right side up +on his crown as it came down, and then shouted: + +"How are yees, me friends?" and made a dash for them. + +In his enthusiasm he forgot the brook running through a small hollow +between them. His feet went down in the depression without any knowledge +on his part, and he sprawled headlong, his cap rolling at the feet of +Deerfoot, who pushed the toe of his moccasin under the edge, and flung +it to him as he rose to his feet. + +"It's all the same, and a part of the show," laughed Terry, "as the wife +of the bear-keeper obsarved when the bear ate him up, and it's how are +ye, and how do ye ixpect to be, and what have ye to say for yersilf, and +why are ye so long answerin' me quistion?" + +Deerfoot simply smiled, and made no reply until Terry had replaced his +cap, and was done with his noisy greeting. Then he pointed to his gun +leaning against the tree, and said: + +"When my brother is in the woods, he should keep his gun within reach of +his arm." + +"Yer moral sentiments are corrict," remarked Terry, hurrying back--this +time without falling--to regain his piece. When he once more stood +beside the laughing Fred, the Shawanoe addressed both: + +"Are the guns of my brothers loaded?" + +Both felt the rebuke; they had violated one of the elementary rules of +the hunter's life, which is that the first thing to be done after +discharging a weapon is to reload it. Fred flushed, for he did not +remember that he had ever forgotten it before. + +"It was a piece of forgetfulness of which Terry and I ought to be +ashamed, but it was the first time we had ever had a fight with such a +beast as that: what do you call it, Deerfoot?" + +The Shawanoe shook his head to signify that he knew of no distinct name +for the animal, but he explained to the boys, what they already knew, +that it was a cross of some kind, concentrating in itself, as it seemed, +all the power, activity, daring and ferocity of the most dreaded animals +of the woods. Deerfoot could not deny that his shot had saved the boys +from being torn to shreds by the brute. Had it been a few seconds later, +or differently aimed, nothing could have saved them from its fury. + + + + +CHAPTER XV. + +"DEERFOOT WILL BE SENTINEL TO-NIGHT." + + +"We are on our way to the camp in the Ozarks," said Fred Linden; "and am +I mistaken in believing that you will go with us all the way?" + +"Such is the wish of Deerfoot," replied the Shawanoe, whereat Terry +Clark gave signs of breaking out again; but at a warning look from Fred +he restrained himself. + +"Deerfoot loves the Hunters of the Ozark; he has promised to make them a +visit; he will do so with his friends that he has found in the woods, +and who forget to keep their guns loaded." + +"No use!" exclaimed Terry, bounding in the air, striking his heels +together, and flinging his hat aloft with a loud whoop; "I must give +gintle exprission to me emotions, even though it makes a war with +England." + +The others showed no objection to this harmless ebullition, and he +speedily became quiet again. + +Had Fred Linden been intimately acquainted with Deerfoot, he would have +noticed that he was not entirely at ease. Now and then he darted glances +about him, as though he half expected the appearance of some unwelcome +person. The glances were so quick and furtive that neither Fred nor +Terry noticed them. + +"Deerfoot," said Fred, the three still standing; "we have concluded that +there isn't a better place along the trail for a camp." + +To the surprise of the boys, he shook his head in dissent. + +"Why, this is where father and the rest spent the night when they last +went this way." + +He nodded to signify that he agreed with them. + +"There were three of them, and they had their horses, that could not be +well hid; when my brothers go into camp for the night, they should take +a place where all who went by would not see them." + +It struck the others as curious that the Shawanoe should talk in that +fashion, when they could not see any cause for alarm; but they had +enough faith in him to accept his judgment on such an important matter. +He added: + +"Come with Deerfoot and he will show his brothers where they may slumber +in peace." + +Without any more explanation the Shawanoe moved down the bank of the +brook, following a course parallel to the flow of the water, the other +two keeping at his heels. He did not look around until he had gone more +than a hundred yards. Then it was that the little party found itself in +a rocky section, with a rough cavern on their right--that is, the +bowlders and rocks were jumbled together in such a fashion that there +was some resemblance to a cave. The chief merit of the place, however, +was the privacy that it afforded, rather than the strength as a means of +defense against an enemy. + +"This suits very well," said Fred, taking in all the points at a glance; +"here is a rocky bed on which we can start a fire, and the other rocks +and bowlders will keep off the wind, if there happens to be any; the +water is handy, if we should need it, and it is certain that we are not +as likely to be seen here as where we first selected." + +"Deerfut," said Terry, who was nosing about, "I obsarve ashes here, as +though somebody had been ahead of us." + +"Deerfoot built a fire but a few moons ago, and staid over night." + +"If it was good enough for ye, I can stand it," said Terry, "which is +the remark me uncle made when the Duke of Argyle asked him to stay to +dinner." + +The boys unfastened the bundles from their backs and prepared to spend +the night where they were. The blankets were spread on the flinty floor, +and Deerfoot, setting down his gun beside theirs, helped to gather the +wood with which to keep a fire burning. The three were so active that it +took but a short time to collect all that was needed. This was thrown +into one pile, from which it could be withdrawn as wanted. + +I must give you a better idea of the spot where the three decided to +spend their first night in the woods together. They had walked northward +from the trail, and, so far as they could see, the country was of the +most broken nature, though the abundance of trees and undergrowth did +not permit an extended view. Two masses of stone rose to the height of a +dozen feet, and were separated by about the same distance. These rough +walls extended back to a distance of three or four yards, where they +came against a similar formation. Thus, as may be said, there were three +sides to an inclosure, that part facing the brook being entirely open. +On top of these supports were tumbled an irregular mass of bowlders and +rocks which formed the roof. The latter had so many openings that it was +as well ventilated as the roof of the house about which the Arkansas +Traveler tells us. + +The rear part of the cavern, if it may be allowed that name, was stone, +while the front was earth. Near the center, Deerfoot had kindled his +fire when he staid there, the smoke finding ready escape through the +openings above. Such a fire might give some warmth were it needed, but +the blaze was so well hidden by the surrounding walls that it was not +likely to be seen by any one passing no nigher than fifty feet: therein +lay the reason why it was selected by Deerfoot. + +After piling up the fuel for the night, the youths threw some branches +on the ground, near the rear of the cavern, and then spread their +blankets over them. The Shawanoe carried no blanket with him, so it was +expected that he would share the couch of his friends. + +While the three were busying themselves in this manner, Fred Linden was +disturbed by a suspicion that had been growing from the moment Deerfoot +expressed dissatisfaction with the spot selected for their camp. This +suspicion was that the young Indian had a fear of something to which, as +yet, he had made no reference. + +I have already shown that it was not generally considered a dangerous +business in which the hunters of Ozark engaged. The rough, outdoor life +sometimes brought with it hardships, and occasionally sufferings, but +chief among the dangers was not that from Indians. It was known that +now and then the red men fired spiteful shots at the invaders of their +hunting grounds (as was the case with Michael Clark, the father of +Terence), but in this section of the west that particular peril was +deemed less than that which threatened from wild beasts. There was no +instance of the hunters having been molested on their way to and from +the trapping regions: why then this special caution of Deerfoot? + +Fred Linden, while turning these thoughts over in his mind, gave but the +one answer--_the Winnebago_. He was an intruder in that part of +Louisiana, and he had shown by his acts how ready he was to shed the +blood of innocent white persons. It was not a supposition merely that +this fierce warrior had companions. The keen eyes of Deerfoot had +discovered the proofs that there were a half dozen, at least, with him, +and from whom he separated for a short time while he entered into the +"side speculation" with Brindle and her bell; so it will be seen that +Fred Linden was not only right in his suspicion that the Wolf had to do +with the unrest of Deerfoot, but that the latter possessed good cause +for his misgiving. + +The Winnebagos, having drifted so far away from their own hunting +grounds into this part of the world, were either going further from +home, or were on their way back. Had the Wolf behaved himself, the band +would have gone and come without the knowledge of any of the pioneers, +unless there was a chance meeting in the wood, when it is not likely +that any harm would have resulted. + +But one of the Winnebagos was struck in the face by a white boy, while a +young Indian, a friend of the latter, having "got the drop" on the Wolf, +had taken his gun from him. In other words, the crime of assault and +robbery had been committed. + +Would the rest of the Winnebagos pocket the outrage and meekly withdraw +from the country? + +That, it would be seen, was the all important question, upon which great +events, as affecting the friends in whom we are interested, hinged. + +It was in violation of the nature of the American race that any member +thereof should refuse to resent an indignity, when there was a chance +of doing so. The Winnebagos had the best of reasons for believing that, +by prowling around the settlement, or along the trail leading thereto, +they would soon gain an opportunity to wipe out the disgrace put upon +the Wolf, and, if not able to get back the gun that had been taken from +him, would be able to procure another. + +The fact that this valuable weapon was carried in the hands of a boy, +who had started to tramp through the woods to a point a hundred miles +off, and that it was not at all impossible that the Winnebagos found, or +would find it out, gave emphasis to the cause of Deerfoot's uneasiness. + +It is worthy of note that, while Terry Clark never once took this view +of the situation, it occurred to his friend Fred, who waited for the +Shawanoe to make some reference to it. + +"He knows best, and if he doesn't choose to say any thing about it, +there is no call for me to do so." + +The shadows of night were creeping through the wood when the fire was +started, and the smoke began stealing upward through the openings in +the rocky roof. + +"Deerfoot," said Fred, when the fire crackled brightly, "the rule is, +that a party in camp like this, must have some one on guard while the +others sleep. I don't know as there is any need now, but if you think +so, let Terry and me do it, for we are not in need of sleep." + +The Shawanoe looked at him intently for a moment as though he would read +his thoughts, and then quietly said: + +"Deerfoot will be sentinel to-night!" + + + + +CHAPTER XVI. + +AROUND THE CAMP-FIRE. + + +Inasmuch as Terry and Fred had enough lunch left to furnish all that was +wanted, Deerfoot decided not to hunt for any thing else. At that hour, +when it was growing dark, it would have been hard to find any game; but +he told them that at no great distance above, the tiny brook issued from +a small lake, where he could easily get all the fish he wanted. + +Accordingly, the fire having been started at the rear of the cavern, +where the smoke found free vent, the three sat within a circle of light, +and partook of the coarse bread and cold venison. The latter was tough, +but it could not withstand the teeth of the two youths, whose appetites +were such as wait on high health. + +It was noticeable that the young Shawanoe ate no more than half as much +as each of the others. Then saying that he wished to view the camp from +the outside, he went out in front of the cavern. He remarked that he +would be gone only a few minutes, but he took his gun with him. + +When Deerfoot emerged from the rude shelter it was fully dark. There was +a moon in the sky, but the density of the surrounding forest kept out +the rays, so that the gloom could not be penetrated to any distance. + +He stood still and listened. His sense of hearing, like that of sight, +was trained to a wonderfully fine point, as you have learned in the +incidents previously related, so that faint noises, such as you or I +could not have detected, would have told their full story to him. + +But nothing more than what may be called the natural sounds of the wood +fell on his ear. Then the young Indian leaped lightly across the small +brook in front of the cavern and walked some two rods beyond, where he +paused and listened again. After this he made a complete circuit of the +cavern. This compelled him to cross the little stream once more, +brought him back to the mouth of the retreat, and caused him also to +climb over a great deal of broken ground, but a shadow could not have +made the circuit more noiselessly. He stopped several times and listened +with the same profound attention, occasionally looking toward the cavern +within which his friends were eating their supper and talking together +in low, guarded tones. He caught the murmur of their voices, which would +have been audible to no one else beyond a dozen feet. Just above the +large opening in the cavern, through which most of the smoke found its +way, a faint, dull glow showed that the camp-fire was burning below. + +The inspection made by Deerfoot was satisfactory; he had discovered no +sign of any prowling enemy, and the party could not have found a place +where there was less likelihood of disturbance by any foes who were in +the neighborhood. It would seem indeed that nothing short of a most +exceptional mishap could bring any danger near. So he once more entered +the cavern, and seated himself by the fire, upon which Fred Linden had +just thrown a bundle of sticks that filled the cavern with a light like +that of noonday. + +Terry insisted that Deerfoot should take his blanket, because the +Shawanoe had none, and the one belonging to Fred Linden was enough for +the others. Deerfoot at first declined, but his young friend persevered, +so the half-dozen yards of heavy stuff were spread on the rock and earth +floor of the cabin, and then Deerfoot disposed of himself in a lolling +attitude, reclining on his left elbow, while he looked across and +through the blaze at his two friends, who were stretched out in almost a +similar attitude. It will be borne in mind that he was nearer the mouth +of the cavern than were the others: in fact he was about half-way +between where they were stretched and the open air. Fred and Terry did +not notice this, or, if they did, they supposed it was accidental, +though it was done with forethought by the sagacious young Shawanoe. + +The evening was yet young, and the circumstances were such as to make +the boys talk at a rate that almost overwhelmed Deerfoot, who always +showed a deliberation in his speech, as if he weighed each word before +allowing it to fall from his lips. + +Fred and Terry had formed a strong liking for the young Shawanoe, and +since he seemed to be in fine spirits, they plied him with questions +until they learned the chief facts in his history. When the long +conversation ended they knew that Deerfoot was the son of a Shawanoe +chief, and that he was born in the Dark and Bloody Ground. When but a +small boy he was like a spitting wildcat in his hatred of the white +people, and it was not until he was wounded and nearly beaten to death, +that he could be taken prisoner on one of the excursions of his people +against the white settlements. + +He fell into goods hands and was nursed back to strength. Not only that, +but those that had him in direct charge told him about God, who made the +world, who loved His creatures, and who sorrowed to see them trying to +harm each other, and who had sent His only Son to die for His lost +children. It was a wonderful story to which Deerfoot listened with rapt +attention, and all in time (as you have been told in another place), +the extraordinary young Shawanoe became a devout follower of the meek +and lowly One. He felt that he could never repay the whites for showing +him the way to eternal life. Thenceforward he became their friend, and +devoted his life to protecting them against the enmity of the red men. + +Deerfoot told Fred and Terry something about his stirring experiences +with Ned Preston and Wildblossom Brown, and afterward with Jack Carleton +and Otto Relstaub, but did not hint at one-tenth the services he had +rendered the white people. Of all the fierce tribes that made portions +of Ohio and Kentucky like sheol on earth, the Shawanoes were the worst: +they were the Apaches of the last century. Deerfoot had fallen into +their hands and many of his most desperate encounters were with them. +Finally the efforts to take him prisoner became so far reaching that he +saw that his usefulness as a friend of the settlements was at end. The +rage of the Shawanoes was such that it may be said that some of their +campaigns were planned with the sole purpose of capturing the young +renegade, whom they hated with a hatred like that of the tigers of the +jungle. + +You will see, therefore, that not only was the usefulness of Deerfoot as +an ally of the whites ended, but he became even an element of danger to +them. He had been urged to make his home with those who held him in such +high regard, but he could not do so. He quietly withdrew from the +country and crossed the Mississippi into the vast Louisiana Territory. +There he had lived for a couple of years, and there he expected to end +his days. + +"Deerfoot," said Fred Linden, when his remarkable narration had ended, +"Terry and I are not new hands in the woods, and we would be much better +satisfied if you would allow us to share the night in watching with +you." + +"Why does my brother think of danger?" + +"Because _you_ do; I know it by your actions." + +The quickness of this reply struck Deerfoot favorably. He did not think +that his conduct had been noticed, and he was gratified that his friend +was so observant. That there should be no mistake about his suspicions, +Fred added: + +"I don't know whether you have seen that Winnebago or not since you +started him on the run yesterday; he may be still running, but I am +quite sure, from the way you have behaved, that you suspect that he and +the rest of his companions are prowling through the woods, on the +lookout for a chance to revenge themselves." + +Deerfoot's face glowed. Fred Linden had hit the nail on the head. + +"My brother speaks the words of truth; his thoughts are the thoughts of +Deerfoot." + +Terry Clark looked at his companion in astonishment. + +"How come ye to know all that, Fred?" + +"I see nothing remarkable about it; all I had to do was to observe the +actions of Deerfoot since he joined us to-day. In the first place, he +wouldn't have made us change our camping place if he hadn't had some +misgiving, and then the way he has been mousing around the outside, and +his decision to keep watch to-night: why what could tell the story more +plainly?" + +"Begorrah," said the admiring Terry, "ye are not such a big fool as you +look to be; I never thought of that." + +"Which looks as if you are a bigger dunce than you seem; but," added +Fred, turning toward the Shawanoe, "have you seen any thing of the +Winnebagos?" + +"Deerfoot has seen their footprints in the woods; they are on the watch +for his white brothers that they may gain their scalps, because the gun +of the Wolf was taken from him." + +"They seem to have hard work in finding us: where do those Winnebagos +come from?" + +Deerfoot pointed to the northward, or rather to a little east of north. + +"Their hunting grounds are many suns' travel that way." + +"Why do the spalpeens come down in this part of the world, and why don't +they behave thimselves whin they do?" demanded Terry, with some +indignation. + +Deerfoot shook his head, as though the question was more than he could +answer. + +"Deerfoot has met Shawanoes and Sacs and Wyandottes and Pawnees far away +from their villages and hunting grounds, besides the strange Indians +who come much further from the setting sun. The red men travel whither +they will. Why the Winnebagos passed near the home of my brothers only +they can tell." + +"Well, they're a bad lot," said Terry, "to try the mean trick they did +on me; though," he added the next moment, "I'm glad they done the same, +for if they hadn't, how would I've got hold of this lovely gun? Do ye +think we shall have any more trouble with them?" + +"Deerfoot believes there will be trouble, and it will come soon!" + +"Well, if it does, all ye have to do is to take away the rist of their +guns and set 'em on the run home agin." + + + + +CHAPTER XVII. + +A SUSPICIOUS SOUND. + + +By and by Fred Linden and Terry Clark became drowsy. Devoutly kneeling, +they spent several minutes in prayer, and then stretched out on a single +blanket, with their backs toward each other, and the face of Fred in +such a position that he could look across the blaze at Deerfoot on the +other side. The latter had remained still and motionless, while the +lads, remembering the lesson they had learned at their mothers' knee, +asked their Heavenly Father to hold them in His keeping. The young +Shawanoe, who spent many an hour in communion with his Maker, was +touched to see that his friends did not forget their duty. + +Deerfoot stirred the burning wood so that it threw out more light, and +then, reclining on his left elbow, so that the illumination came +directly in his face (the worst direction possible), he drew from +beneath his hunting-shirt the small Bible, that had been presented to +him by the Preston family, and began reading it. + +Fred Linden, who had his eyes fixed upon him, was so interested that his +drowsiness departed. Without moving he watched him closely. He saw him +turning the leaves back and forth, as if looking for some place he had +in mind. It took him but a minute to find it, when, still leaning on his +elbow, and with the light striking his face and the printed page, he +seemed to become so absorbed as to lose all consciousness of his +surroundings. + +Fred Linden, without betraying that he was awake, surveyed this +remarkable performance with an admiration that for the moment made his +eyes misty with emotion. + +The eyes of Deerfoot were downcast, as he read the page, so that they +could not be seen but the handsome oval face; the luxuriant black hair, +with the eagle feathers thrust into the crown; the rows of gleaming +beads around the neck; the deerskin shirt that covered the breast and +arms to the wrists, on the left one of which shone the golden bracelet; +the red sash, behind which were shoved the knife and tomahawk; the +brilliant fringes of the hunting-shirt and leggins; the small, +ornamented moccasins; all these of themselves made a striking figure; +but Fred, handsome and rugged himself, who was not accustomed to see any +thing like beauty in the human form, was struck with the symmetry of the +figure before him. He particularly noticed the tapering legs, and could +not help saying to himself: + +"There is no Indian or white man that can run as fast as he." + +And the mental declaration of the lad was truth. The fleetness of the +young warrior had never been equaled, and he had never yet met the +person whom he could not outrun with ease and without putting forth his +whole speed. + +"He don't look strong, but he is the last person that I would want to +meet in a fight; I'll bet he is so quick that he could dodge the bullet +fired at him." + +I must draw the line here: Deerfoot could not do any thing of the kind. + +"And he is reading his Bible! I never in all my life saw an Indian who +could read a word of print, or do more than sign his name with a cross +or some figure like a bug: I wonder whether we couldn't hire him to +teach school for us at Greville." + +Fred thought a great many queer things about his new friend, but lay +watching him fully ten minutes before he spoke. Then, when he saw him +turn a leaf, he said in a low voice: + +"Deerfoot, will you please read aloud?" + +Fred expected that the Shawanoe would start and look up in surprise; but +he never raised his eyes, or gave the least sign that these words of his +were unexpected. He knew that Fred was watching him from the first, and +so, before the words were more than fairly out of his mouth, Deerfoot +began reading in a low, impressive monotone, as though he had merely +resumed, after turning over the leaf. + +"After this I beheld, and lo! a great multitude, which no man could +number, of all nations, and kindred, and people, and tongues, stood +before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and +palms in their hands; + +"And all the angels stood round about the throne, and about the elders, +and the four beasts, and fell before the throne on their faces and +worshiped God. + +"Singing, Amen; blessing and glory and wisdom and thanksgiving and honor +and power and might be unto our God for ever and for ever, Amen. + +"And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, Who are these which are +arrayed in white robes? and whence came they? + +"And I said unto him, sir, thou knowest. And he said unto me, these are +they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes +and made them white in the blood of the Lamb. + +"Therefore are they before the throne of God, and serve Him day and +night in His temple; and He that sitteth on the throne shall dwell among +them. + +"They shall hunger no more, neither shall they thirst any more; neither +shall the sun light on them, nor any heat. + +"For the Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall feed them, and +shall lead them unto living fountains of waters; and God shall wipe +away all tears from their eyes." + +Deerfoot read a few minutes longer from his favorite part in the New +Testament and then ceased. He had not lifted his eyes from the page, but +he knew that Fred Linden was asleep. He observed it in his breathing, +which was as soft as that of an infant. + +The rocky cavern, the smoldering camp-fire, the two sleeping boys, the +motionless Indian stretched out and reading his Bible by the faint +light, the great, solemn forest walling them in, the profound stillness +that reigned everywhere: these were elements in a picture the like of +which it may be said (except where Deerfoot was one of the figures), had +never been seen anywhere else, and was not likely ever to be seen again. + +The fire sank lower and the light on the printed page became so dim that +even the keen eyes of the young Shawanoe could not trace the words. He +looked at the embers as if asking himself whether he should renew the +blaze and continue reading. But the hour for meditation had come, and he +closed the book. Looking fondly at the stiff, wooden cover, he touched +his lips with infinite tenderness to it, and carefully placed it in the +inner receptacle of his hunting-shirt, murmuring as he did so: + +"The best friend that Deerfoot ever knew!" + +O light of life! Comforter of the sorrowing heart! Consoler of the +stricken soul! + +In the flush of bounding health, when the passions throb high, we may +not heed thy blessed teachings, but when man's promises prove false, and +the head bows before the endless strife, and woes overwhelm us like a +flood, there is relief, there is light, there is life in Thee. The +wicked may jeer, the learned may scoff, the powerful may despise, the +favored may turn away, but there comes the time when learning, gifts, +wealth, power, beauty and all the world can give turn to ashes, and they +have no boon compared to Thine. "And God shall wipe away all tears from +their eyes." The pampered monarch, the dying beggar, the statesman, the +slave, the mother bowed with woe, the father shaken with grief, +childhood in its innocence, man in his strength, beauty in its scorn, +trembling old age, can find no balm but in Thee. Better that the sun +should be blotted from the heavens and the earth left a trackless void +than that Thy light should be denied the world. + +Deerfoot lay flat on his face, his arms crossed so that his head and +shoulders were held a few inches above the flinty floor, and his dark +eyes were fixed on the embers in front. It was his favorite enjoyment, +when the stirring incidents of the day were done, and he had read from +the only Book he ever wanted to read, to spend a time in meditating on +the truths that it may be said had become a part of his very being. + +Many a time had he lain thus, as motionless as if dead, while the +wonderful brain was busy with thoughts that stirred the profoundest +depths of his nature. There are beliefs that come to us at which reason +may laugh, but which it can not shake or disturb. There are questions +that the glib unbeliever may ask that we can not answer. But away down +in our hearts is a faith which the whole world can not remove, and which +can be uprooted only by ourselves. Woe to him who dares lay violent +hands upon it! + +Deerfoot no more doubted that he and every one was in the direct keeping +of God than he doubted that he breathed and moved. He knew that the +Great Spirit had caused him to be made a prisoner by whites so that he +might learn the way of life; he knew that He had given him an insight +into the mysteries of His word that was denied to many others. A deep, +outstretching sympathy for those less favored than he suffused his whole +being. Gladly would he have given up his life in pain and torture and +agony, as did One in the dim long ago, if by so doing he could earn the +smile of his Heavenly Father. + +But this remarkable young Christian felt that he was doing the work +appointed for him to do. Here and there he dropped a word that proved to +be seed sown upon good ground, and which had borne its fruit. He had met +his enemies in fair combat and had never taken wrong advantage of them: +his marvelous bow and arrow, and his still more effective rifle, had +brought many a dusky miscreant low, but he had used his amazing gifts in +the line of duty, and for the good of others. Would that he could have +won them by love, but it was not in the nature of things that he should +do so. He had "broken the Bread of Life" to more than one, and he hoped +that ere he should be called home, he should point the way to others. + +Suddenly he raised his chin from his hands and turned his head slightly +to one side. His ear, whose acuteness was almost beyond belief, had +caught a suspicious sound. Profound as might be the meditation of the +Shawanoe, he could never forget his surroundings. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII. + +LIKE A THIEF IN THE NIGHT. + + +The crisp autumn night had not reached its turn when the full moon +climbed from behind the straggling clouds obscuring her face, into the +clear air above, and shone down on the wilderness, with the same calm +splendor with which it had shone during the ages before the foot of a +white man had rested on the soil of our country. Here and there, at +widely-separated points, as the orb moved toward the zenith, could be +seen the star-like twinkles of light which showed where the sparse +settlements had been planted by the pioneers. At intervals, too, miles +away from the clearings, could be distinguished the glimmer of the +hunters' camp-fires, where the hardy men had lain down wrapped in their +blankets, and to sleep the sleep of health. Still further away, by the +side of some calmly flowing river or creek, were the ragged tepees of +the wild Indians. Mountain, forest and stream made up the landscape, +that was illuminated by the moon on the night when Fred Linden and Terry +Clark lay down in slumber by the fire in the cavern, and Deerfoot the +Shawanoe took upon himself the duty of acting as a sentinel over them. + +It was not yet midnight when the figure of a crouching Indian emerged +like a shadow from the little gully which marked the course of the tiny +stream in front of the camp. Just at the point where he appeared, a few +rays of the moonlight found their way among the limbs, and added +impressiveness to his appearance. A glance would have told that he had +approached at the most stealthy gait of which he was capable, and was +still using all the skill at his command. + +Finding himself within the faint light of the moon, he straightened up, +like one who is not certain of his surroundings and is using his eyes +and ears to their utmost. Standing erect in this manner he showed +himself to be a full-grown warrior in middle life, of strong limbs and +frame, and attired in the usual dress of his people. + +The long, coarse hair dangled about the shoulders, some of the strands +having fallen forward in front of the chest, at the time his head drew +it over while in a crouching posture. It grew so low on his forehead +that no more than an inch was between the roots and shaggy eyebrows. +Beneath these the eyes glittered like those of a snake. The ugly +features were made more ugly by the different colored paints--most of it +black--that was daubed over them, and the countenance was distorted by a +swelling recently produced. + +The breast and arms were covered by deerskin, a fringe running down in +front to the belt, which held his tomahawk. The frightful horn-handled +knife was tightly grasped in his right hand. Below the belt was +breechcloth, followed by leggins and moccasins, but it was noticeable +that he carried no rifle with him. + +Perhaps you have guessed the reason; he had none to carry, for he was +the Wolf who had been deprived of his valuable weapon on the day before +by Deerfoot the Shawanoe. + +As was learned in due time, the Winnebago, after being despoiled by +Deerfoot, had made all haste to rejoin his band, that were encamped at +no great distance from Greville. When he told his brother warriors of +the indignity to which he had been subjected, they were as rampart as he +for revenge. They were on the point of starting for a settlement, +intending to await the chance to shoot down some of the unsuspecting +people, when the leader, a man of iron will, interposed. + +He said that according to the story of the Wolf himself, his gun had +been taken from him by a single warrior. A Winnebago ought to be ashamed +to confess such a thing, and the only way by which the Wolf could redeem +himself was to recover his gun unaided by any of his people. Let him +come back to the party with his rifle and then they would risk their +lives a dozen times over to repay the young Shawanoe and his youthful +friend (they knew nothing about Fred Linden) for the insult they had put +upon one of the leading warriors of the Winnebago tribe. + +You can well understand how displeasing this decision was to the Wolf, +but there was no help for it. The warrior who gave the order was not +only the leader of the company, but the principal chief of the tribe. No +one dared to dispute his command, and he intimated that it was not only +necessary for the Wolf to recover his gun in order to enlist the +services of the rest, but his standing at home would be compromised if +he went back without his rifle and the story that it had been taken from +him by a single warrior of another tribe. + +From this you will understand the eagerness with which the Wolf set out +to regain the weapon. + +The fact that Fred Linden and Terry Clark left Greville the next morning +after the affair, mixed matters to that extent that, for a time, the +Winnebago was at fault. It was his intention to prowl around the +settlement, awaiting his chance, for he suspected that Deerfoot had gone +thither with the lad who had given the Wolf such a blow in the face; but +the discovery of the footprints of the two boys leading to the southward +mystified the Indian. He was quite close to the creek, and the sun had +crossed the meridian at the time this discovery was made. It was natural +that he should look for the trail of the Shawanoe, but he could not find +it. + +Finally, with a half-suspicion of the truth, the Wolf went into the +settlement to make inquiries. He could speak enough broken English to +make himself understood, and, as it so happened, it was Mr. MacClaskey +himself whom he accosted. He told the inquirer the truth, adding that +Terry took with him a gun that was captured from a vagabond Indian. But +for that he would not have been allowed to go, for there was but one +rifle in the family, which the settler would trust in no hands but his +own for any length of time. + +The Winnebago was shrewd enough to disarm any doubt that might have been +felt about himself. It was the rule in the settlement to show kindness +to every wandering Indian that visited them, and no one dreamed that any +thing was to be feared from the Wolf. But his heart was full of exulting +malignancy. He knew who had the gun, and aware that the two boys had +started for the camp of the Ozarks, he understood where to look for it. +The fact that the Winnebago had no gun with him would have caused the +belief that he was the vagabond Indian, had he not explained that he +left it in the woods as a token of comity. + +The Wolf sauntered back until he was across the stream and out of sight. +Then he sped along the trail, with a long, loping trot, which his race +can maintain for hours without fatigue. He had a long distance to +travel, but he reached the scene of the encounter with the strange +animal, just as it was growing dark. + +At this point, he showed admirable woodcraft. The signs on the ground +puzzled him for a time, but there was the carcass of the animal, and by +and by he found the imprints of the small moccasins, which told him that +the young Shawanoe had rejoined the others at this point. + +As you can well believe, this was any thing but a pleasant discovery, +for, superior as was the strength of the Winnebago, he would have +preferred to meet the two boys, even though both were armed, than to +find himself face to face again with the remarkable Indian youth. + +But there was no help for it, and the dusky Winnebago compressed his +coppery lips with the resolve that the gun should be in his hands before +the rising of the morrow's sun. + +The light was rapidly fading among the trees and he improved what was +left of it. Prowling around the spot in a circle, with his nose close to +the ground, he discovered that the three youths had started along the +bank of the brook toward its head. + +Thereupon the Winnebago formed the correct conclusion; they had moved +from the main trail (doubtless on the suggestion of the young Shawanoe), +in search of some place to encamp where there would be less danger of +detection. + +By the time the Wolf had satisfied himself on this point, it had become +too dark among the trees for his eyes to detect the trail, which at +mid-day would have been as distinct as a beaten path. He therefore +adopted the plan of which I have made mention elsewhere: he followed a +general rule. + +The conclusion being that the parties for whom he was searching had +located themselves somewhere along the creek, it was useless to try and +follow the footprints, though there were points here and there where the +sense of touch might have helped him. He decided to creep stealthily up +stream until he found the camp, and then bide his time. + +It is hard to form an idea of the extreme care with which this was done. +Had the Winnebago not known of the presence of Deerfoot, he would not +have taken half the time consumed, but he had seen enough of that +wonderful youth to know that it would require more than a child to +outwit him. + +At a point about half way between the trail and the camp among the +rocks, the Wolf thought his hands touched some imprints in the earth +which showed that the three had turned to the right and gone deeper into +the woods. It required reconnoitering before he discovered his mistake. + +With the same amazing patience he renewed his stealthy progress up the +stream, until at last he emerged into the moonlight and found that at +last he had reached the spot for which he had hunted so long. + +It so happened that as he straightened up, he looked directly into the +mouth of the cave and saw the dull glow of the camp-fire, like the open +eye of some monster. Not only that, but he observed the three forms +stretched out by it. The heart of the savage throbbed with pleasure, for +he felt that success had come at last. + +With the same absolute noiselessness he began creeping into the mouth of +the cavern. One of the embers fell apart with a soft rustle, which +caused him to stop and hold his breath lest the sleepers should awake. +But they did not stir, and in a minute he resumed his advance. + +The two white lads had flung the blankets from their faces, so that he +saw Fred Linden plainly, and enough of the other to identify him as the +one who had smitten him. Nearer to the Winnebago than they was the third +form, which he knew equally well. + +"It is the Shawanoe," was his thought; "I will bury my knife in his +heart and then slay the others." + +A minute later he reached forward his upraised right hand and suddenly +brought it down with a force that pinned the blanket to the earth. But +to his unspeakable disgust Deerfoot was not within it. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX. + +SHAWANOE AND WINNEBAGO. + + +While Fred Linden and Terry Clark lay in that part of the cavern where +the floor was of rock, the blanket of Deerfoot was spread on the earth. +Consequently when the Winnebago brought down his knife with such vicious +spitefulness, it went through the folds of the blanket and was buried to +the hilt in the ground underneath. + +You know that, despite the marvelous quiet with which the Winnebago +approached the cavern, he was heard by Deerfoot, who, pausing only long +enough to make sure that an enemy was approaching, whisked outside. +There he stood in the impenetrable shadow under the trees, and saw the +Winnebago at the moment he emerged into the faint moonlight and stood +upright. + +The first look confirmed his suspicion that it was the Winnebago, who +had come back to avenge himself for the affair of the preceding day. +Deerfoot smiled to himself, for there was a tinge of absurdity about the +whole business that was sure to become still more so. + +The Shawanoe paused a few seconds before darting out of the cavern, +until he could arrange his blanket, so that it would appear as if it +infolded his sleeping form, and then he quietly awaited events. + +It must be admitted that it looked like leaving Fred and Terry in great +peril to permit such a savage enemy to creep so close to them while they +were sound asleep; but Deerfoot knew that the first thing that the Wolf +would do would be to attempt his life, precisely as he did attempt it. +Before he could do any thing more, the Shawanoe concluded to impress his +presence upon the visitor. + +At the moment, therefore, that the Winnebago stopped his advance and +slowly raised his knife, as he supposed over the breast of Deerfoot, +that gentleman, kneeling on one knee, brought his rifle to bear upon the +Winnebago, the dull light from the fire shining along the barrel, whose +muzzle was within a yard of the unsuspicious Wolf. + +The blanket through which the keen-pointed knife had been driven was no +more firmly transfixed for the moment than was the Wolf when a slight +hissing noise caused him to turn his head, and he saw the dreaded +Shawanoe in a kneeling position with his gun leveled at him, the finger +on the trigger, and the bright eye glancing along the barrel. + +The Winnebago was literally unable to move or speak, and Deerfoot, +motionless himself, held him thus for several seconds. Then with the gun +still pointed, he said in a low voice: + +"Dog of a Winnebago! Deerfoot has spared the life of the Wolf, and he +now seeks to strike him in the dark." + +This address loosened the tongue of the terrified warrior, who, seeing +his captor raise his head from sighting along the barrel, though he +kept the weapon leveled, obeyed the beckoning motion of Deerfoot, and +crept noiselessly out of the cavern. On the alert for any chance, he was +ready to seize it, but the first object on which his eye rested in the +dim moonlight was the figure of the young Shawanoe holding his gun in +such a position, that, should it be necessary, he could fire like a +flash. + +Deerfoot would not have hesitated to lay his gun aside, and, drawing his +knife, give the Winnebago the same chance with himself; but the Wolf had +left his weapon where he forced it through the blanket into the ground, +so that he had none except his tomahawk, and he was not likely to +attempt any thing with that. + +Besides, while Deerfoot had not the least fear of his enemy, he did not +wish to fight with him. He did not engage in his many desperate +encounters through love of victory, but because it had seemed to him +that it was his duty, and there was no other way out of the trouble. + +It must be said, too, that at this hour the Shawanoe happened to be in a +mood which rendered such encounters more than usually distasteful to +him. After he had closed his Bible and lay on his face, looking into the +embers and meditating, the same thought that had stirred him many a time +before filled his mind again. + +Why do men strive to kill each other? + +It was a question which has puzzled many a wise man in the past and has +not yet been answered. Thousands of affectionate husbands unlock the +white arms of the loving little children from their necks, kiss the +heartbroken wife good-by, and then rush out to try to murder one whom +they have never seen, who has also just torn himself loose from his +family. There is something in the thought that mystifies beyond all +explanation. + +The problem which directly interested Deerfoot was whether the day would +not come when the red men of every tribe could meet the pale faces in +friendship instead of hatred. Why should they always be at war? Could he +do a little to bring about that day of universal peace? Was there not +some work which the Great Spirit had laid out for him by which he could +help to soften the feeling of the two peoples toward each other? + +But Deerfoot had asked himself the same question many a time before, and +the only answer was that the most he could do was to follow the light +within him: that is, aid to remove a part of the antagonism between the +two races. + +Alas, too, that while he was considering the question, his ear caught +the soft rustle that told him one of his own race was seeking his life. +Deerfoot was sorrowed more than angered. He wished that the Winnebago +had taken some other time to make his stealthy attack. + +Joined to this emotion was that of another akin to sympathy for the +Winnebago in his complete discomfiture. He had come back to regain his +rifle, but not only had failed, but had lost his knife, and now was +standing at the mercy of a Shawanoe young enough to be his son. The +latter resolved that, though the Wolf had earned death, he would not +harm him, unless forced to do so in self-defense. + +For half a minute the warriors, with ten feet separating them, looked +straight at each other in silence. Fred Linden and Terry Clark slept +soundly, for as yet there had been no noise sufficient to awake a light +sleeper. + +"Why does the Wolf seek the life of Deerfoot?" asked the latter, willing +to relieve the embarrassment of the other. + +"The Wolf sought the gun that had been stolen from him." + +"But it was not hidden in the blanket, that he should drive his knife +through it." + +"The Wolf believed it was," was the curt response. + +"Does the Wolf strike with his knife at his own gun?" asked the +Shawanoe, without betraying any emotion. + +"He would rather do so than that it should stay in the hands of an +enemy." + +"It never would have been in the hands of an enemy had the Wolf acted as +a brave warrior; but he sought the life of the young pale face who had +never done him harm." + +"Has not his people stolen the hunting grounds of the red man?" demanded +the Winnebago, who, seeing that some grace was to be allowed him, burst +into the argument that multitudes of his people have used before and +since. Before he could proceed further, Deerfoot asked: "Are these the +hunting grounds of the Winnebagos?" + +"They are the hunting grounds of his race, though they may not be of his +totem; Deerfoot should join with his brother the Wolf in driving the +white men into the sea." + +"There was a day when that might have been done," replied Deerfoot, who +felt that faint throb and thrill which sometimes came to him, as if to +tell him that his Indian nature was not yet entirely dead within him; +"once the pale faces were but a handful, and the red men hunted over all +the ground that lies between the great waters. They could have swept the +pale faces into the sea, but they would not be brothers with themselves; +they fought each other. So the pale faces grew, and the day will never +come when they need fear the red men." + +"The brave warrior does not ask what can be done, but does with all his +might that which he knows the Great Spirit wishes him to do." + +"The Great Spirit does not tell him to kill his pale face brother; for +they are all His children and He loves them. The Great Spirit has spoken +to Deerfoot and told him that all His children should love one another." + +"Does Deerfoot do so?" + +"He does; he never strikes but when the Great Spirit tells him to do so; +if he was the Wolf and the Wolf was Deerfoot, he would have slain the +Shawanoe long ago." + +The Winnebago would have denied this had he not seen that it was idle to +do so. What would he not have given at that moment could he have +exchanged places with the handsome and triumphant young warrior? + +"The _true_ Great Spirit loves all His children, whether they be pale or +red or of the color of night; He smiles when they meet each other as +friends, and He will reward in the spirit land those who do His will on +the earth. Let the Wolf bury the words of Deerfoot in his heart, for +they are the words of truth, and if they are heeded he will be +happy--Go!" + +The amazed Winnebago doubted for a moment that he had heard the command +aright; but the wave of the hand which accompanied it, and the fact that +it was in perfect consonance with the words he had just heard, satisfied +him there was no mistake about it. + +"The Wolf thanks his brother for what he has done." + +The heart of the Winnebago forced the words between his lips as he +turned his face away and walked down the bank of the stream in the +direction whence he came. He vanished the next instant in the darkness. + +Deerfoot did not stir until every sound of the soft footsteps had died +out. Then he lowered the hammer of his gun, bent his shoulders slightly +forward, so as to walk freely, and entered the cavern where his friends +were still sleeping. + + + + +CHAPTER XX. + +ANOTHER NIGHT VISITOR. + + +Deerfoot the Shawanoe was convinced of one thing--the Wolf would trouble +him no further that night. What he might do in the future must be left +for the future to tell. Whether the few words that he had dropped should +prove the good seed of which I have spoken, or whether they should be +choked up by thorns, not even the Wolf himself could tell. + +The young warrior showed his convictions by flinging some wood on the +fire, so that its blaze filled the cavern, and preparing for sleep. He +first sat down and pulled out the knife of the Wolf, whose blade took on +an additional gleam from the cleansing it had received in being forced +into the flinty earth. He examined it with no little curiosity, though +it was similar to his own. + +A glance, however, showed that it was an inch or two longer. It was +straight and oval-shaped, the blade not quite two inches wide, with a +handle that had been cut from a deer's horn and fitted with no slight +skill. Whether it was the product of aboriginal ingenuity or was the +work of some cutler of the Caucasian race could only be guessed, the +matter really not being worth the trouble of guessing. Its two edges and +the point were very sharp. Deerfoot having laid aside his gun, grasped +the blade in his left hand and circled it through the air like a +swordsman at play. He was so pleased with it that he decided to keep it. +He would not throw away the one that had served him so well, but would +present it to Fred Linden, while he retained the one with which he was +sure he could do better work. + +It was singular that while the Shawanoe was turning the weapon over in +his hand, and examining it with so much interest, that the occasion for +its immediate use should come, but so it was. + +He was on the point of shoving it in behind his belt and lying down to +sleep, when a movement of the bushes outside was heard. It was so +distinct indeed that he knew it was not caused by a person. + +The rustling was accompanied by a scratching sound and low growl. +Turning his head, he saw an immense wolf standing at the entrance of the +cavern, his whole figure revealed in the firelight. With his jaws parted +and his form erect, he was a formidable creature, before which almost +any one would have recoiled. He would have advanced straight to an +attack upon the young warrior but for the fire which partly interposed. +Even as it was, he seemed making ready to leap at the throat of the +youth, who was sitting on the blanket, looking coolly at him. + +It would have been the easiest matter in the world for Deerfoot to catch +up his gun and shoot him dead, but he chose to do otherwise. Drawing one +of the embers forth by the end that was not burning, he held it before +him in his right hand, and, grasping the knife in his left, ran lightly +toward him, as though he meant to jam it into his eyes. + +The bravest animal can not stand unmoved before such an attack, and the +namesake of the human enemy whisked about and darted out of the cavern +with the Shawanoe close behind him. The former bounded a half dozen +steps, pausing on the very spot where the hostile warrior was first +seen, and facing about, as if to observe whether his foe dare follow him +any further. But Deerfoot had him now where he wished, and he flung the +torch aside among the undergrowth, where it lay smoking for a few +minutes before it went out. + +The fierce animal must have been of the opinion that he too had his +antagonist where he wanted him, for, without the least hesitation, he +uttered a snarling growl and made two leaps straight at him. The first +carried him a little more than half the intervening distance, and the +second was meant to bear Deerfoot to the earth. + +The young warrior, however, stepped lightly to one side, so that the +wolf missed him altogether, and would have been forced to wheel about +and make a second attack had the chance been given him, but at the +instant it landed, the left hand, grasping the long, keen knife, shot +forward with great force and lightning-like swiftness, and was buried to +the hilt in the throat of the brute. + +It was a blow as effective as a cannon ball could have been, for the +knife clove the seat of life in twain, and the beast rolled over on the +earth dead, almost before it could emit a single yelp of agony. + +Deerfoot stood a moment surveying the carcass before him, and then, with +no more excitement than he would have shown in speaking to Fred or +Terry, he said: "'Tis a good weapon, and will serve Deerfoot well." + +Then he walked to the tiny brook, carefully washed the gleaming blade, +shoved it behind his belt, where it was held in place without the sheath +that clasped the other, and walked back to the cavern. The boys had not +been disturbed by the outcry of the wolf, and Deerfoot, throwing some +more wood on the flames, lay down on the blanket, drew it partly about +him, and in ten minutes was asleep, not opening his eyes again until the +light of morning streamed into the cavern and only a few smoldering +embers were left of the camp-fire. + +He smiled when he looked upon the two youths, who were still soundly +sleeping, all unconscious of the stirring events that had taken place +during the darkness. There was no call for a renewal of the fire, and, +after spending a few minutes in communion with the Great Spirit, he +passed outside the cavern, drank from the clear water in the brook, and +laved his face and hands. + +Just as he finished, Fred Linden emerged, rubbing his eyes and yawning, +while Terry Clark was close behind him. + +"Good morning, Deerfoot!" called the former; "it was just like you to +let us sleep all night while you kept watch: to-night you must let us +take our turn." + +"Fred has exprissed me own sintimints," added Terry; "we have had so +much slumber that we can kaap awake for a month. Helloa!" + +The gaze of the boys at that moment fell on the body of the wolf, +stiffened in death. + +"You have had visitors," said Fred; "my gracious, but he's a big fellow! +Killed by a knife thrust too, that looks as if it had gone half way +through his body; how was it, Deerfoot?" + +The Shawanoe waited until they had finished bathing their hands and +faces, and then he quietly told them the story, including the account of +the warrior's visit. As you may well suppose, the boys opened their +eyes, and Terry, running inside, brought out the blanket, which had been +folded in such a manner that the knife of the Winnebago passed through +three thicknesses of the cloth. + +"And to think that we slept through it all!" + +"Begorrah, but wasn't it lucky that we didn't have the blanket wrapped +about us?" gasped Terry, who was in earnest in his momentary belief of +the narrow escape of himself and companion. + +"It is well that you kept guard last night; neither of us would have +heard the approach of the Winnebago; and wouldn't have known any thing +about the other wolf until he lit on our shoulders." + +"My brother is mistaken," said Deerfoot; "he is like the rattlesnake; he +gives warning before he strikes; I heard him growl, and he stopped at +the entrance to the cavern, afraid of the fire." + +"Why didn't you shoot him?" + +"Would he have died more quietly, or with less pain than from the knife? +It is the knife that the Winnebago left; Deerfoot wanted to learn +whether it would serve him well." + +"And I should think ye ought to be satisfied, as a cousin of me own once +remarked after working five years for a man without any pay excipt +starvation and kicks." + +"The knife proved itself a good one," said Fred; "but the poorest knife +would be just as effective in your hands." + +Deerfoot withdrew his own weapon from its skin sheath, and handed it to +Fred. + +"Let my brother carry that, for the hour may come sooner than he thinks +when it will be of use to him." + +Fred accepted it gratefully, saying, as he managed to find place for it +somewhat after the manner of Deerfoot: + +"If I can handle it with half of your skill, it will serve me well +indeed, but that can never be." + +Deerfoot placed the larger weapon within the sheath from which he had +withdrawn his own and made no reply to the compliments of his friends. +He had heard many such before, but he placed no value upon them. He +regarded himself as simply trying to use in the best way the gifts of +the Great Spirit. His many escapes from death and injury were due solely +to God's protecting care, and he could never take to himself any credit +for what he did. + +The excitement of the boys having subsided, the three sat down in front +of the cavern to eat their breakfast. Enough of the food brought by Fred +was left to give each and all the meal needed, but when they were +through, not a particle was left; henceforth they must depend upon what +their rifles brought them for support while on the way to the camp in +the Ozarks. + +"We have two or three days' travel yet before we can reach camp," said +Fred, while they were making ready to resume their journey; "but I don't +think we shall want for food. What troubles me the most is that scamp of +a Winnebago. You have spared him twice, but I don't believe it will +make a friend of him." + +"He was so boilin' mad," added Terry, "because he lost his gun that now +that he has also lost his knife he may get so much madder that he'll +flop over and become pleased again." + +This, however, was a kind of philosophy to which the others could not +agree. Deerfoot owned that he was in doubt; the sentiment of gratitude +is not one of the chief virtues of the American race, though many +story-tellers would have us believe that it is. There have been +instances known where a red man has shown something of the kind, but as +a rule they have no more of it than had the frozen serpent that was +warmed in the bosom of him who proved his foolishness by making the +experiment. + + + + +CHAPTER XXI. + +THE CAMP OF THE WINNEBAGOS. + + +Now that the little party had started once more toward the camp in the +Ozark Mountains, they moved at a brisk pace. It took them but a short +time to reach the main trail, where there was a short pause while +Deerfoot made what may be called a microscopic scrutiny of the ground. + +The result did not please him, for he saw the proof that the Wolf had +turned to the right, and had preceded them over the route which they +were to follow. He would have been better satisfied had he crossed the +trail or turned the other way. The fact that he had gone southward meant +that the main party which he was seeking to join were in that direction, +though the keen eyes of the Shawanoe could detect no signs that they had +trodden the same ground. That signified nothing, however, as they might +have pursued a slightly different route, falling back upon the main path +further on. + +Deerfoot, in telling his young friends what he had learned, added that +he had no doubt that they would hear from the Winnebagos again, and +possibly at an hour when least expected. Fred Linden was disturbed more +by the knowledge that the party were approaching the camp where his +father and his companions were unsuspicious of the danger. They could +easily steal close enough to the cabin to shoot down all three without +warning. + +When he mentioned his fear to Deerfoot, that sagacious young warrior +told him that he saw no cause for anxiety, though he could not deny that +something of the kind might take place. His theory was that the +Winnebagos were not disposed to attack any party of whites in mere +wantonness, the act of the Wolf being the whim of a single +gnarly-brained warrior. + +Be that as it may, our young friends were anxious to make the best +progress they could, and, for fully a dozen miles, they kept up their +brisk gait. At the end of that time, the sun was overhead, and they +were obliged to stop on the bank of a broad, swiftly-flowing stream. The +prints made by the hoofs of the horses that had passed that way some +days before were plainly seen, though there had been a fall of rain +since. A glance at the water showed that it was so deep that the hunters +must have swam their animals across. + +It would have been an easy matter for the boys to swim also, but they +preferred to use a raft. Accordingly, they set to work, and it did not +take them long to gather enough logs and driftwood to float all three. +These were deftly fastened together by Deerfoot, who used hickory withes +for that purpose, and, then, with a long pole which he cut and trimmed +with his tomahawk, he pushed from shore. + +The propelling pole was fully fifteen feet long, and in the middle of +the stream, the boys were surprised to see that when one end was pressed +against the bottom, no more than two feet were above the surface: the +depth was much greater than they had suspected. + +It was hard work to keep the clumsy raft moving at such disadvantage, +but Deerfoot would not yield the pole to either of his companions, and, +after awhile, he drove it against the shore, and all stepped upon dry +land, without so much as their feet having become moistened. + +They had been carried some distance below the trail by the current, but +they quickly regained it, and pushed on. Having eaten nothing since +morning, all three were ahungered, but Fred and Terry grimly determined +to wait for Deerfoot to suggest a stop before they asked for it. Had +they but known that many a time, when on the tramp, he had gone two days +and nights without taking a mouthful, they would not have been so +willing to await his pleasure. + +But though he would not have thought of stopping before nightfall had he +been alone, he was too considerate to subject them to discomfort; but it +was useless to stop, since as yet they had seen nothing in the way of +game to shoot. + +Terry and Fred were beginning to feel impatient with each other because +of their mutual stubbornness when the Shawanoe, who had been walking +quite fast, slackened his pace and turning his head, said: + +"My brothers are hungry, and they shall have to eat." + +"Ye couldn't tell us better news," replied the grateful Terry, "though I +would be obliged to ye if ye would impart the information where there is +any chance of our gettin' any such thing, as the people used to say whin +me uncle on me mother's side offered to bet a sixpence on anythin'." + +Deerfoot made no answer, but walking still more slowly, he was seen to +raise his hand to his mouth. Then followed the peculiar cry that a wild +turkey makes when it is lost from its companions. The Shawanoe knew that +the birds were in the surrounding woods, though none had shown itself. + +By and by there was an answer to the call from a point ahead. Asking the +boys to wait where they were, he trotted lightly forward, and was not +absent ten minutes when he came back with a plump turkey, whose neck he +had wrung. + +Since the lads had heard no report of a gun, they wanted to know by what +means he had secured it. He replied that he had stood behind a tree and +repeated the call until a group of the birds approached within a few +rods, when he made a dash among them, and seized his prize before she +could spread her wings and fly--all of which told of a dexterity that +few others possessed. + +In a brief while, a good dinner was boiled over the coals, a short rest +taken, and the three were on the road again, it being their wish to +travel further than on the day before. Had Deerfoot been alone he would +have broken into a trot that would have doubled the distance before the +set of sun. + +But the trail over which they were walking grew rougher. It was so rocky +in some places that it must have tried the endurance of the horses +ridden by the hunters. Instead of being direct, it grew very sinuous, +made so by the efforts to avoid many formidable obstacles that rose in +front. All this was of little account to the dusky leader, though of +necessity it prolonged the journey, and he was obliged to slacken his +pace to suit those who were less accustomed to such work. + +It was about the middle of the afternoon, when they were checked again +by coming abreast of a stream that was too broad and deep to be forded. +The trail, however, instead of entering the water, turned up the bank, +and the three, under the leadership of Deerfoot, did the same. + +This diversion continued for fully two hundred yards, when the path +struck the water, the point on the other side where the horsemen had +emerged being in plain sight. The former method was resorted to, and in +less than an hour after reaching the creek the three had safely ferried +themselves across. It was neither so broad nor so deep as the other, but +it delayed them fully as much. + +Within a half mile from the stream last crossed they came upon the trail +of the whole Winnebago party. Just as Deerfoot suspected, they had taken +another route, and had come back to the main path a good many miles away +from where the Wolf left it the night before. + +His experienced eye told him that they were close upon the company, who +numbered precisely twelve--several more than he supposed. Whether the +Wolf was with them could not of course be learned until a glimpse of the +party themselves was obtained. + +Matters had now taken such a shape that the Shawanoe told his companions +that the utmost care must be used, since they were liable to stumble on +the very ones whom they were anxious to avoid. He instructed them to +allow him to keep fully a hundred feet in advance, and never to diminish +the distance without orders from him. + +This was a prudent step, and Fred and Terry did their best to carry out +the wishes of their guide, who walked on at a moderate pace, without +once glancing back at his friends, who he knew would respect what he had +said to them. + +Bear in mind that this arrangement was made toward the close of the +afternoon of an autumn day. The three had not traveled more than two +miles, with the leader so far in advance, when the gathering gloom +became such that he would not have been visible to his followers had he +not fallen back so as to keep in sight. + +Finally, when less than a dozen yards separated them, and the graceful +figure of the young Shawanoe looked like a shadow gliding in advance, he +suddenly halted. The eyes of the boys were upon him, and they saw him +raise his hand as a signal to stop; they obeyed without so much as a +whisper. + +He stood like a statue for two or three minutes, and then, turning his +head without moving his body, beckoned them to approach. They could +barely see the motion of his arm, as they stepped softly to his side; +but before reaching him, they caught the glimmer of a light among the +trees, somewhat in front and to the right. When they stood near him, +they saw it more distinctly. + +In a partly open space, near the invariable stream of water, were a +group of Indians, some stretched lazily on the ground, some squatted +like tailors, two busy cooking something over the fire, and nearly every +one smoking long-stemmed, stone pipes. They were a sturdy set of +warriors, who were likely to give a good account of themselves in a +hunt or fight, and both Fred and Terry knew who they were before +Deerfoot, with his arm extended and his finger pointing toward them, +said: + +"It is the camp of the Winnebagos!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXII. + +"KEEP TO THE TRAIL" + + +It was an interesting scene on which the three youths looked. There were +a dozen Winnebago warriors lolling and smoking in camp, while two of +their number were preparing their supper, by half-broiling it over the +blaze and coals. Fred and Terry stood in silence by the side of +Deerfoot, gazing upon the strangers with a curiosity such as no other +sight could have inspired. + +A small tree interfered somewhat with the view of Fred, and he took a +step forward. Immediately the Shawanoe put out his arm and shook his +head to signify that that would not do; they were as close as was safe. +Then Fred shifted his position a little to one side, as you feel like +doing in a public hall when a column is in front of you. To this +Deerfoot offered no objection, and the lad was satisfied. + +"Begorrah, but there's the spalpeen!" whispered Terry, in some +excitement, pointing his finger toward the camp, and with no thought of +the uselessness of such an act. + +The others knew that he referred to the Wolf, who had caused them so +much trouble, but they had already seen him. He was standing at one end +of the group, with folded arms, while he scowled, and the firelight +fell upon his features with such directness that the scowl could be +plainly seen. He appeared to be looking at the two warriors busy with +the fire, though more than likely his gaze fell indifferently upon them +and the rest, all of whom were in his field of vision. + +The tomahawk showed in his girdle, but of course he was without any +other weapon, and Terry could not avoid a smile when he noted it and he +had to say something despite the displeasure of Deerfoot. + +"Do ye observe his left eye and the end of his nose where one of me +blows landed? What could be foiner than the swell that ye see there? He +will naad to use no black paint for siveral days, as me grandfather--" + +At this point Deerfoot deliberately placed his hand over the mouth of +the speaker, abruptly ending what he proposed to say. + +Now, nothing could be clearer than that if the Winnebago party were in +such plain view of the three youths, the latter in turn were liable to +be discovered by them. They were standing beyond the circle of +firelight, where the darkness screened them from sight, and, if one of +the red men should look in that direction, he could not have seen them; +but there was the probability that any moment one of the warriors might +start out to reconnoiter their surroundings, in which event, discovery +was almost certain. Besides, the exuberant spirits of Terry Clark taught +Deerfoot that it was unwise to trust him in such a delicate position. + +Altogether, the time spent in watching the Winnebagos was barely ten +minutes. During that period, some of those reclining on the leaves got +up, walked about and sat down again; others kept their feet, and one +stepped to where the two were busy with a steak of some kind that they +were broiling over the coals, as though his hunger was making him +impatient. + +But the Wolf never stirred a muscle, and Terry afterward insisted that +he did not wink his eyes, so motionless was he. The same scowl added +hideousness to the painted face, and it was easy to understand that his +meditations were of any thing but a pleasant nature. + +Turning his back upon the camp, Deerfoot motioned for them to go back. +They did so, he following on their heels until not the faintest glimmer +of the fire could be seen. Then he led them by a round-about course to +the trail beyond the camp, and explained his wishes. + +He was now free to admit that there was reason to believe the Winnebagos +intended an assault upon the three hunters among the foothills of the +Ozark, and who were unsuspicious of such danger. Of course the Shawanoe +had no direct knowledge that such was their purpose, but he was so +convinced that he meant to take the utmost precautions against it. + +He therefore proposed that he should linger near the camp until he could +learn of a verity what their intentions were. If they meant to attack +the Hunters of the Ozark, then he would hasten to give warning to +Linden, Hardin and Bowlby, who, re-enforced by the three youths, would +be strong enough to beat off an Indian party twice as strong. + +In the meantime, Deerfoot wished Terry and Fred to push toward the camp +with all the speed of which they were capable, he promising to follow as +soon as he could. They had walked almost the entire day with scarcely a +halt on the road, but he wished them to keep on into the night so long +as they could. They would need nothing to eat before morning and between +sundown and sunup they ought to make a long advance on their journey. + +You will probably wonder why (the situation being such as was explained +by Deerfoot), he did not keep company with the lads and help them in +their forced march to the mountains. One reason was that he was +convinced in the first place that a demonstration would be made by the +Winnebagos against the Hunters of the Ozark, and he wanted to get both +boys--especially Terry--out of the neighborhood as soon as he could; for +their presence hampered his own actions. The safest place for them was +in the strong cabin to the southward, and they could not get there too +soon. + +Yet they would certainly travel as fast in his company as by themselves, +and Fred and Terry, therefore, could not see why he should stay behind +instead of going with them; yet Deerfoot the Shawanoe never took a step +of that kind without the best reason for it, as you will admit when it +is made clear to you. To give this explanation would require such a long +diversion from the thread of my story that you would be impatient. +Before I am through with the history of Deerfoot, you shall know not +only the reason for his course but for several other things that have +been referred to in the stories told about him. + +The confidence of Fred Lincoln and Terry Clark in the wonderful young +Shawanoe was so perfect that they did not question any decision, no +matter how little they failed to see its reason. If what he asked was in +their power, they would bound at the chance of doing it, just as they +did now. + +He had a parting warning to give. + +"Let my brothers make sure that they do not lose the trail; they must +look at the ground often: when they do not see the path they must stop +and await the rising of the sun; they can not reach the cabin too soon, +but they can never reach it by going wrong; _keep to the trail_!" + +The circuitous route which they had taken under the guidance of +Deerfoot, had brought them back to the path at a point fully a hundred +yards beyond the camp-fire, which had been started in the small open +space only a few rods from the path. So far as they knew there was +nothing now between them in the way of a direct advance to the cabin of +their hunters. + +"Fred," said Terry, after they were fairly under way, and while he +almost stepped on the heels of his friend; "Deerfoot thinks we won't go +more than five or six miles; let's show him that we ain't such babies as +he thinks." + +"I feel as you do; I propose that we keep it up all night." + +"Will ye be kind enough to raich yer right hand over your lift shoulder +and shake wid me on the same?" + +Instead of doing precisely as asked, Fred laughingly turned about and +shook hands with his friend, whom he loved and for whom he was ready at +any time to risk his life. They were on their mettle and they meant to +show the young Shawanoe that they were capable of doing much more than +he seemed to believe. They intended that when, after a few hours, he +started to overtake them, he would find that he had a good many miles +further to travel than he supposed. + +Had Deerfoot known of their thoughts he would have smiled and been +pleased. He wanted them to do their best and he was willing, should it +prove to be safe, to allow them to keep up the delusion that their gait +could bear any comparison with the speed of which he was capable. + +Meanwhile, the boys started in earnest to carry out their intention. +Their only fear was that they might be hindered by the difficulty in +keeping to the trail; for though the full moon was again overhead, and +though many of the leaves had fallen from the trees, little light was +there to help them. + +But for a time, at least, the difficulty was much less than they +expected. The path, though it continued to lead over rough places and +around obstructions, sometimes up-hill and sometimes down, was still so +clearly marked that Fred Linden went forward with scarcely a halt or any +hesitation. + +Though there are men who have walked their five and six hundred miles +with little rest on the road, it is a severe task for any one to keep it +up through an entire day and night, as you can soon become convinced by +making the experiment; but Fred and Terry were sturdy, strong-limbed +fellows, born and bred on the frontier, who were capable of standing a +great deal. When, therefore, they meant to astonish Deerfoot by their +progress during the night, they felt no distrust of their ability in +that direction. + +There was no reason why they should put any restraint on themselves, and +they talked quite cheerily, Terry indulging now and then in some of his +quaint remarks. But a tired boy does not feel like keeping up a lively +conversation for any length of time, and so it came about that after +awhile they walked steadily forward, for miles at a time, without +exchanging more than a few syllables. Terry could see the figure of his +friend with his rifle over his shoulder always a few feet in front, +there being just enough light in the gloom to keep his form in sight, +while Fred heard the steady tramp, tramp behind him, sometimes keeping +pace with his own and sometimes falling "out of step." + +"Helloa! this is too bad!" suddenly exclaimed Fred, coming to an abrupt +halt; "I guess this ends our tramp for to-night." + + + + +CHAPTER XXIII. + +AN INFURIATE SHAWANOE. + + +WITH the departure of Fred and Terry, Deerfoot felt as though he had +flung off a blanket that had been wrapped about his shoulders: his arms +were now free and he could use them at will. + +He shrewdly suspected that his young friends would fancy they had been +put upon their mettle, and would, therefore, exert themselves to their +fullest to meet his expectations. He was glad it was so, and he would +have been much better pleased could he have known they were in the cabin +at the foot of the mountains, or, better still, safe at their home in +Greville. + +Deerfoot now stealthily approached as close to the camp-fire as was +safe. He screened his body behind a tree, but he was nigh enough to +catch every word that was said in an ordinary tone, and he understood +the Winnebago tongue well enough to want no interpreter. + +The Shawanoe had hardly taken his position to act as cowen, when the +venison steaks were about one-fourth broiled, which was enough to +satisfy the parties interested. Those who had charge of the culinary +operations divided the meat into a dozen slices, so that each warrior +was provided for, and the feast opened. The strong animal appetites, and +teeth like those of the steel traps that were set at the foot of the +Ozarks, soon brought the feast to a close, after which the feasters +walked the few steps necessary to the brook near at hand, and lying down +on their faces drank their fill, just as so many pigs would have done, +grunting with satisfaction as they came back and resumed their pipes. + +All this Deerfoot had seen so often that it had no interest to him. He +kept his eyes on two warriors--the Wolf and one whom he had never seen +before. These two sat near each other on the ground while eating, and +they talked together in low tones. Since none of those around could +overhear the words, it was impossible for Deerfoot, with all his +wonderful acuteness, to catch a syllable. He would have given a great +deal could he have done so, for he suspected the dark plot that was +taking shape in their dusky brains. There was a dangerous flash in the +black eyes of the young Shawanoe while he watched their movements. + +It was clear to him that the Wolf had lost prestige, instead of gaining +sympathy by his last misfortune. Having gone out to gather wool he had +come back shorn, to go out a second time and to come back shorn to a +still more ludicrous degree. The manner in which the Wolf kept apart +from the rest, affiliating only with the single warrior at his side, +showed the feeling in the party. + +It was easy to recognize the leader or chieftain, though his dress was +precisely like the rest, but his air of authority told the story plainly +enough. The Winnebagos were a fine set of men in their war paint, and, +as I have said, were able to give a good account of themselves in any +scrimmage in which they might become engaged. + +As unexpectedly to the warriors as to Deerfoot himself, the Winnebago +chieftain, who was standing on one side of the fire where his rifle with +several others leaned against a tree, took his pipe from between his +lips and spoke to the Wolf in tones which caused that redskin to look up +in wonder. Seeing that the sachem hesitated, as if waiting for him to +rise, the Wolf came nimbly to his feet, as did his friend at his elbow. +The majority of the rest, however, sat still and showed no special +interest in what was going on. + +"The Wolf was the bravest of the Winnebagos," remarked the chief, "when +our war parties met those of the Sauks and Foxes and Pottawatomies who +dared to come into our country; the heart of the Wolf bounded with +delight and no tomahawk was hurled with such swiftness as his: no gun +was fired more often; no scalping knife took back more scalps to hang +upon the ridge-pole of his wigwam. + +"But the Wolf came across the Big Water and his heart longed for the +scalp of the pale face; he went out to hunt for it; he came back; the +tongue of the Wolf is not double and tells no lies; the Wolf met a +Shawanoe warrior who took his gun from him. + +"It was the young Shawanoe called Deerfoot; the Winnebagos have been +told about Deerfoot, the friend of the white man; the heart of Black +Bear (meaning himself) was angry; he was chief of the Winnebagos; he +told the Wolf that he must go forth and bring back his rifle; the Wolf +went; he did not bring back his rifle, but left his knife behind; +Deerfoot saw him and took it away from him. + +"Deerfoot is but a youth; he is not a mighty warrior; the Wolf must get +his gun and knife; he must bring back the scalp of the Shawanoe, he +shall take Wau-ko-mia-tan with him; each shall have his gun; let them +bring back the scalps of Deerfoot and the two pale faces with him; then +will Black Bear forget that the Wolf was not always a great warrior. + +"Let the Wolf and Wau-ko-mia-tan make haste; the Winnebagos are on the +war path; they will carry back with them the scalps of the pale faces +who are gathering the skins of the beaver and otter and foxes by the +base of the mountain." + +It may be said that this little speech developed the plan of the +Winnebago campaign. The Wolf had fallen so low in the opinion of his +chieftain and brother warriors, that it was necessary for him to take +heroic measures to restore himself. Seeing this, the sachem had just +notified him that he must secure the scalps of Deerfoot and the two +white boys with him. Wau-ko-mia-tan (who was the warrior that sat at the +elbow of the Wolf), was to be his companion. The chieftain knew how +closely the two were allied, and he indulged in the little fiction of +allowing one to keep company with the other, when the truth was he was +afraid to let the Wolf go alone. Since on each of the two former +excursions he had lost something, the probabilities were that if he came +back again, it would be without his scalp. + +The eagerness with which the Wolf accepted this task, the moment he +found that he was to have a companion, showed that he was an admirable +representative of the average Indian: gratitude to him was a vice rather +than a virtue. + +The expression on the face of Deerfoot showed that all forbearance was +ended. He had twice spared the ingrate: he would do so no more. + +Had the Wolf told his leader that the mercy of Deerfoot had touched his +heart, so that his arm could never more be raised in anger against him, +but that he would seek the scalps of the hunters at the base of the +mountains, the Shawanoe would have felt an admiration for him. Had he +sought out Deerfoot and asked for the return of his weapons (though that +would have been very unlike his race), Deerfoot would have restored them +to him. But now, as it was, when they should meet it would be as mortal +enemies. + +Nothing showed the vicious ingratitude of the Wolf more vividly than the +fact that instead of waiting for the morning before entering upon his +wicked enterprise, he started within three minutes after Black Bear, the +chieftain, finished his little speech. The sachem picked up his own +rifle from where it leaned against the tree and handed it to him, while +Wau-ko-mia-tan stood at the other end of the group, until the warrior, +his ugly face glowing like that of a demon, stepped to his side. Then +the two, without a word or motion like a farewell, turned away and +vanished in the gloom of the wood. + +They had not taken a dozen steps, when Deerfoot glided from behind the +tree and passed after them, as if he were the shadow thrown out by the +light of the camp-fire. The expression on his face was such as would +have hushed Fred Linden and Terry Clark to awed silence could they have +seen it. + +The two Winnebagos did not come directly back to the trail, but fell +into it at almost the precise point where Deerfoot had led his two +friends. They stopped a few minutes and talked in their low, guttural +tones, none of which was understood by the Shawanoe, who listened with +the closest attention. + +There was considerable distance at that time between the warriors and +Fred and Terry, who had set out with the ambition to keep up their +traveling through the entire night. The Winnebagos did not wait long, +when they moved on at their usual pace. + +Less than a mile from the camp, the warriors again came to a halt and as +before talked in a low voice. The point was where the wood was more +open, so that the moonlight which found its way among the limbs above +showed their forms quite plainly. More than that, enough of their words +were audible to enable the listening Shawanoe, who had crept dangerously +near, to catch their meaning. + +The Winnebagos turned off at almost a right angle and left the trail +behind them. The ground was broken, but they had not gone far, when it +became evident that they were following another path, though it was so +faintly marked that no eye except that of an American Indian could have +discovered it in such an uncertain light. + +As they advanced, the surface became not only rougher, but the grade +which they ascended was so steep that it would have been tiresome to an +ordinary traveler. + +Suddenly Deerfoot himself wheeled aside from the indistinct path to +which the Winnebagos clung and passed lightly and with great speed +through the wood where no one had walked before. So swiftly did he make +his way, that, though he crossed a deep ravine and went a considerable +distance, it was less than live minutes before he came back to the +shadowy trail. + +Instead of keeping along this path, in the same direction as that of his +enemies, he turned about and advanced to meet the red men who had dared +to come that way. He walked with his usual noiseless step, and stopped +on reaching the edge of the ravine over which he had leaped when it +crossed his path only a few minutes before. + +This gully was more than twenty feet in depth, and about half as wide. +The trail led to the edge on one side, continuing on the margin directly +opposite, so that any one who wished to keep to it was perforce +compelled to leap the chasm--a slight task for any Indian, though it +would have been easy to make a bridge by means of a fallen tree. + +The moon was now directly overhead, so that a flood of light fell into +the craggy ravine, lighting up the gray rocks and bowlders, the +prostrate trees that had fallen from the sides, the vegetation along the +slopes and the mossy grass that had been watered by the torrents when +they roared through. The trees grew rank and close to the edge at the +top--so close that some of them had slidden off and fallen part way +below, carrying the gravel, sand and earth with the prong-like roots +part way to the bottom. + +So faint was the mark of the trail opposite that even with the help of +the moonbeams, it took an eye as keen as that of Deerfoot to tell where +his enemies would appear. But he coolly awaited them, though his +calmness was the fearful calm of a fury such as even he rarely knew. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIV. + +THE DEFIANCE. + + +The expression of the face of Deerfoot was terrible. The whole fury of +his nature was at white heat. He knew that the two Winnebagos had set +out to commit a fearful crime, and it was his work to stay their hands. +There was but the single way in which they could be stayed. + +The young Shawanoe kept back a couple of paces from the edge of the +ravine, where the shadow of the stunted trees above would hide him from +his foes when they should come in sight. He held his gun pointed and +cocked. Though his passion had the glow of the furnace, he was as calm +as death. + +[Illustration: "There was a fierce whizz like the rush of an eagle's +wing."] + +He had not long to wait. By and by a low guttural exclamation struck his +ear, and his hearing, strung to a marvelously fine point, caught the +sound of the soft moccasins on the hard earth. Less than a minute later +the form of the Wolf came into the moonlight, as a bather emerges from +the side of a lake. Seeing the open ravine at his feet, he stopped, and +instantly his companion, Wau-ko-mia-tan, appeared at his side. + +They quickly saw that the leap was an easy one. + +"Wau-ko-mia-tan will leap across," said that warrior, "then the Wolf +will follow; let us lose no time, for the Shawanoe may be gone." + +The speaker recoiled a single pace and gathered his muscles for the +leap. He took one quick step and made a terrific bound upward and +outward, straight for the rocky brink whereon Deerfoot the Shawanoe +instantly stepped into the moonlight. + +The Winnebago was in mid-air, crouching like a leaper, with his legs +gathered under him and his arms at his side, when there was a fierce +whiz, like the rush of an eagle's wing, something flashed in the +moonlight, and the tomahawk, driven by a lightning-like sweep of the +Shawanoe's arm, was buried in the chest of the Winnebago as it would +have sunk in so much sodden earth. + +An ear-splitting screech burst from the throat of the smitten warrior, +who struck the edge of the ravine like a bundle of rags flung thither, +and then tumbled to the bottom as dead as the jagged rock on which he +lay. + +The Wolf stood transfixed, unable to understand what had taken place. +Then he saw the figure of the youthful warrior on the other side and +heard his voice. + +"Rattlesnake of a Winnebago! Die the death of the rattlesnake!" + +The wretch was given no time to protest again, for the words were yet in +the mouth of Deerfoot when the flash of his rifle lit up the partial +gloom, and the crack of the weapon mingled with the death shriek of the +redskin, who slumped end over end down the ravine and lay beside the +body of Wau-ko-mia-tan as dead as he. + +"Thus shall die all that seek to follow your footsteps," muttered the +Shawanoe, who, standing where he stood when he slew both, proceeded to +reload his rifle with as much coolness as though he had just fired at a +target on a tree. + +This finished, he let himself over the edge of the ravine, holding fast +a moment by one hand, and then letting go, dropped lightly beside the +two bodies that lay below. His face showed no excitement now, and he +moved with his usual care and deliberation. Drawing the hunting-knife +which he had taken from the Wolf, he partly bent over, but straightened +up again, saying to himself: + +"Deerfoot is a Christian Indian and can not scalp a foe though as base +as they." + +Picking up each rifle (that of Wau-ko-mia-tan being still clutched by +his nerveless fingers while the Wolf's had fallen from his grasp), he +deliberately broke the locks of each by striking them on the stones. He +then recovered his own tomahawk, and carried off the useless weapons +with him. + +He passed down the ravine until he reached a point where the sides were +not so high. There he clambered out, still keeping the two broken guns. +He had reached high ground on the side from which had come the +Winnebagos, and he walked grimly forward, until in a brief while he +reached the main trail over which he and the boys had passed a brief +while before. + +He turned toward the left, which led him in the direction of the camp of +the Ozarks as well as toward the camp of Black Bear and his Winnebagos. +He took longer steps than usual, but did not trot or run. + +When he once more caught the glimmer of the camp-fire among the trees, +he slackened his pace and drew nigh with the caution that had become a +second nature to him. He quickly saw that the Winnebagos had disposed of +themselves for the night. The fire was burning as brightly as ever, +because of the attention it received from the two warriors who were +standing on guard. + +The party were in a portion of the country where they knew there was +scarcely a possibility of their being molested by any one; but the +American Indian loves nothing like laziness and war; and, treacherous by +nature himself, he expects treachery at all times in others. And so, +although they knew of no enemies within miles of them (unless it was +Deerfoot, whom they did not fear) they had two vigilant sentinels on +duty. The rest were stretched out on their blankets with their feet +turned toward the blaze, sleeping like so many tired animals. + +At the moment of Deerfoot's approach, the Winnebagos on guard were +standing some twenty feet apart, with the fire burning between them. +Each held a loaded gun in hand and cast his keen glance hither and +thither in the gloom, eyes and ears alert for the first suspicious sight +or sound. + +The sentinel nearer Deerfoot was Black Bear himself. The chieftain +evidently believed that the best way to instruct his warriors in their +duty was to set the example. His attitude showed that something had +arrested his attention. Deerfoot knew that the sound had been made by +his moccasin, for he purposely rustled the leaves. + +Black Bear looked intently off in the gloom, but seeing nothing, turned +his head and told the other guard to fling more wood upon the fire. He +obeyed, and the circle of light quickly extended out among the trees. + +It would have been an easy matter for the Shawanoe to slay both, but he +had no thought of doing so. That would have been killing without +justification. + +The Winnebago chieftain was gazing intently into the night, when from +behind a tree, no more than a dozen steps distant, softly stepped the +young Shawanoe. + +"Listen, Black Bear," said he, "to the words of Deerfoot the Shawanoe. +Twice did he spare the life of the Wolf and the Wolf thanked him, but he +went out a third time to take his life; he was a rattlesnake, but he had +not the courage of the rattlesnake, for he took with him Wau-ko-mia-tan, +whose heart was that of a rattlesnake also; they bent their steps where +none but Deerfoot has the right to go; therefore Deerfoot killed them +and took away their guns. _There they are!_" + +In the same minute that Deerfoot began speaking, the second sentinel +stepped forward and took his place beside his chief. That both were +amazed need not be said. Each stood with the muzzle of his gun lowered, +neither dreaming that the youth thought of assailing them. + +Deerfoot spoke in the slow but impressive voice natural to his race. But +the last exclamation escaped him like the discharge from a Leyden jar. +So quickly that neither saw a movement, he hurled the broken gun of the +chief straight at him, following it with the second gun driven at his +companion. + +Both hit their mark. Black Bear was struck in the chest with such force, +that he was carried off his feet and knocked half fainting to the earth. +The other was hit and compelled to recoil a step, but the weapon struck +him lengthwise, and he was not harmed. He rallied and brought his gun to +his shoulder, but by the time it was leveled, the Shawanoe had vanished. + +Such an exploit, as you may well suppose, caused consternation among the +Winnebagos for the space of several minutes. No gun had been fired, but +the American Indian is a light sleeper, and slight as was the +disturbance, it aroused every one. There was a gathering about the +fallen chieftain, who, however, came to his feet without help, though he +gasped and was weak for a few moments. The explanation given by the +other sentinel removed the general fear of an attack, but three of the +warriors scattered through the wood to make sure that no surprise +overtook them, while the others with an agitation rare among red men +talked over the astounding occurrence. + +The broken rifles lying on the ground left no doubt that when the +Shawanoe declared he had slain both the Wolf and Wau-ko-mia-tan he spoke +the truth. Else, how could their shattered guns be in his possession? + +And this same youth, with an audacity beyond comprehension, had flung +the two guns at the chieftain and his brother warrior and defied them. +It seemed as though he must be more than a human being, to be capable of +such deeds. Legends had reached them of some of the exploits of the +wonderful young Shawanoe, but this surpassed them all. + +The Winnebagos, however, were among the bravest tribes in the west, and +when they broke camp at early dawn, Deerfoot, who was on the watch, knew +that it was their determination to slay every one of the three hunters +in the camp at the foot of the Ozarks, as soon as they could reach +them. + + + + +CHAPTER XXV. + +THE SIGNAL FIRE. + + +Deerfoot the Shawanoe remained in the vicinity of the Winnebago camp +until the warriors made their start at an early hour the following +morning. He took more than one survey of the red men, who gathered about +the blazing fire and talked over the remarkable events of the night. He +could easily have slain every one of the scouts whom they kept moving +through the wood, but he had no wish to do so. + +He heard and saw enough to convince him that they intended to make an +attack on the camp in the mountains, but he did not feel absolutely sure +that they would not turn aside and follow in the path of the Wolf and +Wau-ko-mia-tan, until the party had advanced several miles to the +southward along the Ozark trail. + +It seemed strange that the Winnebagos paid no attention to the two +missing warriors, and yet, after all, it was not singular. They knew +they were dead and it was therefore a waste of time to give heed to +them. If by any possibility they were alive, they must take care of +themselves, just as all brave Indians did: if unable to do so, the +consequences must be on their own heads. + +So the ten Winnebagos, under the lead of the famous chieftain Black +Bear, moved along the trail in the direction of the camp of the Hunters +of the Ozark, and the expressions and words that had been overheard by +the watchful Shawanoe, left no doubt that by way of revenge they meant +to slay the three trappers who had located there for the winter. + +The Winnebagos came from the north-east. Their lodges, villages and +hunting grounds were many moons' travel away, and the section of country +through which they were journeying was so sparsely settled that they had +no fear of pursuit. Now, when you give an American Indian the chance to +commit some vicious mischief with no fear of being made to pay +therefor, you may set it down as a truth that nine hundred and +ninety-nine out of every one thousand will commit that crime. It was a +matter of indifference, in the first place, whether they harmed the +hunters or not. Since the latter were removed some distance from their +path, it is probable that they would not at that time have taken the +trouble to go in quest of them: it was the feeling of revenge that was +the deciding weight in the scale. + +Let us recall the situation as it was on the second morning after Fred +Linden and Terry Clark left their homes in Greville. The boys themselves +were the furthest advanced along the trail to the mountains, while at a +considerable distance behind, filed the ten Winnebago warriors, and +hovering in the vicinity was Deerfoot the Shawanoe, watching every +movement with the vigilance of a lynx. + +Whenever he chose he could make a circuit around the Winnebagos, and +joining the boys beyond, hasten to the hunters' camp and apprise them of +their danger; but there remained an abundance of time in which to do +that, and he did not wish to leave the vicinity of the enemies until he +saw a little more of them. + +It was evident that the Winnebagos were in no hurry. They must have +known that two of the youths were following the trail in advance, for +the heavy shoes of the lads could not fail to leave their imprints in +many places; but, such being the case, the red men might ask in what +manner they could know that a party of Winnebagos were following them, +unless such knowledge came through Deerfoot the Shawanoe, who, wherever +he might be, certainly was not in front of them. + +When the Indians came to a stream of water, they did not rush in and +wade or swim to the other side, as they would have done had there been +any call for haste, but like those who had gone before, they stopped +long enough to make a raft on which they could float across. The +American Indian is not as fond of water as he should be, and though the +Winnebagos would have cared little for the chill of the stream, it was +more pleasant for them to pass over dry shod; so they made their several +rafts and poled themselves to the opposite bank. + +You would not look for humor under such circumstances, and yet on one of +the three rafts there was so much of it shown that even the grim +Shawanoe smiled. + +The structures on which the red men floated were, as a matter of course, +of the frailest nature, intended as they were to last only long enough +to bear them to the other shore. With proper management, all would have +done this, but on one of the rafts holding four of the warriors, there +was an aboriginal wag. A single Indian managed the pole, while the +others squatted carefully in their respective positions and were +expected to keep quiet, so as not to disintegrate the frail structure. + +The wag to whom I have referred, while sitting with an innocent +expression on his painted countenance, quietly loosened the two or three +withes, and gave the logs such an impetus that they separated like two +bodies positively charged with electricity, when brought together. The +warrior who handled the pole was standing with legs somewhat apart, +resting on a different log, when they suddenly separated still more, and +he sat down with a splash in the water. Another log revolved backwards, +as did the savage who was sitting on it, while the others were also +plashing in the stream, which was not deep enough to make them swim, +though it came to the neck of the shortest one. The four warriors waded +to shore amid the grins of the others, and with no suspicion of the +criminal that had played the trick upon them. + +The next stream was reached by the Indians a couple of hours later. This +was not as deep as the other and they did not stop to make rafts. After +a little searching, they found a portion where the current did not come +above their knees and they waded. + +In doing so, Black Bear took the lead, and, in accordance with a custom +universal among Indians, each warrior carefully stepped into the +footprints in front of him. The water was so limpid that the impression +made by the chieftain's moccasin was plainly shown, so that there was no +difficulty in this respect. Had a person been trailing them, he would +have seen before him what seemed to be the footprints of a single man. +There was but a slight variation near the further shore, where the +moccasin of one of the Winnebagos had slid from a stone on which, like +all the others, it was placed. The brown stone was slippery with a faint +coating of slime, and the scrape of the deerskin down the side gave it a +white gleam like the belly of a fish. It was a "slip" in every sense, +and, when the slight splash announced it, Black Bear at the head of the +procession turned about with his most impressive scowl. + +The party made a halt on the other bank. It was considerably past noon, +and, while some busied themselves in starting a fire, and a couple began +fishing in the stream, two others going into the woods with their guns, +Deerfoot was quite sure that they had decided to spend an hour or so for +dinner. He concluded, however, to follow the two who went into the +woods, and it was fortunate that he did so. + +The first surprise that came to him was when the Winnebagos had gone +nearly an eighth of a mile from camp. All this time they were making +their way up quite a steep slope, so that they were close to the top of +a high, wooded ridge. + +The Shawanoe might well wonder why they had taken such a course, but +when two frightened deer burst through the undergrowth and dashed by at +full speed, within easy gun shot, and the Winnebagos looked at them +without raising their guns to fire, then it was that Deerfoot was +genuinely astonished. + +The conclusion was inevitable that these red men were not looking for +game. + +With a suspicion of their real errand (and that caused another +surprise), Deerfoot stealthily followed the Winnebagos until they paused +on the highest part of the ridge. He was not long kept in doubt as to +their business. + +The top of the ridge was almost bare. There were a few stunted trees, a +number of bowlders and rocks, and here and there, patches of scraggly +grass. From this elevation, however, a magnificent view opened out on +every hand before the spectator. To the north stretched the undulating +country covered with prairie, stream, valley and forest, the last +brilliant with all the gorgeous hues that come with the frosts of +autumn. + +These flaming colors were visible in whatever direction the eye turned, +and the same varied surface was seen everywhere, but to the southward, +the Ozark Mountains had a faint bluish tinge, like a mass of clouds +resting in the horizon. It was in that direction that the camp of the +hunters lay, and thither the footsteps of pale face and redskin were +directed. + +The two Winnebagos spent only a minute or so in scanning the surrounding +country, when they began gathering wood, until they had quite a pile. A +quantity of leaves, some of which were damp, was mixed among the twigs, +so that when with a little trouble they were fired by means of the flint +and steel in the hands of one of the red men, the fuel did not burn +clearly but gave off considerable dark smoke, which was what the +Winnebagos wanted. + +As soon as the fire was fairly burning, one of the Indians flung his +blanket over it, his friend seizing the other part, while both held it +thus until it was in danger of taking fire or smothering the flames. Had +the coarse cloth been a little more cleanly it is likely that it would +have been burned, but as it was it strangled the blaze until it may be +said there were several bushels of smoke gathered beneath and the embers +were at their last gasp. + +At that moment, the Indians raised the blanket so that they stood +upright, and plenty of fresh air was allowed to feed the blaze. Then +they slowly waved the blanket between them, sometimes lowering it until +it was scorched by the sleepy flames, and then elevating it above their +heads. All the time, they manipulated the blanket, sometimes straight up +and down, sometimes diagonally, and indeed, in every possible way. + +The result of all this varied swinging was that the black column of +vapor which slowly climbed the sky, was broken into circles, spiral +curves, and all sorts of odd-shaped figures, which did not dissolve for +several minutes in the clear air above. + +I need not tell you what this meant, for in another place I have +described the same thing. It was a signal fire intended by the +Winnebagos for the eyes of a party of friends who were too far off to be +reached in any other way. Deerfoot had seen such telegraphy many a time +and oft, and more than once he had used it. He could interpret such a +signal when made by a Shawanoe, Wyandotte, Sauk or Fox, but he had never +learned the code in use by the Winnebago military authorities. + +However, it was not possible that there was any very fine shade of +meaning in the various manipulations of the two warriors. Keen brained +as is the American Indian, he is unable to do a great many things with +which he is credited: one of these is to do more than telegraph the +simplest messages by means of fire, though it is beyond question that +important tidings has been flashed hundreds of miles in a single night, +from mountain top to mountain top, by means of the signal fires of the +Indians. + +What disturbed Deerfoot was this proof that there was a second party of +Winnebagos in that section of the country. He had not dreamed of such a +thing, and it might well cause him alarm, that is, for the three men who +were so intent on gathering their furs comparatively a short distance +away. + +Carefully screening himself from observation, the Shawanoe looked +intently in the direction of the gaze of the Winnebagos. He saw that +they were not peering at any other ridge, but at the broad low valley to +the north-west. They had not long to look when they detected a thin +bluish column of smoke creeping upward among the tree tops and +dissolving in the clear air above. + +Deerfoot also saw it, and he knew that it was a reply to the first +signal. There was another party of Winnebagos in the neighborhood; they +would soon join Black Bear's party, and there was no time for delay. +Indeed, but for the discovery he had made, the Shawanoe would have felt +that he had tarried too long already. + +It was not far now to the camp of the Hunters of the Ozark, and it was +perilous to wait to warn them. Every hour counted. Not only that, but, +as you can readily see, Fred Linden and Terry Clark were in still +greater danger. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVI + +ON THE EDGE OF THE PRAIRIE. + + +The night was far advanced when Fred Linden and Terry Clark reached the +stream, where the former remarked that their progress was stopped. Of +course he meant that they could continue if they chose to make another +raft or they could wade, but they had journeyed so far since dusk, and +the trouble of constructing a float was such that he thought it best to +wait where they were until daylight. They were pretty well fagged out, +and nothing could have been more grateful than to throw themselves on +the ground and sleep for several hours. + +Terry was as tired as his companion, but he stood irresolute, inclined +to think it best that they should push on. + +"The stream doesn't look very deep," said he, "and if ye agraas wid me +that we can wade, it'll be wiser if we make tother side and then +journey to the nixt straam." + +"But that may be a good many miles further on." + +"Thin all we have to do is to travel a good many miles," said the plucky +Irish lad, sitting down to take off his shoes. + +"I shall never give in to _you_," remarked Fred, also seating himself +and beginning to remove his foot-gear. + +Before any thing more could be done, however, both were startled by the +discovery that some one was on the other side of the stream. First they +heard the guttural exclamations which they knew were made by Indians, +and then they saw one of the red men come out into full view in the +moonlight. + +Without a word, the boys hastily moved back under the shadow of the +trees, making sure that they also placed several rods between them and +the trail which they had followed to the edge of the water. Secure from +observation, they fastened their eyes on the other bank, where they saw +an interesting sight. + +Three Indian warriors stood for fully five minutes in plain sight, +while they discussed the same question that had engaged the lads--that +is, in what manner the stream should be crossed. + +It did not take them long to decide. The foremost stepped into the +water, followed by the other two, none removing his moccasins or +leg-gear, and in a brief while they came out upon dry land again, within +fifty feet of where the lads were crouching under shelter. + +The boys trembled as they realized how narrow their escape had been. Had +they not paused for a few minutes, they would have been in the middle of +the stream, just as the others came down to the edge of the water. In +the light of their recent experience with the Winnebagos, they had not a +particle of doubt that the three belonged to the same tribe and that +they were fierce enemies. Had they not slain the boys, they would have +made captives of both and conducted them to the main party. Then when it +should have been found that one of the prisoners had the gun that once +belonged to the Wolf, their fate would have been sealed. + +The incident drove from the mind of Fred all wish to tarry on the road. +He wished that they were many miles on their way to the camp in the +Ozarks. They considered themselves members of the little party of +hunters whom they could not reach any too soon. + +"I obsarved while the spalpeens were wadin'," said Terry, "that none of +them wint lower in the water than their knees. Why didn't they take off +their shoes like dacent gintlemen, and cross as they should; but bein' +as they didn't do the same, why, we'll sit them the example." + +A minute later, the boys stepped into the stream, and, by using care, +reached the other side, with all their garments dry. Their shoes were +quickly replaced, and the two were off again, so moved by what they had +seen, that for the time they forgot fatigue and every thing else. + +"I tell you, Terry, that matters are beginning to look worse than even +Deerfoot thought, and you know that when he left us he didn't feel +satisfied, by any means." + +"Could it be," asked his companion, "that these spalpeens don't belong +to the same crowd that we saw?" + +"I am quite sure they do; these three would not have been so separated +from the others." + +"Where could they have come from?" asked the puzzled Terry. + +"Where all the Indians come from--the woods. I suppose a large party of +Winnebagos have been off on a tramp, and they are coming together with a +view of going home or of making an attack on some place or persons." + +A random guess, like this, sometimes comes closer to the truth than a +labored theory. The three Indians whom they had so narrowly escaped were +members of Black Bear's party and were on their way to meet him. +Furthermore, there were more of them at no great distance. + +"Me father lost his life by the Indians," said Terry, in a soft voice; +"but though it was not known what tribe the same belonged to, I don't +think they were Winnebagos; but Indians are Indians and are always ready +to kill white people whiniver the chance comes along." + +"You are right; father doesn't think there is the least danger or he +wouldn't have sent for me. He has hunted several seasons without any +trouble with them, but he ought to have learned long ago to be forever +on the watch." + +"Fred," said the other, stopping short in his excitement; "do ye think +they are goin' to attack the _sittlement_?" + +"Impossible! There's the blockhouse and plenty of men to defend it +against a thousand savages." + +"But the woods saam to be full of thim; there may be some kind of an +Indian war that has broke out and these are the first part of the rid +army that is to coom down and swaap us over the Rocky Mountains." + +But Fred could not share in this prodigious fear. He faced to the front +again and laughed, as he resumed his walk. + +"There couldn't be any thing like _that_ without warning reaching us; +some of the runners would have come to Greville with the news; besides, +Deerfoot would have been certain to know something about it." + +"_That_ sittles it!" exclaimed Terry, with a sigh of relief; "ye are +right in sayin' the Shawanoe would have knowed about it; he would have +larned it before the spalpeens that started out on the war path, and, +bein' as he didn't say any thin', I'm sure ye are right; but all the +same, it looks bad for the Hunters of the Ozark, which maans oursilves +as well as the men in the mountains." + +"There's no use of denying that there is enough to make all of us +anxious, but when I remember that father and Mr. Hardin and Bowlby have +spent so many years in the Indian country, I can not help feeling hope +that they will be able to take care of themselves. You know they are all +good shots and they have a cabin strong enough to stand a rough siege." + +"I don't forgit the same; but there's a good many more rid than white +men and Mr. Bowlby is lame." + +"What of that? He doesn't expect to fight with his feet." + +"There are many scrimmages in which it's handy to use yer faat. If +Deerfut hadn't popped along just as I keeled over the Wolf I'd jumped +on him; then, do ye not mind that the men may take it into their heads +to run away." + +"They have their horses," said Fred, foreseeing and agreeing with the +response that his young friend would make. + +"Not one of 'em is worth a cint at such a time; a one-legged Indian +could outrun the fastest; they would have to stick fast to the trail +while the spalpeens would walk all around 'em." + +"All that is true, but if they could get a good start, it would be very +handy for Mr. Bowlby to have one of the horses to ride." + +"I don't see much chance of the same," was the sensible comment of +Terry; "but, me boy, have ye any idaa of what time it is?" + +"It must be far beyond midnight: surely we are a long ways in advance of +the Winnebago camp where we left Deerfoot." + +"They are not meaning to make a start to-night?" + +"Of course not; they will not move until morning." + +"Thin I'm in favor of an adjournment _sine die_, at once and without +waitin' any longer." + +"What do you mean?" asked the puzzled Fred, stopping and looking around +at his companion. + +"I'm tired out." + +"So am I, but I made up my mind to keep walking till I dropped, before I +would give in to you. It will be a sensible thing for us to rest, but we +must get far enough from the trail, so that if any more stragglers come +along this way, they won't stumble over us." + +This was only simple prudence. They groped along for several rods, +through the undergrowth and among the limbs, and were still walking, +when Terry's foot struck some obstruction and he fell flat. + +"Are you hurt?" asked Fred. + +"Hurt? No; that's the way I always lay down, as me uncle obsarved whin +he fell off the roof--call me early, Fred, and be sure ye don't take up +more of the bed--than--a--gintleman----" + +The poor wearied fellow was asleep. + +Fred smiled, as he lay down beside him The air was quite brisk, so he +unstrapped his blanket and flung part of it over his friend and the rest +over himself, the two lying back to back as they lay the night before in +the cavern. The dried leaves made as soft a couch as they could want and +Fred had only time to murmur a prayer to heaven, when he too became +unconscious. + +They slumbered for four full hours, when both awoke at the same moment, +refreshed and strengthened. The sun was well up in the sky, and +fortunately the weather continued clear, crisp and bracing. Indeed it +could not have been more nearly perfect. + +They laughed when they saw where they had made their bed, right in the +open wood, just as any wild animal would have done when overcome by +fatigue. There was no water within sight and no food at command. The +blanket was quickly folded up into a neat parcel and strapped to the +back of Fred and the two retraced their steps to the trail, which they +hoped to follow until it took them to the camp at the foot of the +Ozarks. + +"I have found out one thing, that have I," remarked Terry, with the air +of one announcing a great discovery. + +"What is that?" + +"The hungriest young gintleman on the western side of the Mississippi is +the handsome youth whom ye have the honor of walkin' with this very +minute." + +"I can feel for you on _that_ question," added Fred; "for it seems to me +that I never wanted food so bad in all my life; we must be on the +lookout for game. Do you know how to make that call that Deerfoot used +to bring the turkey to him?" + +"No, but I know how to use the turkey after the same is brought to me. +If I should try the signal, it would scare all the turkeys and deer and +foxes and bears and wolves and beavers out of the country, which bein' +the same, I won't try it, principally because I don't know how to begin +to try it." + +"My gracious, Terry; if you could shoot like you can talk, we wouldn't +have to wait long for something to eat." + +"Whisht, Fred," whispered Terry, in some excitement; "the wood just +beyanst ye looks as if it wasn't any wood at all." + +Fred Linden had noticed the peculiarity. The trees were becoming so +scarce and far apart that it was evident they were approaching some +extensive clearing where no trees grew at all. The next minute the two +stood on the edge of an immense prairie, which revealed a sight that +profoundly interested them. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVII. + +A MORNING MEAL. + + +The two boys stood on the edge of a prairie which had a varying width of +from one to three miles. Looking to the right and the left, neither end +could be seen, so that there was no means of judging its length. + +The trail led straight across to the wilderness on the other side, which +at that point was all of two miles distant. You can understand that +walking was so much easier on the open ground that any party of +travelers would hasten to take advantage of such a chance. The hoofs of +the half dozen horses had left such a distinct impression that the eye +could follow the trail a long ways from the margin of the woods. + +This prairie was entirely covered with a growth of succulent grass. The +season was so late that it had lost most of its verdancy, but there was +an abundance of nutriment in the blades and it was splendid +feeding-ground--one of those breaks in the almost limitless forest of +which grazing animals were sure to take advantage. + +The boys had paused only a minute or two, gazing out on the almost level +expanse, when Terry uttered an exclamation of delight and pointed to the +right. Looking in that direction (as Fred had done at the moment his +companion spoke), he saw a welcome sight indeed. A herd of buffaloes +were cropping the grass within gunshot of the young hunters. + +As I have said in another place, there were no such droves as have +sometimes been seen on the vast prairies of the far west, numbering +fully a hundred thousand, though a century ago some amazing collections +of animals were met within sight of the Mississippi. + +The herd upon which our friends looked with so much interest numbered +little more than a hundred, and they were ruminating along the side of +the prairie instead of cropping the grass in the middle of the plain. +Some of them seemed to be browsing among the trees and undergrowth, but +the major part were scattered over the prairie to a distance of two +hundred yards, while they were strung to a still greater extent parallel +with the course of the prairie itself. From this you will see they were +much dispersed, none of them being close to another, except he may have +brushed against him now and then. + +The front of the drove was not less than two hundred feet away and +others could be heard ruminating among the trees, where their huge bushy +heads and big round eyes were often thrust into view. Some of them may +have caught sight of the lads, but if so, they did not consider them +worth attention, for they continued browsing and grazing, advancing step +by step toward the spot where our young friends stood. + +"Frederick," said Terry, laying his hand on the arm of his companion, +and speaking with the gravity of a judge, "whin ye swoop yer gaze on +thim playthings out there, bear in mind that there's our breakfast, as +me grandmither obsarved whin the dinner table upsit and ivery thing +rolled down cellar." + +"Our opinion is unanimous on that point; I have already selected my +victim, and if you will go away and start a fire, it will hurry matters +along." + +"It ain't as bad as that," said Terry in some surprise, "I'm not so near +dead that I'm goin' to die in ten minutes if I don't git somethin' to +ate: I will stay and superintind the operations of shootin' one of them +little pets out there." + +"It isn't the first buffalo I have killed--" + +"I'm not aware that ye have killed that yit," interrupted the Irish lad +in his quizzical fashion. + +"You soon will be, but I have been out with father before to-day and +shot buffaloes: have you?" + +"No; whin I goes out huntin' yer fither has't the proud distinction of +bein' taken along. Lucky for the buffaloes I niver took a notion to go +out and kill siveral thousand: for that raison we find the drove out +there so innocent and confidin' that they don't know enough to be afeard +of us." + +"Maybe they have no cause to be." + +"But they can't know that _I'm_ not goin' to shoot among them,--so why +shouldn't they be scared out of their siven sinses? Howsumiver, ye have +me permission to show the animals that ye are actin' under me own eye +and orders and it will be an incouragement to yersilf to know the same." + +From what has been said, it will be understood that Fred Linden knew +much more about buffaloes than did his companion. [The proper name is +_bison_: the genuine buffalo is not found in America.] As he had said, +this was not the first time he had hunted them, but with Terry Clark it +was different. He had spent a good deal of his time in the woods and had +gone in quest of wolves, bears and deer, but he had never brought down +one of the lumbering animals for whose flesh he now yearned with a +yearning that only the most ravening hunger can inspire. + +Terry had formed a deep plot during the short conversation. He did not +know the best manner in which to shoot a buffalo and he was too proud to +ask instruction. He encouraged the scheme, therefore, of Fred making the +first shot. That would give him a chance to see how it was done, so +that when he came to exhibit _his_ skill, he would make no mistake. + +Although up to this time the animals had not shown that they cared a +straw for the two beings who stood so near and were looking at them with +loaded guns in their hands, yet they were liable to become stampeded at +any moment. A snort and jump by a single animal were likely to set the +whole drove on a dead run, in which all hope of a breakfast on buffalo +steaks would be gone for that morning at least. + +So, as a matter of prudence, Terry stayed where he was, but partly +sheltered himself, so as not to startle any one of the animals that +might come upon him suddenly. At the same time, Fred bent low and with +loaded and cocked rifle began stealing toward the nearest buffalo. + +As it happened this was a cow in fine condition. She was plucking a +ribbon of grass that followed the edge of prairie. By some chemistry of +shadow and sunshine, there was this little strip of unusually tender +herbage, which the cow was eating in her quick, vigorous way, as though +afraid that some of her companions would find and take it from her. + +Fred singled out this one as his prize. Being so close to the wood, he +could not have wanted a better chance to steal up to her. Indeed he had +but to stand still, for she was coming a regular half step at a time as +she clipped the grass in front of her; but the youth's hunger would not +allow him to wait the few minutes that would have been required. + +When within fifty feet of the cow, Fred knelt on one knee and brought +his rifle to a level. The cow was still advancing, "head on," when he +made a noise similar to that which comes natural to you when you wish to +drive the hens out of your garden-patch. The cow stopped abruptly, threw +up her head and stared at the hunter. The sight of the crouching figure +must have suggested to the stupid animal that every thing was not right, +for with a frightened whiff, she bounded short around with the intention +of joining the other animals. + +At the very moment she turned, Fred Linden fired, sending the bullet +directly back of her fore leg, where it tore its way through flesh, +muscles, bones and the heart, the battered bullet humming off through +the air on the other side. + +No shot could have been more effective. The cow made a couple of wild +leaps and then lunged forward, her nose striking the earth with such +force that her head doubled under her and she swung over on her back and +side with a violence that made it seem as if she had fallen down a high +precipice. + +Following his old rule, Fred loaded his gun where he stood, before +moving out to examine his prize. It was at this juncture that a stampede +of the whole drove was due. Now that the boys had secured their +breakfast they would not have cared had the animals thundered off out of +sight. + +But the terror of the smitten creature was too brief to affect the rest, +even though several were quite close to her at the time she gave the +snort and rolled over on the ground. A cow grazing near did raise her +head for a moment and look at her fallen friend as though she hardly +understood it. She seemed to meditate plunging into the rest of the +drove with head down and with tidings of the disaster, but she must +have concluded that since the other cow was dead, it wasn't worth while +to make any fuss over it; for she dropped her head and resumed her +grazing as though she had no further interest in the matter. + +Even when Fred ran out, and, stooping down, began cutting a large slice +from the shoulder of the victim, none of the others paid any attention +to him. Close behind him came Terry, who was so desirous of examining +the prize, that he postponed starting the fire. + +"Terry, how will that do for a shot?" asked Fred, with some pride, as he +plied his knife. + +"Where did ye land the shot?" + +"Right there, behind the fore leg; you can see the hole where it +entered." + +Terry turned his head to one side, closed an eye and surveyed it as +though he was measuring the height of a wall: then he shook his head. + +"What's the matter with you?" asked the impatient Fred. + +"Ye are a sixteenth of an inch too far forward, be the token of which +the ball wint through the upper part of the heart: whin ye kill a +buffalo coow ye should always sind the ball through the lower instead of +the upper part of the heart. Ye surprise me so much that I am graved +with ye, me own Fred." + +The latter laughed. + +"I suppose it would have done as well had I sent the bullet through her +brain; but that takes the finest kind of marksmanship." + +"Av course, which explains why ye didn't dare attimpt it: whin we have +finished our dinner, supper and breakfast all in one, I'll step out on +the perarie, strike an impressive attitude and drop the biggest bull in +the drove, just to tach ye the gintaal way of doin' that same thing." + +"Well, I shall be glad to learn the best style of bringing down the +creatures." + +By this time, Fred had severed a piece of meat from the shoulder of the +buffalo. It weighed several pounds, but Terry broke in with the +wondering inquiry: + +"What are ye goin' to do with _that_?" + +"That's for our dinner; what would you suppose?" + +"I thought that was the part of the coow that ye were goin' to be +sinsible enough to lave behind while we built a fire around the rist and +had enough of a maal to stay the pangs of hunger." + +Without waiting to hear the response of his companion, Terry ran among +the trees and began gathering wood with which to start a blaze. Both +boys were such experts at this that only a brief time was necessary. +Fred laid the buffalo steak on the leaves and took part, striking the +flame with his own flint and tinder. There was no water within reach and +this was quite a deprivation, but the boys were hungry enough to wait +for that. From his scant store of mixed salt and sugar, Fred drew forth +enough to season the enormous slice and it was speedily half broiled. + +Two such hungry youngsters are not likely to be particular about their +dinner being done to a turn, and they were eager to eat it when it was +exceedingly rare. Leaving Terry to make known when it was ready for the +palate, Fred walked to the edge of the prairie to take a survey. + +He could not forget that they had serious business before them, and, +though he was warranted in believing that there was nothing to fear from +the Winnebagos who had caused so much trouble, he was too wise to take +any thing for granted. + +He saw the buffaloes cropping the grass with the same vigorous +persistency which they will show for hours, while the prairie, extending +far to the right and left, failed to show any other living creature upon +it. So far as he could tell, there was no cause for fear. + + + + +CHAPTER XXVIII. + +A STRANGE RIDE. + + +When the boys had eaten their fill, there was a quantity of meat left. +This was cooked still more over the coals, wrapped about with the +greenest leaves that could be got, and then packed in the bundle which +Terry Clark strapped to his back. + +"There's enough of the same," he explained, "to presarve us from pinin' +away with starvation, which reminds me now that I promised ye that I'd +show ye the properest way in which to bring down a buffalo." + +"I'm willing to wait until some other time," said Fred, who feared there +would be dangerous delay; "I am more anxious to get forward than I am to +see you make an exhibition of yourself." + +"It will not take me long," replied Terry, who was sure there could be +no miss where the animals were so plentiful, while of course the delay +ought to be slight. + +"If thim Winnebagos that we obsarved last night have started this way, +they ain' t any more than fairly goin', which puts thim at the laast +calculation a dozen good miles behind us; they won't walk any faster +than we do, so we'll git to the camp a long ways ahead of 'em." + +"All this sounds reasonable, but you know we have learned that they are +not the only Winnebagos in these parts; but then they are under the eye +of Deerfoot and he would give us warning." + +"That sittles it, as I previously remarked some time ago, in token of +which we will shake hands on the same." + +The Irish lad had made such an enjoyable meal that he was in the highest +spirits. He extended his hand to his friend and shook it warmly, as he +was inclined to do for slight cause. + +"Now stand still, obsarve, admire and remimber." + +And with this high flown counsel, Terry with his gun in position began +moving toward an enormous bull. The latter really was not so close to +him as was a cow, but he thought it beneath his dignity to spend his +ammunition on such game as had served for their dinner. + +Although Terry Clark's natural love of humor often led him to assume +what he failed to feel, he was hopeful in the present instance that he +would be able to carry out the little scheme in mind. He knew that the +weapon in his hand was a good one, and he was already so close to the +buffalo that he was sure of bringing it down at the first fire. + +While he was willing to admit that Fred's shot could not have been +improved, so far as effectiveness was concerned, yet he was in earnest +in his intention of firing at the head. He knew that no animal is of any +account after its brain has been perforated, and it seemed to him that +it was more appropriate for a true sportsman to bring down his game by +that means instead of firing at its body. + +Terry made a mistake from which his experience on the border ought to +have saved him. Had he driven his bullet into the eye of the buffalo, he +could have slain him, but he was almost certain to fail by firing +simply at the head. It would have been far better had he followed the +example that his companion set. + +The bull upon which he had cast his eyes was about twenty yards from the +wood. He did not raise his head until this distance was diminished by +one half. Just then a cow showed some alarm of the approaching figure +and walked hastily away. This caused the bull to throw up his head and +stare at Terry. + +"Obsarve!" called the latter to his friend, who began to feel uneasy +over the appearance of things. + +A dozen spears of grass seemed to be dripping from the mouth of the +magnificent bull, who glared at the figure of the young man in the act +of leveling his gun as though he had some curiosity to know what was +going on. + +Terry aimed at the head, making the part between and above the eyes his +target. This was probably the most invulnerable spot of the animal. + +The bull was still staring at the intruder, when the latter, aiming at +the point named, fired. The bullet struck the bony ridge at the upper +part of the head and glanced off into space, inflicting no more real +injury than a paper wad. + +But the impingement of the lead must have given the stupid brute an idea +that harm was meant. His anger was roused, and, dropping his head with a +savage bellow, he charged the young hunter at full speed. + +This was giving the matter an unpleasant turn, but there was no time to +argue, and flinging his gun aside, Terry gave the finest exhibition of +running he had ever shown. No one could have realized better than did he +that the bull "meant business" and it would never do to allow himself to +be caught. + +Fred Linden himself was so startled by the sudden onslaught of the +animal that he was flurried and fired without taking proper aim. He +struck him, but he was unable to check his charge: indeed he rather +added to his fury. Stepping back, so as to shield himself as much as he +could behind the nearest tree, he began reloading his weapon with the +utmost haste. + +Meantime Terry, by desperate running, reached the tree at which he aimed +a few steps in advance of his formidable foe. He had no time to climb +the trunk, but believing the lowermost limb was within reach, he made a +leap, seized it with both hands and swung himself out of reach, just as +the bull thundered beneath like a runaway engine. + +Finding he had missed his victim, the savage beast snorted with rage, +wheeled about, came back a few paces and was passing beneath the limb +again, when a singular accident gave an astonishing turn to the whole +business. + +The limb which afforded Terry Clark his temporary safety was unable to +bear his weight, and, while he was struggling to raise himself to the +upper side and it was bending low with him, it broke like a pipe stem +close to the body of the tree. + +This took place so suddenly that the youth had not the slightest +warning. Indeed it would not have availed him had he known what was +coming, for the time was too brief in which to help himself. + +Down he came with the limb grasped in both hands and fell squarely on +the back of the buffalo bull. Fortunately the bewildered animal had +just shifted his position, so that the lad fell with his face turned +toward the head instead of in "reverse order." + +Even in that exciting moment Terry saw the grotesqueness of the +situation. His legs were stretched apart so as to span the animal just +back of his enormous neck. Letting go of the branch that had played him +the trick, he grasped the bushy mane with both hands and yelled in a +voice that might have been heard a mile away: + +"_All aboard! off wid ye!_" + +So far as a bull is capable of feeling emotion, that particular specimen +must have been in a peculiar frame of mind. He glared about him, here +and there, turned part way round, as if the whole thing was more than he +could understand, and then as his bulging eyes caught sight of the +remarkable load on his back and he felt the weight of the burden, he was +seized with a panic. + +He emitted a single whiffing snort, and flinging his tail high in air, +made for the other side of the prairie as if Death himself was racing at +his heels. His actions were of that pronounced character that his +fright communicated itself to the rest of the herd. There was a general +uplifting of heads, and then, as the bulls and cows saw their most +eminent leader tearing across the prairie with a live boy astride of his +back, the sight was too much for them. A wholesale series of snorts and +bellows followed, tails were flirted aloft, and away the whole herd +went, fairly making the ground tremble beneath their tread. + +By the time the alarmed Fred Linden had his rifle reloaded there was not +a buffalo within a hundred yards of him. The one that bore his friend on +his back was making as good time as the fleetest and was well toward the +head of the drove. The panic began like an eddy of the sea; there was a +surging of the animals toward the other side of the prairie and away +they went, as I have said, with their tails and heels in the air, as if +they meant to keep up their headlong flight for twenty miles, as is +sometimes the case, when an immense drove become stampeded on the great +plains of the west. + +Whatever feelings of amusement might have been first aroused by the +figure that Terry cut on the back of the terrified bull were lost in the +dreadful fear of Fred that it would prove a fatal ride for his friend. + +He could see him plainly for a fourth of a mile, but by that time the +trampling hoofs raised a dust in the dry grass which partly obscured the +herd and made it impossible to distinguish the figure of the lad +clinging to the mane of his novel charger. + +"He will fall off," was the exclamation of Fred, "and will be trampled +to death by the others." + +He recalled that the bull must have been wounded by his own shot, but +that knowledge gave him concern instead of relief; for if the bull +should give out, he would be trampled by those who were thundering so +close at his heels. + +The buffaloes did not preserve the open order which marked them when +they were grazing, but crowded together, so that their backs looked like +brown dusty waves, rising and falling rapidly from the motions of their +bodies. + +Fred quickly recovered from his astonishment. He had reloaded his gun, +but when ready to fire, was afraid to do so. Too many other buffaloes +interposed between him and the bull, and had he discharged his weapon, +he would have been as likely to hit Terry as to wound the brute that was +carrying him away with such speed. + +Running to where the rifle of the boy lay, Fred picked it up, hastily +reloaded it, and started after the herd. He broke into a loping trot +such as an Indian shows when hurriedly following a trail. He kept his +eyes on the fast receding animals, his interest being now centered on +the moment when they should reach the wood on the other side of the +prairie. + +"It will be the death of him if they dash among the trees," he thought; +"for he will be struck by some limb and have his brains dashed out." + +But such a catastrophe did not take place. The fleeing animals must have +known that their headlong speed could not be kept up among the trees and +undergrowth; so, when those at the head of the drove were close to the +edge of the wood they swerved to the left, and the others followed with +the same furious swiftness with which they had sped across the open. + +Fred Linden at this time was not a third of the way across the prairie, +and he stopped and viewed the sight. He could distinguish the animals +much better than when they were tearing straight away from him. They +ran, so to speak, from under the cloud of dust that had obscured his +vision, which, sweeping backward, left all in plain view. + +What he saw, too, showed that the buffaloes possessed varying rates of +speed. A dozen were well to the front, still crowding close together, +while the rest, also in close order, were strung along at different +distances. Still, they were so far from Fred that his view was any thing +but satisfactory. Shading his eyes with his hand, he peered through the +autumn air in the search for his friend. + +"There he is!" he exclaimed, but the words were hardly out of his mouth +when he saw he was mistaken. The distance was too great for him to see +clearly. + +"How long will this keep up?" was the question which he would have been +glad to answer, for it included the fate of Terence Clark. If his steed +should grow weary and fall behind the others, possibly he would give his +rider a chance to leap to the ground and make off; but the likelihood of +that taking place was so remote that Fred could feel no hope. + + + + +CHAPTER XXIX. + +A YOUNG HUNTER'S STRATEGY. + + +Fred Linden walked rapidly forward until he reached the middle of the +prairie, when he paused and bent his eyes on the swiftly vanishing drove +of buffaloes. They were speeding at right angles to the course he had +been following, and, so far as he could judge at the distance, were on +the same dead run with which they started. + +He was convinced that he was mistaken a brief while before, when, for a +moment, he thought he caught a glimpse of Terry on the back of the +terrified bull. He was unable to distinguish any thing that looked like +him. He might--and it was not at all improbable--be still clinging to +his steed, but he was too far off and too mixed up with the others for +even the keen eyes of Fred Linden to identify him. + +There seemed but the one thing to do: that was to follow the drove +until he learned the fate of his friend. Certain that he would find him +sooner or later, Fred resorted again to his loping trot, which he could +keep up for several hours without great fatigue. + +But he had not gone twenty steps at this gait, when, to his astonishment +and alarm, he observed three Indian warriors, each mounted on a horse, +issue from the wood at the point where the buffaloes would have entered +it had they not turned to the left. The red men headed their animals +directly toward Fred, and advanced at a moderate gallop. + +The sight was enough to make the bravest person thoughtful; for you will +readily see the critical situation of the boy. It was useless to turn +and run, for they would overhaul him before he could get half way to +cover. He was in the middle of a grassy prairie, where there was not the +slightest object which could be used as a screen in a fight with them. +He glanced quickly about, but did not see a stone as large as his hand. +Except so far as his weapons were concerned, he was absolutely +helpless. + +Never did Fred Linden display more coolness and knowledge of Indian +character than he did at this time when caught at such fearful +disadvantage. He knew that if he showed any timidity, the red men would +attack him at once, while, if he could deceive them, as he hoped, there +was a possibility that he would escape. + +Two hundred yards away, the Indians drew their cantering horses down to +a walk: they evidently saw there was no call for haste and they could +afford to take all the time they wished. They were riding beside each +other, instead of in Indian file, and being nigh enough to be observed +distinctly, showed that they were dressed precisely like the Winnebagos +whom he had noticed the night before around their camp-fire. This might +have been, had they belonged to another totem, for there is a similarity +in the dress of different tribes, but Fred had no doubt that these were +Winnebagos. It began to look indeed as if there was an irruption of them +into that section of the Louisiana Territory. + +During those trying moments, when Fred calmly watched the approach of +the dusky horsemen, he was observant of the smallest things. He recalled +that they were the same in number as the party which he and Terry so +narrowly missed the night before on the edge of the stream and he half +suspected they were the same, though such supposition did not correspond +with the theories formed and accepted at the time. + +He saw the middle horse, which was darker in color than the others, +slightly stumble; then the rider turned his head and said something to +the warrior on his left, who made answer without taking his eyes from +Fred; then the one on the right said something, his painted features +relaxing into a frightful grin, the guttural words being plainly +audible: all these points being noticed, as I have said, by the young +hunter who had so much more important matters to engage his thoughts. + +He recalled with relief that on picking up the gun of Terry he had +reloaded it, so that he now had two weapons ready for use. With these he +could make a brave resistance, and you may depend upon it that the last +thing he thought of doing was to surrender. He might easily be shot +down where he stood, but he would die fighting. + +The three horsemen advanced with the same deliberate pace, their black +eyes fixed upon Fred, who stood erect, looking straight at them. When +they were within twenty yards, he quietly turned so as to face the other +way, and waved his cap several times over his head. At the same moment +he uttered a resounding whoop, replaced his cap, laid Terry's rifle at +his feet and leveled his own at the amazed savages, who could not have +suspected what was coming. + +You understand that the purpose of Fred was to make the Winnebagos +believe that he had friends on the edge of the wood behind him to whom +he had signaled. The act of laying down his gun was to give the +impression that he was so sure of support that he was ready to fight +until it should appear. + +Now, the red men might have been deceived by this to as full an extent +as the youth desired, but the fact remained that, even if there were +re-enforcements on the margin of the prairie, they were so far off that +they could give no help if the Indians chose to assail the boy. I am +inclined to think that had the Winnebagos believed that a dozen white +hunters were encamped there, they would not have been restrained from +carrying out their design by such fact: but when the cool defiance of +the youth was added to the same, there was enough to make them pause. + +They might shoot him down, wheel and dash for the woods from which they +had emerged but a short time before; but they would be liable to +pursuit, and, when a white borderer takes to the trail, he can be as +persistent as the red man himself, though, as I have said, had they been +eager to shoot the boy, they would not have been stopped by that +knowledge. But they saw that he had his loaded rifle leveled at them: +each Winnebago probably imagined he would be the special target. Their +guns were still in their hands and no doubt the moment any one attempted +to raise his weapon the white boy would fire. + +The distance was so short that there could be no miss. It followed +therefore that the cost of an assault upon the lad would be the death +of one of the Winnebagos, and none of the three could know that he would +not be the victim. + +The cost was more than they were willing to pay, for it must be borne in +mind that not only was the death of one of their number considered +assured, but it was not at all unlikely that such a daring youngster +would be able to do something with the gun at his feet before +succumbing. + +But it is not to be supposed that three mounted Indians would +deliberately ride away from a single youth through fear alone,--that is, +not until they had tried to circumvent him by strategy. And so it came +to pass that within the same minute that Fred raised his rifle, the +Winnebago who sat in the middle waved his hand toward him as a sign of +comity. At the same time he called out: "Yenghese! Long Knife! +Friend--friend--friend!" + +But Fred knew too much to be deceived. He was the master of more +vigorous English, and, without lowering his gun, he called out: + +"Keep off or I'll fire! If you ride another step, I'll let daylight +through you!" + +As if to add emphasis to his words, he gently swayed his rifle from +right to left, so that it covered each warrior in turn. There was an +involuntary ducking of the heads, and the Indians, seeing that nothing +was to be done without large risk, opened out--two riding to the right +and one to the left. Thus they passed by Fred without lessening the +space between him and them. + +After all, this was the most trying moment to the youth, for it diverted +his attention in the most exasperating manner. The three horsemen were +in his field of vision, but it was hard to keep watch upon each. He +suspected the maneuver was for the purpose of taking him off his guard, +but it is doubtful whether such was the case, for there was something in +the grim pose of the youthful hunter which warned them that it was +unsafe to trifle with him. + +When the horsemen were opposite each other and on a line with Fred, he +suddenly wheeled with great quickness and held his piece still leveled +so that he could shift it from one to the other the moment needed. On +their part, the Winnebagos watched him with cat-like vigilance, keeping +their heads turned until they came together a hundred feet beyond, and +between him and the wood which he had just left. There they stopped, +their position such that the sides of their animals were turned toward +the lad, whom they continued to view with an interest that it is safe to +say they had never felt in any other of his race. + +It was tiresome to hold his heavy rifle leveled, but Fred stuck to it, +for he knew how much depended on the next minute or two. + +It looked for a time as though the Winnebagos had decided not to leave +without a demonstration, but finally they moved off with their backs +toward Fred, and their horses on a walk. + +"How nicely I could pick one of them off," said he to himself, as the +broad shoulders, with the black hair streaming over them, moved gently +up and down with the motion of the animals, and ranged themselves beside +each other like three dusky targets. "I could hit _him_ or _him_ or +_him_" he added, shifting his aim from one to the other in turn, "and +it's because they know it that they are afraid to risk a shot. If one +of them had made a motion to take aim, I would have let fly, and I +wouldn't have missed either. Then I would have done something with +Terry's gun." + +These thoughts had hardly found expression, when the middle Winnebago +suddenly turned on his horse, raised his gun and discharged it at Fred +Linden. The instant he did so, he and his two companions threw +themselves forward on their animals and dashed off on a dead run for the +wood. + +Had the warrior been less hurried, it is probable he would have struck +the astonished youth, who plainly heard the _pinge_ of the bullet as it +almost touched his ear. His own arms were beginning to ache because of +their constrained position, but he took as careful aim as possible and +fired at the savage who fired at him. + +More than that, he hit him. A screeching yawp broke the stillness, the +warrior half straightened up on his steed, seemed to sway, and would +have fallen had not one of his companions caught his shoulder and +supported him for a minute or two. The horses were brought down to a +walk, and finally came to a standstill, though they halted at a point +beyond rifle shot. + +"I hope I finished him," muttered Fred Linden, with a snap of his eyes; +"they are seeking my life, and, if I could have my way, I would tumble +every one of them off his horse." + +Never was the value of two rifles shown more strikingly than at this +time. The moment his gun was discharged--had he possessed no other--Fred +would have been helpless, and the Winnebagos would have been upon him +before he could reload his piece; for that was in the days of +flint-locks, when the charge had to be rammed down and the powder poured +into the pan before the weapon was ready for use. It may be said, +however, that under such circumstances he would not have fired. + +But before the horsemen could wheel about, they would have found the +youth standing at "present arms" precisely as before, and the situation +unchanged, except that one of their own number had been disabled, and to +that extent (which was considerable) the gain was on the side of the +lad. + +There could be little doubt that the stricken Winnebago was hit hard, +though after some attention from his companions, he was able to sit his +horse. The three warriors seemed to have lost all interest in Fred, for +a few minutes later they rode off at a walk, without, so far as he could +judge, once bestowing a look upon him. + +It struck him as singular that after his stratagem, by which he believed +he gave the impression that he had a party of friends on the margin of +the wood, that the Winnebagos should guide their horses to the very +point. After all, it began to look as though he was not so successful in +that respect as he imagined, and that it was his own courageous demeanor +that for the time had saved his life. + +"I am glad they have ridden off in that direction," said the youth to +himself, as he saw them carefully enter the wood, where they were lost +from sight; "for if they had ridden the other way they would have +bothered me in my hunt for Terry." + + + + +CHAPTER XXX. + +TERRY FINISHES HIS RIDE. + + +That ride of Terry Clark on the back of the buffalo bull was one which +he could never forget had he wished to do so, which of course he did +not. The first thrill, when the beast dashed off on a dead run, and the +wind began blowing by the ears of the lad, was that of pleasure. He was +having an exciting ride, and, as good fortune would have it, the animal +was bearing him straight along the trail toward the camp in the Ozarks. + +"If the baste will show enough consideration for me," thought the lad, +"to kape up his coorse for twinty miles or so, he will give me a good +lift toward raichin' the folks, though sorry I am that I haven't Fred +alongside or rather behind me." + +The bull being on a run, his progress consisted of a series of quick +jumps, which jarred the rider so much that had he not kept a good grip +upon the shaggy mane, he would have been unseated. The hair of the +animal was so long that he was able to make his hold secure, though he +had a constant fear that he would stumble, in which case the rider was +sure to take a tremendous header that was likely to break his neck. + +Terry could feel the throb, as it may be called, of the engine. His +position was such that his heels touched the body close to the shoulders +of the bull. At that point there was an alternate swelling and sinking +of the muscles, as the animal alighted on his feet and leaped away +again, which Terry felt as plainly as if he had held his open hand on +the shoulder. Then, too, the bull had a peculiar sidelong motion, as +though some of his muscles occasionally got out of "gear," and the +action of the hind legs did not "dovetail," so to speak, with that of +the fore legs. + +Nothing escaped the eye of Terry during those exciting minutes. He +thought the head of the bull was held unusually low, but he noticed the +short, thick horns, curving outward and then coming over until they +ended within a few inches of each other, and he was sure that amid the +dusty frontispiece of the immense area of skull bone he could see where +his useless bullet had struck and glanced off; once or twice he caught a +whiff of the breath of the buffalo, redolent with the not unpleasant +odor of grass, and now and then he could hear his fierce snort. It +seemed to Terry that the animal turned his head partly to one side as if +to get a view of the strange creature on his back. Doubtless such was +the fact, and, after each sight, it seemed that he bounded away with +more terror than before. + +Brief as was the time taken by the bull in galloping across the prairie, +it allowed Terry to see every thing. As soon as he felt sure of +retaining his seat, he glanced at the other animals, all of which were +galloping in the same direction as the bull. Some of them were so fleet +that they passed him, but he retained his place near the middle of the +herd. + +The buffalo, or properly the bison, is a stupid animal, but a peculiar +fact about the small drove amid which Terry Clark was riding was that a +number noticed him and in their way tried to push him off. They would +dash up beside the bull with head lowered, and rub their horns against +him in the effort to reach the rider and unseat him. + +"The only way in which ye can do that," said Terry, when he saw what +they were trying to do, "is to climb up and take a saat behind me. Thin, +if ye'll lock yer arms about me nick ye may persuade me to stip down, +but ye can't do much while on the ground." + +The buffaloes were too dull of intellect to realize their helplessness +in this respect, and they continued crowding close to the bull until +they must have caused him some discomfort. This crowding was of such a +marked character that, as you will remember, it was noticed by Fred +Linden as far off as he stood. + +Once or twice the rider had one of his feet slightly jammed, but he was +able to lift it out of danger without imperiling his position. The dust +caused by the hoofs of the animals did not rise until his steed had +passed beyond, so that he suffered nothing therefrom and every thing in +front was in plain view. The speed of the beast, however, caused some +inconvenience, for the wind made him blink, and it was only by half +closing his eyes that he could peer out between the lids and see +clearly. + +Before the other side of the prairie was reached, Terry Clark began +asking himself the natural and important question,--How is this to end? + +The same theories that I have mentioned as occurring to Fred Linden +passed through his brain also. If the bull should dash among the trees +at that headlong pace, the rider could not retain his place for more +than a minute or two; if he was wounded enough to cause him to give out +and fall to the ground, he would be trampled upon by those behind and +Terry of course would share his fate. + +Brief as was the time given for thought, the youth considered a half +dozen plans. He glanced over his shoulder and was alarmed to see how +many animals were in the rear of him. He asked himself whether he could +not slip backward, grasp the swinging tail, and dropping to the ground, +keep his feet while he held fast to the caudal appendage, and pulling +the other way, act as a brake upon the progress of the animal until all +the others had passed on. Then he would "release brakes," and allow the +bull to continue his career as suited himself. + +But he was compelled to admit that the plan was not feasible. The bull +was going at such a pace that the rider would be sure to lose his +balance the moment he struck the ground, and, though he might still hold +fast to the tail and retard the progress of the beast, he was sure of +getting in the way of his heels. + +"If his tail was a little longer," reflected Terry, "I would try the +same, but I'm afeard I would git mixed up with his hind hoofs and things +wouldn't be agraaable." + +So that plan was abandoned. + +"If he goes in among the trees, I'll lean forward on me face until he +knocks out his brains--that is, if he has any--whin I'll dismount." + +That was all well enough if the bull should happen to follow the +programme, but the prospect of his doing so was too remote to afford +much comfort to the youth. + +"I guess I'll kaap erict like a gintleman," he concluded, "and as soon +as a chance comes for me to jump off, I'll go." + +Terry had no thought but that the buffaloes would dash among the trees +and continue their flight in the same headlong fashion, as long as they +could; but, to his amazement, the head of the drove suddenly swerved to +the left and the bull followed. + +"Be the powers, but this will never do," was his conclusion; "this +perarie may raach all the way to the Gulf of Mexico, and the bull +doesn't act as if he meant to stop before he raaches there; I'm goin' to +make other arrangements." + +He kept his seat until the drove had gone several hundred yards with +unabated speed. So far as he could judge, the bull was holding his own +with the rest: whatever wound he had received was of no account, so far +as its immediate effect was seen. The others continued crowding up as +before, but Terry did not mind them. He yelled and shook his head in the +hope of frightening them off so as to give him the room he wished in +order to make his venture, but they did not mind him. The odd crackling +of their hoofs, the rattling of their horns as they struck together, and +their occasional bellowing, made a din amid which no shout that he could +raise would gain any consideration whatever. + +"There's one thing sartin," said Terry, compressing his lips and showing +by his action that he had made up his mind to end the business one way +or the other. "I'm tired of this crowd, and I ain't goin' to spind any +more time with it." + +Between him and the wood were seven or eight buffaloes, crowding close +in their idiotic fashion, as though to push off the rider. Terry +recalled the day, early in spring, when he ran rapidly across the creek +near his home, by stepping upon the surging masses of ice, one after the +other, and leaping off again before they had time to respond to his +weight. He resolved to try something of the kind. + +Holding fast to the wiry mane with his hands, he drew his feet up under +him, balanced himself a moment, then straightened up, and, turning +quickly, stepped upon the back of the bull that was immediately +alongside. Before that creature could know what had been done, the +pressure was removed and the weight of the lad was borne by a cow which +was his next neighbor. + +Terry Clark ran as nimbly as a monkey across the backs of the +intervening buffaloes, until his foot rested on the one nearest the +wood. A slight slip at the moment of stepping upon his back disconcerted +him so that he could not recover himself. His intention was to land on +the ground with his face in the same direction he was going. Then, even +if he could not keep his feet, he could run with such speed that his +fall would not hurt him; but unfortunately as he struck the ground he +faced the other way, and before he could check himself, he went over +backward with such force that he was knocked senseless. + +After all, the fall may be considered a fortunate one, for he was not +seriously hurt and soon recovered himself. He had received a severe +shock, but in a short time he sat up and stared about him. Recalling +what had taken place, he looked in the direction of the herd of +buffaloes. None of them was in sight, but a dark heap a short distance +away showed where the bull on which he had ridden had given out and +fallen to the ground. He was wounded more seriously than at first seemed +to be the case. Had Terry stayed on his back a few brief minutes longer, +he would have gone down with him and been trampled to death by the hoofs +of those in the rear. + +"I think I'm all here, as me cousin used to remark after he had enj'yed +himself at Donnybrook Fair," said Terry, rising carefully to his feet, +swinging his arms and kicking out his legs. He had been violently +jarred, and he was alarmed by a dizziness that caused him to sit down +again. But he recovered quickly, and soon was as well as ever. He turned +to the left and passed among the trees, where, despite the coolness of +the day, he felt the relief of the shade thus afforded him. + +"I s'pose Fred will be jealous whin he finds out what a foine ride I +have had," he added, his old sense of humor coming back; "but all he has +to do is to catch a buffalo bull and git on his back: but I don't think +he'll forgit the same right away." + +Looking over the prairie, he saw the figure of his friend walking in +almost a direct line toward him, though he was so far off that he was +not distinctly visible, partly because of the dust which still lingered +in the air. + +Fred's encounter with the Winnebago horsemen had taken place and ended +while Terry lay senseless on the ground, so that the latter had no +suspicion of the exciting occurrence. + +Terry ought to have walked out on the plain, swung his hat and cheered +his friend; but that would have been contrary to his nature. He kept out +of sight among the trees, until Fred was quite close, when he broke into +vigorous whistling. + +Fred heard the familiar sound, stopped short, looked about him and then +burst into laughter as he saw his comrade. The next moment they ran +together, shook hands and mutually congratulated each other, as you will +admit they had full warrant in doing. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXI. + +THE DEVIL'S PUNCH BOWL. + + +It was a thrilling story which Terry Clark had to tell about his ride on +the back of the buffalo, but, after all, it was not so stirring as the +experience which befell Fred Linden, and the Irish lad declared that it +surpassed his own in every respect. + +"Thim Winnebagos are gittin' altogether too plintiful," said he; "whin +they come on horseback as will as on foot, there must be more than we +can take care of, though you managed the three as well as I could have +done the same mesilf. And so ye hit one of 'em whin ye touched off yer +gun, did ye?" + +"There is no doubt of it, though I am sorry to say that it did not end +his career right away." + +"It'll sarve him the good turn of givin' him time to think what a maan +spalpeen he is any way, and that's a good deal. And so ye say they was +mounted on horseback: what has become of thim?" + +"They rode in among the trees over yonder, near where we kindled the +fire and cooked the buffalo steak." + +Terry walked out to the edge of the prairie, and shading his eyes, +peered in that direction. + +"I can see nuthin' of thim; they must have found out that ye hadn't any +frinds there after all the fuss ye made, and it may be they will come +back to sittle with ye." + +"If I alone could attend to them, do you think we together have any +thing to fear?" + +"Of course not, if it's only thim three, but we have seen so many of the +spalpeens that they won't be loikely to foind much trouble in scarin' up +a few hundred more and makin' it uncomfortable for us." + +"Well," replied Fred, with a sigh, "I am so relieved and thankful to +know how well we got through it all, that I am hopeful we shall have no +great trouble during the rest of the way. We ought to be able to reach +the camp by to-morrow night if we don't have any interruption." + +The young friends surely had good reason to feel grateful for their +deliverance from the perils of the morning, and with hopeful hearts they +walked along the margin of the wood until they came to the point where +the trail turned to the left. Over this they started at a brisk pace, +Fred slightly in advance of his companion, for the path was not broad +enough for them to walk any other way with freedom. + +"Terry," said the elder, "do you think it possible that the three +Winnebagos with whom I had the trouble could be the three that we met +last night, when we were about to cross the stream?" + +"Niver," was the emphatic reply; "how could they have got around so far +in front? It was a good many miles the ither way that we saw the same!" + +"I have thought of that, but, you know, we spent several hours in sleep, +during which they might have turned back." + +"But where could they have got their horses?" + +"They may have had them within easy reach?" + +"It couldn't be." + +"I guess you are right; we hadn't a very good view of them last night, +though the moon shone on them when they were wading the stream and I had +a fancy that one of them looked like the fellow I hit when I fired." + +"All a fancy," insisted Terry. + +"Well, there's no use of guessing, for any way it must be only a guess; +but where do you suppose Deerfoot is?" + +"I've been thinkin' of the fellow and it saams to me that it's time he +showed up." + +"I wonder whether he could have passed us in the night." + +"That couldn't be, for he meant to stay near the camp-fire where we lift +him till he found out what the spalpeens were goin' to do, and he +couldn't have got that chance till mornin'." + +"Unless they made a start last night." + +"Which the same they didn't do." + +The boys were more in want of water than food, and fortunately they had +not gone far when they struck another stream, narrow enough for them to +leap across, and which afforded them a draught with which to quench +their thirst. + +"Now," said Fred, "since we have had such a good breakfast, we will +think of nothing more to eat until night." + +"I don't know about not _thinkin'_ of the same," said Terry doubtfully, +"but I am with ye in agraain' that we won't go out of the path to hunt +any of the same onless--that is, onless we should think what I've +brought along isn't aqual to our appetites." + +"We must have passed considerably more than half the distance between +home and the camp in the mountains," added the elder, some minutes +later; "so, if all goes well, we ought to be with our friends some time +to-morrow afternoon." + +"I'm of the opinion," remarked the sagacious Terry, "that Deerfut sint +us on ahead last night so as to git us out uv the way; thim pritty legs +of his can travel so fast that he wanted a chance to stritch the same +without waitin' fur us." + +"More than likely you are right; whenever he thinks it necessary, he +will branch out ahead of the Winnebagos and overhaul us; so even though +we see nothing of him, we ought not to feel much concern." + +"How about the wither, me lad?" + +Fred had noticed since resuming their journey, that the sky, which was +clear and sunshiny in the morning, had become overcast. The sun was no +longer visible, and a chilliness in the air warned them that the fine +weather could not last much longer. They had not only been favored in +this respect, but for several days before leaving home equally charming +skies had spanned them. And so, in accordance with the laws of our +changeable climate, a disagreeable turn was to be expected. + +"I was hopeful that it would keep off until we reached camp," said Fred, +looking up through the tree tops at the darkening sky; "but that is too +much, and we must take it as it comes." + +"Push on as fast as ye choose." + +Taking his friend at his word, Fred broke into a slow, easy trot, not +much more rapid than an ordinary walking gait, but one which they could +keep up a long time, where the ground was not too rough. Terry of course +did the same, and they covered fully two miles in that manner, when they +slackened their pace before an extensive rise of the ground. But for +that, they would have gone much further at the same speed. + +Some fifteen minutes were spent in clambering up the stony incline, when +they descended into a broad valley, the path still rough and difficult +of passage. They recognized a dull but increasing roar as made by a +rapid torrent, and ere long stopped on the edge of a stream fifty feet +wide, which dashed and foamed over the rocks, breaking into eddies, and +agitated pools, falling in foamy cataracts and splashing forward again +with a rollicking freedom that formed one of the prettiest and most +romantic sights on which they had ever looked. + +Directly at their feet was a curious formation. By some means at a +remote day, a number of hard stones had been flung downward and given a +spinning motion, which, acting on the softer sandstone beneath, had +begun hollowing it out, as if by the chisel of an engraver. This +strange operation had gone on for years, until a bowl a dozen feet +across and half as deep had been formed. It was almost mathematically +round, very smooth and with a tapering shape to the bottom that made the +resemblance to an enormous punch bowl strikingly accurate. + +This formation (which in accordance with the taste prevailing in all +parts of our country, should be christened the "Devil's Punch Bowl"), +was full of limpid water, fed by a slight overflow from above and +overrunning and flowing calmly over the lower rim. In the bottom lay +three stones, looking like cannon balls. These were the tools with which +the stream had carved the Devil's Punch Bowl. Having done their work, +they were resting in the bottom, where they had lain for a period that +could not be guessed. + +Out beyond, a thin sheet of the water hung like a transparent curtain +over the edge of the rocks. It was so smooth and unruffled that it +seemed stationary, like a film of glass, but, after striking the stones +below, it broke into foam, whirlpools and eddies, which helped to form +as lovely and picturesque a scene as the most devoted lover of nature +could long to see. + +The picture was so pretty indeed that the boys stood for several minutes +lost in admiration. They had never viewed any thing of the kind, and it +was something that would always be a pleasant memory to them. + +But, great as was their admiration, there was a startling question that +came to them: how was this interesting stream to be crossed? + +In front and up and down the bank, the eyes searched in vain for a ford. +It was idle to think of ferrying themselves over, while the cascades, +pools, eddies and general "upsetting" of a broad deep stream, made its +passage as perilous as that of the rapids nearer home in which the two +had come so near losing their lives. + +"There is no possible way by which we can reach the other side," said +Fred, after they had walked a few rods up and down the stream. + +"I don't obsarve any way mesilf," was the response of Terry. + +"But there _must_ be, for how could father and the rest have crossed?" + +"They may have put up a bridge." + +"But where is the bridge? There are no signs of any thing of the kind," +said the bewildered Fred; "they couldn't have made a bridge without +leaving it behind." + +"The high water has swipt it away." + +Fred stood surveying the stream and the banks, for several minutes, +during which he once more walked back and forth, but he was right when +he said that the place had never been spanned by even the simplest +structure, for it could not have been done without leaving some traces +behind. + +This being the case, the mystery was greater than ever; for it was +certain that at that hour their friends were many miles distant on the +other side. + +"This is a little ahead of any thing I ever heard tell of," remarked +Fred, taking off his cap and scratching his head, after the fashion of +Terry when he was puzzled. + +"It couldn't be," ventured the latter, who also had his cap in his hand +and was stirring up his flaxen locks, "that they carried a bridge along +with 'em." + +"Impossible!" + +"That's what I thought, as me sicond cousin remarked whin they told him +his uncle carried his shillaleh a half mile and passed two persons +without beltin' 'em over the head." + +"There's something about this which I can not understand." + +Terry turned and looked at him in his quizzical way and solemnly +extended his hand. Fred shook it as he wished, though he was far from +feeling in a sportive mood. + +"They _must_ have crossed," he added, replacing his cap with some +violence, compressing his lips and shaking his head in a determined way; +"do you walk up the bank, while I make a search in the other direction; +we _must_ find the explanation." + +The proposition was acted upon, Terry clambering carefully along the +slippery bank and over the rocks, until he was fully a hundred yards +from his friend, who busied himself in doing the same thing in the +opposite direction. + +All at once the Irish lad shouted. Looking up to him, Fred saw that he +was beckoning him to approach. + +"I knew there must be something of the kind," thought Fred, who after +much labor placed himself beside his friend. + +To his disappointment, Terry had paused before the worst part of the +series of cascades. It was at the broadest portion of the stream, where +the falls, whirlpools, eddies and deep water would have turned back the +most skillful swimmer. + +"What do you mean?" asked the astonished Fred. + +"I thought I'd show you the place where they _didn't_ cross," was his +reply, and then he broke into the merriest laughter, as well he might, +for he had solved the mystery. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXII. + +THE TERROR IN THE AIR. + + +"Do obsarve where the trail comes down to that big bowl?" asked Terry, +pointing to the huge, circular cavity below them. + +"Of course." + +"Well, that's a mistake; _that isn't the right trail_." + +Fred turned about, and jumped and ran back to the Devil's Punch Bowl, at +a rate that threatened his neck. Stooping over, he carefully examined +the path. He saw that his companion was right; the trail which they had +followed to the edge of the stream was one that had been worn by animals +in coming to and going from the Punch Bowl. You will admit that no +better punch in the wide world could be furnished the dumb beasts than +that which was thus freely given to them. + +As if to confirm that which did not need confirming, a large buck at +that moment appeared in the path, within a hundred feet of where Fred +had straightened up, after examining the trail. He threw up his head on +catching sight of the young hunter, gave one quick, inquiring stare and +then whirled about and was off like a flash. + +Fred Linden could have brought him down at the moment he wheeled had he +chosen to do so, but he recalled his own proposition to Terry some time +before, about firing such a shot. Indeed, since they had some of the +cooked buffalo steak left, there was no call to use any more ammunition +for game. + +Terry Clark came laughing down the rocks, looking upon the whole +business as one of the funniest of incidents, but to Fred it was any +thing but a laughing matter. Time was becoming of the utmost value, and +this divergence from the trail meant delay--a delay, too, whose length +could not be guessed. If they had turned aside several miles back, it +was more than likely that they would lose all the advantage gained by +the laborious travel of the night before. + +"How could we have made such a blunder?" asked Fred, his eyes wandering +back over the path, as though searching for an explanation of the +mistake; "I suppose at the point where the trails cross the direction +isn't changed much and this is more distinct than the other. Terry, I +can't see any thing about this to laugh at." + +"I don't obsarve much of the same mesilf," said the other, whose face +nevertheless was on abroad grin; "I wasn't laughing at yersilf, or the +mistake we made." + +"What was it then that amused you so much?" + +"I was thinkin' how funny it looked to see the deer and bears and +buffaloes and foxes and panthers all standing round that big bowl and +winkin' at each ither while they drank their health." + +"Terry, there's going to be trouble because of this blunder." + +"What do ye signify be the same?" + +"I believe that all the advantage we gained by traveling so hard last +night is lost. When we follow this trail back until it reaches the main +one, more than likely we shall meet the Winnebagos at that point, if +they will not actually be between us and the camp in the Ozarks." + +"I'm afeard it's not all a falsehood that ye are telling me," said +Terry, with an expression in which there was nothing like a jest. + +"Let's be off then." + +At this juncture the Irish lad made a proposition which his companion +accepted, for he thought it promised them much saving in time and +travel. + +It was quite certain that the false trail followed pretty much the same +direction as the true one: at any rate there could be no doubt that it +crossed the stream which had stopped them, so instead of picking their +way back for several miles, they decided to keep along the edge of the +water itself until they struck the path. + +To make sure of avoiding another blunder, one should have gone up and +the other down stream, for manifestly they could not be certain they +were above or below the true path; but each felt too strong a misgiving +about such a course. Their surroundings required mutual support. + +Beside this, they were convinced that the trail which they wished to +recover lay above instead of below, so that, when making their way they +were not held back by any doubt, though each could not fail to see that +it was only a piece of guess-work. + +Fortunately for their peace of mind, they were right, and the plan saved +them much time and travel. They had not gone very far, when they came +upon the path, marked so distinctly that there could be no possible +mistake. + +The width of the stream was about the same as below. The water was +smooth, deep, clear and sluggish. The bank sloped gently down from each +side and on the other shore were plainly seen the prints of the hoofs +where the animals had left the water. It was so deep that whoever went +over there had done so by floating or swimming. + +The crossing was so far above the point where the cascades began, that +nothing was to be feared from them. The clumsiest raft could be ferried +over by a child before it would drift into danger, while in case of +swimming, the peril was still less. + +"If it wasn't so chilly," said Fred, "I would propose that we swim the +stream." + +Terry shivered and shook his head. + +"We must go over on a raft; it is not only cowld, but is gittin' +cowlder." + +"There's a storm brewing; it looks as black as ink off yonder." + +At this moment the boys made a discovery which both pleased and alarmed +them. Such a float as they needed was at their call. There lay a half +dozen logs and trees fastened together by several withes, and with +enough buoyancy to bear them to the other side. Even the pole to be used +in propulsion lay upon the heavy timbers that were pulled just far +enough against the bank to prevent them floating off with the current. + +While it was pleasant to know that they would not have to go through the +labor of constructing any thing of the kind, yet there was a cause for +fear in the presence of the structure which led them to hesitate several +minutes before using it. + +It proved that some one had crossed from the other side upon it, while +the withes were so white and fresh at the angles, where they were +twisted open, as to show that the raft had been made but a short time. + +The natural question was as to who could have been coming from the other +way. + +"I know," said Terry, compressing his lips and shaking his head. + +"Who?" + +"Winnebagos; they're so plintiful that it couldn't have been any one +ilse, for they wouldn't have had a chance." + +"I suppose you are right," remarked Fred thoughtfully, "for they do seem +to be almost everywhere, though I can't understand why they should be +coming this way." + +"Suppose there was but one of the spalpeens, and he'd been out on a +scout, and was on his way back to the rist of the spalpeens with the +news, would it be onraisonable to think he would take a little pains to +kaap his leggins and moccasins from gittin' damp enough to give him +cowld?" + +"Well, I can think of no better reason than that, and am willing to +believe it is correct, but don't you see, Terry, that all this goes to +prove that we have lost a dangerous amount of time? We ought to have +been many miles further on the road than we are." + +"The buffalo bull had a good deal to do with our impolite tarryin', and +as he is slaapin' with his four mithers, I maan his forefathers, let him +rist in pace." + +The boys did not allow their words to delay their hands. The raft was +shoved clear, and the two took their positions upon it, Fred holding the +pole, while his companion looked after the guns. They were astonished to +find, directly after leaving land, that the pole, which was nearly +twenty feet in length, would not reach bottom. + +This compelled them to use it as a paddle. The progress was slow, but +the distance was so slight that it did not take them long to reach the +other bank, where they set the structure adrift, so that it could not be +used by any one else. + +Looking directly up stream, where the sky was in plain sight, its +blackness startled even the boys, who were used to seeing the most +violent changes of temperature. The hue was not of the dark blue which +often gives warning of the coming tempest, but there was a greenish +tinge to the blackness that would have awed any one. + +While they looked, a zigzag ribbon of flame fluttered across the +darkened portion, accompanied by a crash that seemed to shiver the +earth. Fred Linden, who happened to be staring straight at the fiery +burst, saw the upper part of a large cypress that leaned over the water, +leap from the trunk as though it had been sawn short off and flung into +the water. + +It was all ablaze, and, falling upright into the current, kept its +equilibrium, that is, it did not fall to any side, but swept slowly +downward as upright as when on the tree, and suggested that some giant +as big as the Statue of Liberty was walking beneath, with an enormous +torch held above his head to light his path. + +"Did ye iver see the like?" asked Terry. + +"No; it is wonderful." + +[Illustration: "Did ye iver see the like?" asked Terry.] + +Although it was about mid-day, the heavens were so overcast that the +gloom was like night itself. At the same time the darkness had a ghastly +tinge which made the faces of the boys, when they looked at each other, +livid and unearthly. + +The scene was so impressive that they stood motionless, watching the +flaming tree and the inky heavens beyond. Suddenly in the sky they saw a +figure that resembled a vast balloon slightly inclined to one side, and +spinning on its axis with inconceivable swiftness. + +At the bottom the snout-like appendage wavered off to one side as though +the amazing velocity of the upper part was twisting it loose. A similar +formation appeared a few minutes after a short distance behind. + +And now began the most extraordinary exhibition of all. Imagine two +whirling balloons, a hundred feet in height, and so black that they +stood out from the surrounding gloom, showing like pitch against the +dimly lit sky behind. They began a witches' waltz in the firmament, +sometimes leaning far backward, then dancing forward, as if saluting +each other, then "balancing," then dancing up and down, then so far away +from each other that one would pass out of the field of vision, soon to +reappear, however. At times they seemed as if about to rush into each +other's arms, and then they coquetted away again and resumed the weird +dance in the skies. + +You understand that I am trying to describe one of those terrible +visitations of the west known as a cyclone. Little was heard of them a +century ago, and the balloon to which I have compared the form of the +ghostly dancers, was unknown to the lads, who watched the exhibition +with an interest that was not turned into terror, as it would have been +to-day, by the knowledge of the awful power for death and destruction +that lies within that concentration of electricity in its most fateful +form. + +It seemed a long time that this strange scene lasted, though it could +not have been many seconds. Suddenly, while the balloon-like forms were +saluting each other, they rushed together. There was no shock +perceivable when they met, but there were vivid flashes from within the +murky folds, as the heat lightning sometimes plays among the clouds at +the close of a warm day. + +Having met, the forms engaged in a wrestling bout. Round and round they +spun with the same bewildering swiftness, leaning far to one side, as +though about to fall, and all the time whirling with such speed on the +one spiral leg that it seemed unable to keep pace with the bulkier part +above. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIII. + +FRED LINDEN AWAKENS TO AN ALARMING FACT. + + +The approach of the cyclone was attended by an appalling roar, and a +mass of branches and trees flying through the air, which warned the boys +of their danger. + +"Terry, it won't do to stay here," shouted Fred, casting about for some +place of refuge; "where shall we go?" + +Quite close to the stream which they had just crossed was an enormous +rock. Its irregular surface, a dozen feet in extent each way, must have +reached far down in the ground, so that nothing could have been more +immovable. It was not the refuge that the boys would have taken, had +they been given time to hunt for one, but surely they could not have +found a better. + +A couple of leaps took Terry to the place, and, as he threw himself on +his face, Fred was directly behind him. As they lay, the shelving rock +was less than two feet above their heads. Though they could hear, they +could not see what was coming. They could look to the right and left, +but only for a few seconds in front. + +Using their eyes as best they could, they saw the air filled with +leaves, twigs, branches, huge limbs and trunks, which spun forward and +over and over, like so many feathers in a tornado. + +The first shock that came to the boys crouching behind the rock was a +dead thump near their heads. An uprooted tree had been hurled from some +point above, like an enormous spear, and, striking the rock at a slant, +slid over the rough surface like the finger of a player over the face of +a tambourine and out beyond, hunting for some spot where it could +penetrate. It found it on the ground, but it was instantly wrenched +loose by the resistless power that had first thrown it forward, and went +end over end into the general wreck and ruin beyond. + +The next sight which startled the boys was on their left, directly over +the stream. The air was filled apparently with snow, as if a violent +squall had suddenly sprung up. It was accompanied by a hissing noise, +which mingled with the fearful roar that had not stopped and was like +that of the stormy Atlantic beating upon the rock-bound coast. + +Striking the stream, the cyclone whirled most of the water from its bed, +scattered the mist and foam among the trees, and saturated the boys +where they lay. The huge torch was quenched as suddenly as it was +lighted. + +The most terrifying moment to Fred and Terry was when they felt the rock +in front of them move. It was turned several inches to one side, and for +one frightful moment, they believed that that too would be sent skimming +through the air, or whirled over upon them. But there was no other +refuge to which they could fly; had they attempted to rise to their +feet, they would have been snatched up and dashed to death. So they +flattened themselves as much as they could on their faces, and the +terrific outburst could not reach them. + +Such an elemental fury can not last long. Having torn up the ponderous +trees, overturned rocks, and cleaned out the stream, the cyclone seemed +to mount upward and leave the earth entirely, probably to descend some +miles away and continue its work of destruction. + +Fred lay still several minutes after it had passed, and then turned to +look at his companion. He had unrolled the package and taken therefrom +the cooked buffalo steak, which had been so roughly handled during his +ride on the bull. + +"Well, well," said the astonished Fred, "I believe you are the only +person in the world who could eat his dinner in the middle of such a +storm as this." + +"I was thinkin', bein' as we are in so much of a hurry, that I would +save some toime by dinin' without delay, though ye do me an injoostice +by sayin' I'm through the same; I'm jist about to begin and I'll be +plaised to have yer company." + +Terry may not have had much sentiment, but he was sensible. Fred sat up, +his head just rising above the rock, and, for a few minutes, they gave +their attention to their meal. There was enough for a fair lunch, but no +more. A gentle wind blew against them, being the remnant left by the +cyclone, and while they ate, you need not be told they used their eyes. + +The sight was a striking one: the trees lay across each other, many with +their prong-like roots pointing toward the sky, limbs and trunks having +been tossed about in the most bewildering confusion. The water that had +been lifted from the creek rendered not only their clothing wet, but +every thing around them was saturated. Walking to the side of the +stream, they looked down at the sloping banks, wet and muddy, but with +little water except in the bottom. The current, however, was pouring so +swiftly from above that this was rapidly filling up, and before long +would reach its former level. + +Now that the cyclone had passed, the sky rapidly cleared. There was a +chilliness in the air, and the sun did not show itself. + +The boys took but a short time to view the destruction, great as it was, +when they faced about in the direction of the camp which was their +destination from the first. It looked as though they were finally +separated from the trail, for since it was so covered by fallen trees +and limbs, not the slightest trace of it was seen. They were filled with +dismay, and indeed would have been at their wits' end had not the +cyclone confined its fury to exceedingly narrow limits. All its +prodigious force was spent in and directly along the stream. Twenty +yards away, the forest was undisturbed, so that the elemental scythe had +made a clean swath as it sped along. + +"Hurrah!" called out Terry, "here's the path; I follyed a straight line +as I could from the water here, so I'm sure I couldn't coom out very far +from the right place." + +Fred hurried over the ruins to his side, and a glance at the ground +showed that his friend was right: there was the trail at their feet. + +"Now," said Terry, recovering his spirits, "if we had only knowed that +that storm was coomin', we could have fastened our guns to our backs and +swum across, without waitin' to build the raft, and saved all the time +that we lost." + +"But we would have been wetted all the same, had we done so." + +"And gained that much time; do ye know," added Terry, in a half +frightened voice, "what I obsarved?" + +"I suppose you saw what I did,--the air full of water, trees, limbs, +stones and lightning." + +"While we were peepin' over the edge of the rock, ye moind that the wind +cut our faces so we had to lower 'em to keep our heads flyin' off where +we couldn't find 'em agin. It was yersilf that stuck yer nose in the +ground, but I took a paap off beyanst the creek and I saan one of the +Winnebagos." + +"Can it be possible! what was he doin'?" + +"Turnin' summersets at the rate of twinty to the second and about a +dozen faat above the ground; I had only the one glimpse of him, but whin +I obsarved him it looked to me as if his head and one leg wint off in +different directions; I s'pose he's lookin' for the same." + +Fred Linden could hardly believe that Terry had seen one of their +enemies, though, as you can well understand, from what cyclones have +done in recent years, it was not at all impossible. The youth insisted +so strongly on the first part of his statement, that Fred decided that +at the time the storm burst, one at least of their foes was on the bank +behind them. + +All this confirmed the belief he had expressed that they had lost +invaluable time by wandering from the trail, and that they would have +hard work to keep far enough in advance to reach the camp before the +Winnebagos. The proof that they had received too of some of the +Winnebagos being in front complicated the situation and added to the +mental discomfort of both. + +The sky which, as you will remember, had become overcast sometime before +the bursting of the cyclone, continued to clear, and to the surprise of +the young hunters, about the middle of the afternoon the sun showed +itself. The chilliness, however, remained, though the two walked so +briskly that they could have well stood a still lower temperature. + +Fortunately for them (though it also operated in favor of their enemies) +the trail was traveled without difficulty. The ground was uneven, +sometimes up and sometimes down, but it was not hard for the feet and +they made good progress. The distance they had to go was too great for +them to hope to reach the end of the journey before the morrow, even if +they traveled most of the night. They had already proven their pluck and +resolution, and you may be sure, now that they were on the right path, +that they did not throw away any minutes. + +They had eaten the extra buffalo steak sooner than was intended, but +they could afford to wait until the morrow before partaking of any more +food. + +The afternoon was far along and they were pushing forward in their usual +vigor, talking in a hopeful strain now and then, when both were startled +by the report of a rifle. It did not sound in front nor to the rear, but +only a moderate distance to the left. The boys stopped and looked in +each other's face. + +"Anither of the spalpeens," whispered Terry; "now there ought to be a +gun fired on tother side of us and one in front and one behind us." + +"They may be there, all the same," replied Fred, staring in the +direction whence came the report, as though he expected the appearance +of the one who had caused it. They looked and listened for several +minutes, but saw and heard nothing more, and resumed their hurried pace, +frequently glancing behind, for they were in that distrustful state of +mind which comes to one who has a strong suspicion that an enemy is +trying to steal behind him unawares. The actual presence of such an +enemy is no more trying than the suspense itself. + +The shot might have been innocent--that is, fired by some wandering +white man or Indian who had not the remotest thought that any other +person was within hearing. Probably such was the fact, though there was +enough uncertainty about it to prevent the theory affording the youth +the comfort it otherwise would have done. + +The lads, as you may well believe, did not stop to look into the matter, +but pressed on at a gait which they were confident would prevent any of +their enemies overtaking them, unless they broke into their loping trot, +which was hardly likely. + +Somehow or other, Terry seemed to be thinking more about the three +Winnebago horsemen with whom Fred Linden had had his encounter than he +did about his own experience. + +"How thim spalpeens could be ridin', whin all the rist are afoot, is +somethin' that puzzles me," said he, after they had walked some distance +further; "can't ye give some explanation that will relaave me mind, +Fred?" + +"I can certainly know no more about it than you do." + +"Didn't ye obsarve them with particularity?" + +"I can't say that I did; they were rather small, tough-looking; two were +bay in color, while one was black: I noticed the black one more than the +others, because the Indian that I hit was riding on him; I remember that +he had a star in his forehead." + +"Who? The Winnebago?" + +"You know well enough that I meant the horse----" + +Fred Linden stopped short, and turned his white, scared face upon his +friend. He had just awakened to an astounding fact. + +"What's the matter, Fred? Are ye ill?" + +"My gracious! why didn't I think of that before? Those three horses +belong to father, Mr. Hardin and Mr. Bowlby." + +"Are ye sure of the same?" + +"Why, of course; I can't understand why I did not notice it the moment I +saw them!" + + + + +CHAPTER XXXIV. + +THE CANOE. + + +It certainly was remarkable that when Fred Linden was watching the three +Winnebagos so closely, and when, as I have said, he noticed more than +one trifling matter, that he failed to recognize the animals they were +riding. All three were familiar to him, and the one he had spoken of as +being darker in color than the others, and as having a star in his +forehead, was the identical animal owned by his father. Fred, himself, +had ridden him more than once. + +It should be said, however, that they were the pack-horses, which even +when put to their best paces, could not make good speed. Nevertheless, +they were of great value to the hunters. + +The first conviction of the lad on awaking to the alarming fact, was +that his father and the other two men had been killed by the +Winnebagos. The thought overcame him so that he leaned against the +nearest tree and was on the point of fainting. + +"They are all dead, Terry--I know it--we may as well give up, and try to +reach home." + +Terry was agitated, but not so much so as his friend. + +"Why, my dear boy, it's not so bad as _that_," he said feelingly; "do ye +not moind that whin the gintlemen go to trappin' and huntin' they turn +the horses loose to graze? The spalpeens have coom along and run off +with the same." + +"Do you think so?" asked Fred, looking up yearningly for the grain of +comfort that his companion was able to give. + +"I don't _think_ so; I know so; if the gintlemen took the bastes into +the cabin and slipt with the same ivery night, as me rilatives do with +their pigs in Ireland, why ye might think that they had suffered before +the Winnebagos tuk thim away; but they have snaaked up where the animals +was grazin', jumped onto their backs and rid off." + +This view of the case was so reasonable, that Fred rallied and half +smiled at his own faintheartedness. He stood erect and drew a deep +breath of satisfaction. + +"I believe you are right, but it strikes me that such thieves would have +stolen all instead of half the horses." + +"They've lift the ither three for their frinds that I make no doubt will +be along to take thim, if they haven't done so now." + +"You know that the loss of a horse is considered almost as bad as the +loss of a man in this part of the world." + +"Sometimes he amounts to a good deal more, as me mither--" + +Terry paused in his remarks, for just then Fred uttered a +warning--"_Sh!_" to signify that something was in the path in front. The +next moment, he ran several paces to the right and sheltered himself +behind a tree, Terry being only a few seconds behind him. + +Both had discovered what it was. A brown bear of moderate size was +waddling along toward them. He had probably struck the trail, and +finding it easier walking than among the trees and undergrowth, was +swinging forward in the direction of the stream that had received such a +visit from the cyclone. + +The boys could not know for a minute or two whether the beast had seen +them, but they felt no alarm. As I have said, he was not very large nor +formidable looking, and, if he chose to turn aside to attack them, they +were more than his equal. As it was, their own eagerness to get forward +was all that prevented them from shooting him. + +Bruin lumbered ahead in his awkward way, and, as the boys peeped forth, +they fancied that his big brown eyes glanced mischievously at them; but +they were mistaken. He did not see nor scent them, but went by, and, in +a few minutes, disappeared from sight among the trees. + +Hardly waiting till he had vanished, the youths stepped back into the +path and resumed the rapid pace at which they had been traveling. The +sun, that had been partly shining from behind the clouds, was low in the +sky, and it was not long before they were journeying in the twilight. +The moon rose early, but its light was so much obscured by the mists +that it gave little if any help, and the friends were disappointed to +find it difficult to make any progress at all. + +At this trying juncture, they found themselves once more on the bank of +a stream that had to be crossed before they could go any further. It was +fully double the width of the one last passed, but did not look as if it +was deep. + +"My clothes ain't all dry yit," said Terry, "and I'm in favor of wadin' +if we can." + +"I am afraid it is too deep for that, and with our guns and bundles and +thick clothes it isn't an easy thing to swim. Besides it's colder than +it was last night and it won't be pleasant to spend a few more hours in +wet clothing: mine is about dry." + +Fred added that if they should decide to push on, the only way of doing +so was by the usual means of a raft. It would take considerable time to +build one, and probably still longer to work their way to the other +side. + +"No use of waitin'," said Terry; "let's take hold; I've an idaa that we +ain't far from the cabin and ivery mile that we can make now counts." + +Fred started to give his help, when to his unbounded amazement, he +narrowly missed going headlong over a small Indian canoe that lay at +their feet. They would not have been more surprised had they come upon +Deerfoot himself in a sound slumber, and not until they had stooped down +and examined it closely were they certain that it was not some log +fantastically shaped by nature that had floated thither. + +But an Indian canoe it was beyond all mistake, though after searching +all around it, they failed to find the paddle so necessary for its +propulsion. The boat had been drawn up the bank, underneath some bushes +and undergrowth, where it would not have been seen by any one further +off than six feet. It was so far back too from the stream that it would +require an unusual overflow to carry it away. + +It was not so dark that the lads could not see that it was of beautiful +pattern and fine make--one of those delicate vessels which under the +skillful guidance of its owner skim like a swallow over the water. It +was a prize indeed. + +Now, as you very well know, there is nothing wonderful about an Indian +canoe, but the astonishment of the boys came from the fact that they +found it in this place. Fred Linden, in listening to the accounts given +by his father on his return in the spring from his trapping expeditions, +had heard him say more than once that there was no Indian village +between Greville and the camp at the foot of the Ozarks, and that, +according to the friendly red men who occasionally visited them, he +believed that the nearest lodge lay nearly two hundred miles to the +north-west of Greville. It was this fact that gave the Hunters of the +Ozark so much confidence in themselves when they went on their long +hunts, though, as you have learned, danger did sometimes come from the +wandering Indians, the father of Terry Clark having lost his life at +their hands. + +All this being known to the boys, they had cause to wonder how it was +that an Indian canoe lay hidden under the bushes on the shore. None of +those people would go to the trouble of making such a boat, unless he +expected to use it many times. It would be the same as if you had a +costly rowboat constructed with which to cross only once a canal or +small stream of water. + +But, as in many other cases, it was idle to speculate, and the boys did +not allow any feeling of surprise to rob them of the valuable minutes. +Finding no paddle with which to manage the boat, Fred cut a small +sapling and trimmed it so that he had a pole fully twenty feet long. +Then the guns were laid in the bottom, Terry took his seat, and they +carefully pushed from shore, Fred managing the pole. + +As they suspected, the water was quite shallow, the depth nowhere being +more than three or four feet; but the current was rapid, and in some +places the bottom of the canoe grated over the gravel. Both had to move +well to the stern to raise the bow, so as to allow them to reach land +with dry feet. + +"It's a pity to allow this to float off and be lost," said Fred; "let's +draw it up the bank where the owner won't have any trouble in finding +it." + +"I would give a good deal if I could be introduced to that same +gintleman," remarked Terry, who took off his cap and scratched his head +as he added: + +"I wonder whither that is one of the canoes from near home?" + +"What are you talking about? How could it get _here_?" + +"By some subterranean communication, the same as we boys used to sind +notes to the gurls whin I was laarnin' the higher mathematics in +college." + +Fred made no comment upon the remark of his friend. The canoe, when +relieved of their weight, was so light that the bow was pulled to the +shore by means of the pole. Then Fred alone drew it up beyond the reach +of the water, and it was left until the owner should come forward to +claim it. + +The two now set out to hunt for the trail, with a view of making eight +or ten miles more before they stopped to rest; but the result was +discouraging. It took more than a half hour to make sure they had found +it, and then they had not gone twenty yards, when Fred said he could +not tell whether he was in the path or not. + +"It's no use," he added; "we may as well stop, for we are sure to repeat +the mistake of to-day: we'll get so far wrong that it'll take many hours +to find our way back again, and we shall lose far more than we gain." + +"That bein' the same--and I'm willin' to agraa that ye are now strivin' +to till the truth--let's turn off from the trail, go back so far that +there isn't any chance for any one to saa us and slaap till mornin'." + +Since there was nothing else to do, the boys did as Terry proposed. They +were not so tired as they were the night before, and they did not dare +to lie down on the leaves and sleep as they did then. There were wild +animals prowling through the woods, and the fact that the lads escaped +once could be no guaranty that they would have equally good fortune a +second time. + +Terry proposed that they should climb a tree and make a bed among the +branches; but that was hardly feasible. It is not often that the limbs +of a tree are accommodating enough to allow any one to rest with +comfort. The branches may be pleasant for a time, but the limbs soon +become like iron rods and the position so cramped as to drive away all +comfort. In addition, there was the danger of a fatal fall during sleep. + +So it was decided to hunt out the most secluded place possible and start +a fire. That would keep off the wild animals, and the boys were not in +such need of sleep that they could not afford to take turns with each +other in watching through the night. + +While hunting a suitable spot, they moved down the river bank for fully +a hundred yards, and then entered some dense undergrowth which they +penetrated until they were sure that no safer place could be found. So +they began gathering twigs, leaves and branches, and piling them against +the shaggy bark of a tree, and soon had all they wanted. This was fired +by means of the flint and steel, and a roaring, crackling blaze made +every thing look cheerful. + +"Let's walk off a little ways," said Fred, "and see whether the light +can be noticed very far; you know that we can not be too careful." + +Terry liked the proposal, and rose to act upon it. They moved in +opposite directions, walking several rods, and then carefully passing +entirely around the camp-fire. The result was satisfactory, for the +undergrowth in all directions was so thick that they felt as secure from +discovery as if the fire had been kindled within an impenetrable cave. + +And yet they were woefully mistaken, as they were destined to learn in a +brief while. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXV. + +AMERICA VERSUS IRELAND. + + +Having satisfied themselves that they could not have fallen upon a safer +place, the boys came back to their camp, as it may be called, and sat +down in front of the blaze. Their knapsacks were unstrapped from their +backs and the blankets spread upon the leaves. There was some moisture +in the thick cloth, but not enough to deter them from using them as +couches. Their own clothing had become dry, and, under the warm glow of +the fire, the blankets would soon be the same. + +In spite of the reconnoissance just made, both felt some uneasiness over +their own situation. They were confident that no one further away than +two or three rods would observe the fire, but the possibility remained +that some enemy might pass within that space, brief as it was. Their +experience since leaving Greville taught them that a large number of +Winnebagos were in the wilderness, and, as Terry remarked, the nearer +they approached camp, the more plentiful did they seem to become. + +It was this feeling which caused them to let the fire sink to half its +first size and led them to keep far back within the circle of light +thrown into the surrounding gloom. They talked in low voices, often +listening and looking around, and were in any thing but a comfortable +frame of mind. The feeling with them was that if any enemy should happen +to be lurking in the vicinity, every possible advantage would be on his +side. + +"I feel, Terry, as though all this is wasted time. I know it is more +than likely that the Winnebagos are doing the same as we, that is, +nothing at all; but that makes me more anxious to push on." + +"I've an idaa," remarked the Irish lad, who was stretched out in a lazy +posture, with his cap in hand, while, as was his custom, he scratched +his pate with the other; "I'm thinkin' why couldn't we aich take a torch +in hand and walk along over the path with the same?" + +Fred was half inclined to try the experiment, but fear prevented. They +had learned that the Winnebagos were not only in the rear but in front. +No more conspicuous target can be given than that of a person carrying a +lighted torch: it was the same as when a man with a candle in his hand +starts out to explore his house for burglars. So that plan was not +adopted. + +Terry was about to speak to his companion, when the latter saw him +start, and, rising quickly to the sitting position, stare at a point +beyond Fred. He had seen something that terrified him. + +With his big round eyes still fixed on the gloom behind young Linden, +Terry stealthily reached for his gun, which lay on the leaves close by, +and softly drew back the flint. Fred, as may be supposed, was alarmed, +and starting half to his feet, glanced nervously around. + +He saw nothing. + +"What's the matter?" he asked in an undertone, as he also laid his hand +upon his weapon. + +"Whin I was lookin' at ye," said Terry in a husky whisper, "I obsarved +one of the spalpeens standin' right behind ye and close enough to touch +ye with his hand. Before I could spake, he slipped out of sight like a +shadder." + +Fred did not ask his companion whether he was sure of what he said, for +he knew he was not mistaken. + +"That shows we shouldn't have started the fire; it has caught the eye of +some of the Indians, who will be here in a few minutes; let's slip back +in the darkness and get as far off as we can; it don't make much +difference what course we take, but it will never do to stay here." + +Fred Linden had no more than completed his guarded remark, when he too +caught sight of a warrior standing on the very edge of the circle of +light and looking straight at him. The view of the dusky intruder was +faint but unmistakable. + +The outlines and figure received enough of the firelight to cause him to +look like a dim painting against a dark background. He was holding a +rifle in one hand and appeared to be contemplating the lads, as if +seeking to learn their identity before he advanced or performed some +action. + +"_Sh!_ don't stir," whispered Fred, softly raising the hammer of his +gun, "I see him,--I'll drop him!" + +With the utmost caution he brought the gun around in front until it was +almost to his breast. Then as quickly as he could he raised it to his +shoulder and aimed at the daring redskin. + +But the latter was invisible, he had vanished like the picture on the +slide of a magic lantern. + +As you may suppose, the boys began to feel queer. There was something so +peculiar about this business that, as Terry expressed it, he was "crawly +all over." What they might have done can only be guessed, for before +they could move away from the fire, Deerfoot the Shawanoe, who had been +having a little amusement at their expense, advanced from the gloom and +addressed them. + +"The heart of Deerfoot is glad when he sees his brothers do not sleep; +he has watched them, but their eyes are open." + +"Wal, be the powers!" muttered Terry Clark, hastily rising to his feet, +as did Fred; "the spalpeen that plays that trick on me has got to fight +it out." + +And he began taking off his coat and spitting on his hands, to show that +the matter could only be settled by a bout at fisticuffs. Deerfoot had +extended his hand to Fred and he smiled at the combative Irish lad, who +put up his fists and began dancing about him in the most belligerent +fashion. + +"Give him a trial," whispered Fred, with a laugh. + +"Deerfoot loves his brothers; he can not hurt them." + +"If ye can git the bist of mesilf," said Terry, who was still sawing the +air and hopping about as though the ground had become hot; "I'll think +more of ye than iver before, bein' that I think more of ye now than I +ever can, and I defy ye to sit your gun aside and git the bist of me in +any way." + +"Go for him," urged Fred, knowing that the Irish boy, strong and active +as he was, had no chance with the Shawanoe; "he thinks he is your +master when you don't use your weapons. If you will give him a lesson, +it will do him good." + +"Deerfoot will try to be a teacher to my brother," said the Shawanoe +gravely, handing his gun to Fred, and following with his knife and +tomahawk, that he might have no weapons except such as nature gave him. +Then he threw some wood on the fire, so that the space immediately +surrounding them was as light as noonday. Finally, every thing being +ready, he proceeded to "go for" Mr. Terence Clark in a truly aboriginal +fashion. + +Now, it must be borne in mind that, though there was and could not be +the least ill feeling between the youths, yet each was resolutely +resolved to overcome the other in the most emphatic manner at his +command. Terry did not mean to batter the handsome face of his dusky +friend, but to tap it so smartly that he would feel it. The naturally +combative lad was an adept with his fists, and he meant to strike +Deerfoot often enough to convince him of his inferiority. Then he would +rush in, seize the young warrior and throw him to the ground, repeating +it several times, until his antagonist cried, "Hold! Enough!" Fred +Linden was to play the part of referee, and decide which was the better +man. Thus you see the match bore some similarity to those of the present +day, in which the victor is declared to be the one who in a certain +number of rounds gains the advantage of the other. + +"As I am to be the boss of this business," sald Fred, with the keenest +zest, "let me explain the terms: Each one is to strike the other as +often as he can, the blows to be sharp enough to be felt pretty plainly, +but not enough to cause any injury. I will let this go on until one of +you has enough, or until I am satisfied of the superiority of one over +the other. After that you are to have a wrestling match. When I call for +you to stop, you must do so, no matter how anxious you may be to go on. +Is that understood?" + +"The terms are agraaable to mesilf," said Terry; "it is sittled that +there's to be no bettin' on the match." + +"I have no objection to your betting if you wish, but inasmuch as you +haven't a cent and Deerfoot never did such a thing as bet in all his +life, I don't think there will be any trouble about holding the stakes." + +"There ain't to be any foul blows in this," added Terry, who showed that +he knew more than most of his friends about the "Irish champions" and +the cause that made them champions of England and Ireland. + +"What do you mean by foul blows?" asked the puzzled Fred. + +"Hits below the belt. What I wished to observe, howiver, is that we +ain't to recognize such things as foul blows in this fight for the +championship of Louisiana. Aich one is to git the bist of the ither in +the bist way he can. The rule, Deerfut, is for such pugilists to shake +hands before beginnin' to try to knock aich ither out." + +And Terry extended his hand, which the young warrior gravely shook, for, +as you can well understand, this was something to which he was +altogether unaccustomed. He knew, however, the nature of the contest +between himself and his doughty Irish friend, and he entered into it +with the calm confidence with which he would have engaged Tecumseh +himself in a fight to the death with knives. + +Deerfoot did not put up his hands after the manner of a pugilist, nor +did he even close them, but fixing his eyes on those of Terry (just as +he always did in his deadly fights with his antagonists), he began +softly circling about him, like a cat searching for a chance to leap +upon his prey. + +This did not disconcert Terry, whose pose would have been pronounced +excellent by any one competent to judge. The left arm and foot were +advanced, the right fist being held across and just in front of the +breast, ready to take advantage of the first opening that presented +itself. + +As Deerfoot circled around Terry, the latter moved around him, each on +the alert for a chance. + +"Moind yer eye," Terry was kind enough to say; "it's a pity to sp'il +such a handsome face, but a sinse of dooty will not allow me to thrifle, +and so here goes!" + +With that he made a creditable lunge with his left, instantly following +it with his right hand, and leaping back to avoid a counter. He did not +strike Deerfoot nor did he receive a blow in return. + +"Ye are quick on yer faat and very good at dodgin', but it is an +obligation ye owe to yersilf and to America to show whither thim foin +purty hands can hit----" + +_Rap, whack, spat!_ The Shawanoe smote one cheek of Terry, then the +other, and then his mouth, the blows being so quick that they seemed to +be simultaneous. At the moment they were delivered, the Irish lad could +not see that the young warrior had stirred. He appeared to be moving in +his cat-like way around him, but beyond reach of Terry's own tough +fists. Seeing that he must force matters, he made a furious rush for his +antagonist. + +You must not set down Terry Clark as an awkward fellow who went into the +contest without any skill. His father in his younger days was one of the +best fighters in the north of Ireland, and he had taught considerable of +his science to his only son, who gave an exhibition of what he could do +when he smote the Winnebago that was swinging the cow-bell. There was +not a lad anywhere near his years in Greville whom he could not master. + +Deerfoot knew nothing of the modern rules of self-defense. His +superiority lay in his unequaled dexterity and quickness. It was that, +as you will recall, which enabled him to win so many victories over foes +who were his superior in every other respect. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVI. + +AMERICA VERSUS AMERICA. + + +Terence Clark gathered himself for another rush and blow at the +Shawanoe, when the latter with a quickness which the eye of Fred Linden +could hardly follow, ducked under the arm of the Irish lad and again +struck him a resounding blow with the flat of the hand, first on one +side of the face and then on the other. Terry wheeled and returned the +blows with skill. Once his hand grazed the black hair that was dangling +about Deerfoot's head, and several times he touched the nodding +feathers, but strive as much as he might, he could not reach the fellow +himself. + +Now that the combat may be said to have opened, it went through to the +end without halt or break. Here, there, everywhere dodged and struck the +Shawanoe, while Terry was always just too late to catch him. Deerfoot +might have inflicted considerable injury upon his plucky antagonist, had +he struck him with his closed hand, but he always used his open palm. +Some of the blows resounded like pistol shots. Having delivered all that +he wished, Deerfoot doubled up his left hand so that only the index +finger was extended. With this he punched the right and left ribs of +Terry, then his chest, and then actually flipped each side of his nose, +easily dodging the blows which the half angered Irish lad aimed at him +in return. + +Suddenly Terry turned his back on his foe and deliberately struck +several times at vacancy. Then he dropped his hands and walked back by +the fire, saying, with a shake of his head: + +"I've enough! ye could bate the divil and his uncle." + +Fred Linden was sitting on the ground shaking with laughter. He had not +seen any thing for a long time that pleased him so much. He had observed +Terry in more than one fight with the boys at home and he knew he was an +ugly customer, as full of grit as a bull dog, but the Shawanoe struck +him fully a dozen times, while the Irish lad with all his skill +desperately put forth never once touched him. The discomfiture of the +brave Irish lad was complete. + +No witness of the bout, however, could have failed to admire the skill +and pluck of Terry. He acquitted himself well and kept up the struggle, +even after he was convinced that he could do nothing with his alert +antagonist. Then, when Deerfoot began to trifle with him, he turned +around as I have shown and struck the empty air. + +"Why did you do that?" asked Fred, as the three stood by the fire +discussing the incident. + +Terry passed his open hand over his cheeks, which were red and smarting +from the sharp taps of Deerfoot, and closing one eye and scratching his +head, made answer: + +"I had been sthrikin' at Deerfut until I obsarved that ivery time I +sthruck _at_ him I didn't hit him; so thinks I to mesilf, I will see +whither I can hit him by tryin' not to hit him; so I sthruck where I +knowed he wasn't, thinkin' he was there." + +"Well, I must declare Deerfoot the winner." + +"I can't deny that he is; I throw up the sponge and extind to him the +best wishes for himself and family." + +Smiling in a way that left no doubt of his relish of the incident, +Deerfoot warmly shook the hand of his friend, whose brave fight had +increased his admiration of him. + +"My brother is brave," said he admiringly; "perhaps he can lay Deerfoot +on his back; Deerfoot will rejoice if he can do so." + +"Be the powers! but that suits me," exclaimed the delighted Terry; "I +forgot we were to have a wrestling match; Fred, ye will be koind enough +to sarve as riferee again; we'll take side holts and it'll be the bist +two out of thraa." + +Terry was warranted in feeling more confidence in this test of skill. He +had failed--as he knew he would always fail--in a sparring contest, for +the reason that Deerfoot was so quick that he could not touch him; but +one of the necessities of a wrestling match is that the contestants +shall first seize each other. Terry believed that he had as much +physical strength as Deerfoot, and if he once got a fair hold, he would +not let go until he downed him. + +Terry being right and Deerfoot left handed, each was able to secure his +most effective grip. So, standing side by side, in the old fashioned +style, with a dusky left arm around the white neck and a white arm +around the dusky neck, they began the struggle. + +In this match, as before, Deerfoot allowed his antagonist to dally with +him awhile before he took the aggressive. Passing him over his hip Terry +gave Deerfoot such a violent fling that a pang of fear shot through him, +lest he had broken the Shawanoe's neck; but though he shot headlong out +of the grasp of the Irish lad, the Shawanoe landed lightly on his feet +and instantly leaped back and closed with Terry again. + +"I'll fetch ye this time," he muttered between his compressed lips; "ye +shan't git out of me hands till ye's down flat on yer back and mesilf +layin' a-straddle of ye. There's a difference between boxin' and +sparrin' and I shall taich ye the same, as me grandmither--" + +Both went down that instant, but the Shawanoe was on top. His +antagonist could not have fallen flatter had he been dropped from the +roof of a house. + +"Mark the first fall for Deerfut," called out Terry, hastily clambering +to his feet, the Shawanoe extending his hand to help. + +This result weakened the confidence of the Irish lad in himself, that +is, so far as concerned his opponent. He reflected that many of the +Indians are skillful wrestlers, and while Deerfoot had had no training +in boxing, he had in the other art. Such a cool headed athlete would be +sure to learn fast. Terry recognized the peculiar flirt by which he had +been turned off his feet as the very trick he had played successfully on +his playmates at home, but which he never dreamed was known to Deerfoot. + +The Irish lad tried every possible lock, twist and turn upon his rival, +but he could not get him off his feet. It seemed to Terry that he +whirled in the air when almost on the ground, and that if he had been +dropped head downwards from the height of a rod, he would alight on his +feet. + +Fred saw Deerfoot, who was carefully watching his antagonist, smile, +and he knew what was coming. So deftly that, for the life of him, the +spectator could not see how it was done, Terry went over again as "flat +as a flounder." Not only that, but to the astonishment of the victim as +well as of the witness, the Shawanoe remained erect, so that he +literally flung his antagonist to the ground and looked smilingly down +upon him. + +"Ye can baat the baaters," exclaimed Terry, rising to his feet, and +shaking hands with his victor. "I niver met any one who could down me in +that sthyle. I don't know how ye did the same, but I haven't any doubts +that ye done it, as me great uncle remarked whin the cannon ball took +off his head." + +With the same shadowy smile Deerfoot looked inquiringly at Fred Linden. + +"Deerfoot thinks maybe his brother would be glad to lay him on the +ground?" + +"I'll be hanged if I don't try it," laughed Fred, springing to his feet, +and instantly but cautiously closing arms with the graceful warrior. + +"My brother can not throw Deerfoot," said the latter; "but the heart of +Deerfoot would be glad if he would tell him how he would like to +fall--on his shoulders, or side, or back." + +"I wouldn't like to fall at all; but if you think you can get me on my +shoulders, just try it; that's all." + +"It shall be as my brother wishes." + +The words seemed yet in the mouth of Deerfoot when Fred felt himself +sailing through space, and the next instant he landed on his shoulders +with a shock that Terry declared made the ground shake. + +As before, Deerfoot himself did not fall, but looked smilingly down on +his prostrate friend as he began climbing to his feet again. + +"Now, if my brother wishes to fall on his back, it shall be so." + +"I've little doubt that you will not do just as you say you will; I only +ask that you wait till I say I am ready; you did the last before I had +time to prepare." + +"Ye bitter not ax him to wait," said Terry, who rolled over on the +ground in the exuberance of his mirth, at the sight of his big friend +going down before the lithe, willowy Shawanoe; "for since he's bound to +do what he says, the sooner ye are out of yer suspinse, the sooner ye'll +be out of it." + +"Be kind enough to attend to your own affairs," said Fred stiffly; +"Deerfoot and I are running this show." + +"It looks as if Deerfut had charge of the whole of it," was the comment +of Terry, who broke into laughter again; "and whin he is done ye'll +agraa with me." + +Once more the arms passed over each other's neck. Fred resolved that +whatever came, he would not be taken by surprise this time. He was +stronger than Terry and he had thrown him more than once. He could not +understand, therefore, why he should not at least give the Shawanoe a +struggle. He braced his feet, with every muscle strained, and every +faculty on the alert. + +"I am ready," said he; "do your best." + +"On which side shall Deerfoot throw his brother?" + +"On my right side, and as hard as you can." + +Now, you will see the difficulty of the task, for Fred had his right arm +tightly locked over the neck of Deerfoot, so that that side was guarded +by the body of the warrior himself. It would seem, that if Fred should +fall on either side it could only be on the left. Manifestly if it +should be the right, the Shawanoe could not go down with him. He must +bring him to the ground and escape from beneath him before he fell. + +He did it. For a second or two the contestants stood motionless. Then, +like a flash, Deerfoot slipped from the grasp of his friend, dropped +down in a stooping posture almost to the earth, holding the right hand +of Fred firmly with his left (this was to prevent him using that hand to +save himself), and then by a quick dart to the left, he carried both +feet of his opponent off the ground, and Fred fell squarely on his right +side, his conqueror straightening up as he went down. + +"I would be obleeged," said Terry, throwing back his head with laughter, +"if yees will be koind enough to till me who is runnin' the show about +this time." + +Fred was chagrined at the ease with which Deerfoot had overthrown him, +and it was not lessened by the honest compliment which the young warrior +gave to his skill. Both Fred and Terry had been pretty well jarred, for +they were downed with such amazing suddenness that it could not be +otherwise; but neither referred to it and they could only praise the +wonderful ability of their friend. + +"I tell you," said Fred, seating himself on the ground beside the other +two, after the flurry was over, "all this proves that skill is worth +more than strength. I am quite sure that I am as strong as you, +Deerfoot, but I don't believe that Terry and I together could lay you on +your back. When I had my arm around your neck, I suspected you would try +to slip out, and I squeezed you pretty hard. You slid out so quickly +that at the moment you were down at my heels, I thought I had you fast." + +"I'm thinkin' that the nixt thing we should try is a race; Fred can +outrun me and I'll agraa that he will outrun Deerfut, that is, if ye'll +allow me to make the conditions." + +"What would they be?" asked Deerfoot, Looking gravely down upon his +friends. + +"The race should be for a hundred yards, and Deerfut must give Fred +ninety-five yards start, though to make it sure enough, maybe it ought +to be ninety-six or siven." + +"Then you would require about ninety-nine, according to the same +calculation," said Fred. + +"Ye's are right," replied Terry, to whom it seemed that no athletic feat +was impossible for the Shawanoe; "nayther yersilf nor mesilf have a +right to be mintioned in the same day with him." + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVII. + +THE LAST CAMP-FIRE. + + +It seemed to strike all three of the friends at the same moment that +they had shown a strange forgetfulness of the occasion. A sudden impulse +had led them into a test of skill, that had continued fully a quarter of +an hour, during which there was no thought on the part of any one of the +gravity of their situation. + +But a little while before, both Fred Linden and Terry Clark were in +distress on account of their friends, while their own position +(believing as they did that there were Winnebagos in front as well as in +the rear), ought to have driven away all inclination for sport or +amusement. One of their strongest desires was the presence of Deerfoot, +that they might have his counsel and help. Here he was, and no reference +had been made to the subjects uppermost in their minds. Now that he took +his seat near them by the camp-fire, as if to invite their confidence, +they quickly returned to the all important business. + +First of all, they asked for his experience since their separation the +night before. He gave only a part of it. He told nothing about his +conflict with the Wolf and his companion, which resulted in the death of +both, but said that he had kept watch of the Winnebagos until morning, +when he saw them start for the camp in the mountains. He learned from +their signaling that they had other warriors in the neighborhood, and +there could be no doubt that an attack was intended upon the Hunters of +the Ozark. Nevertheless the Shawanoe kept in their vicinity, until they +approached the open prairie of which mention has been make. Then he +decided to pass them and join his young friends. + +Feeling no doubt that the latter were following the right trail (several +examinations which he made satisfied him that they were doing so), he +left it altogether, and took a shorter route across the country. He was +so familiar with it that he could easily do this. His intention was to +strike the main path again at the crossing, where they had such a narrow +escape from the cyclone; but he calculated that by nightfall they would +be a considerable distance beyond, and he wished to test their +watchfulness when left to themselves. So he came back to the trail about +half way between that point and the creek which they had crossed by +means of the canoe. He saw from an examination of the ground that he was +ahead of them, so he sauntered forward, firing off his gun where a turn +in the path made it seem to come from one side instead of in front of +them. He did this as he explained with a view of warning them to keep +their eyes open. It soon began growing dark and he kept on until he +reached the stream, where he decided to wait and see what they would do. + +He was as surprised as they when they brought forth the little canoe and +pushed themselves across by means of the pole which Fred Linden himself +cut. He followed them, easily wading the stream. After that he indulged +in a little diversion with which you are familiar. + +"Wasn't it strange, Deerfoot," said Fred, "that we should have found +that canoe?" + +He nodded his head to signify that he thought it was. + +"Have you any idea how it got there?" + +"He who owned the boat hid it under the bushes." + +"But there are no Indian villages within a great many miles of this +place--is that not so?" + +He gave another affirmative nod. + +"Have you any idea of who the owner can be?" + +A third affirmative nod followed. + +"Who is he?" asked Fred in astonishment. + +"Deerfoot." + +"What! Does that little canoe belong to _you_?" + +"Deerfoot made it and hid it under the bushes: why did not my brothers +use the paddle?" + +"We hunted all round, but could not find it." + +"It was within reach of my brother's hands; it was covered with leaves." + +"And so the boat is yer own?" repeated Terry; "why that looks as if ye +lived somewhere in this neighborhood; is such the case, owld boy?" + +The question did not seem to please the Shawanoe. He was sitting +directly in front of his young friends, who looked earnestly in his +face. He made no answer to Terry's question, but continued looking among +the coals, as if he was pondering some other matter that had thus been +brought to mind. Fred shook his head at Terry as a warning that he +should not repeat his query, and the latter was wise enough not to do +so; but the friends concluded from that moment that the wandering young +Shawanoe made his home at no great distance from where all three were at +that moment sitting in the wilderness. And they were right. + +A minute later, Deerfoot raised his head and signified that he wished to +know in turn what had befallen them since they parted company +twenty-four hours before. You will admit that each had a stirring story +to tell and he told it. The Shawanoe first listened to Terry's account +of his ride on the back of the wounded buffalo, and, when it was +finished, he quietly remarked to his young friend that he had done well. + +Though he showed no emotion, it was clear to both boys that he felt the +most concern in the experience of Fred Linden. He said nothing until the +narrator was through, including the account of the cyclone. Deerfoot had +heard the noise made by the latter, but he was so far removed from its +path that he saw none of its fearful effects, and in fact cared little +about it, for he had seen the same thing more than once before. + +But that which interested him was the account of Fred Linden's meeting +with the Winnebago horse thieves. This was the first knowledge he +received that any of their enemies were mounted on animals. Deerfoot had +turned off the main trail so early in the day that he missed them +altogether. When he came back to the path, near where the three were in +camp at that moment, and he examined the ground for signs of the +footprints of the boys, there were none that had been made by the hoofs +of horses. They had struck the trail further to the north, taking a +different course from the camp where they had stolen the animals. + +Fred blushed under the warm compliments of Deerfoot on his coolness, +bravery and skill in the presence of the three Winnebagos. You will +agree that it was a daring exploit indeed, which would have done credit +to a veteran frontiersman. It could not have been otherwise to draw such +warm praise from the Shawanoe. + +But the compliments could well be deferred to some other season. The +fact that three Indians had stolen the same number of horses from the +Hunters of the Ozark, and then had ridden leisurely away to meet their +friends, showed that they had great confidence in themselves, doubtless +caused by the belief that they were safe against any attempt to recover +the property. + +"Deerfoot," said Fred, after there had been a full exchange of +experiences; "we stopped here only because we could not keep to the +trail in the darkness. Don't you think it best that we should now go on, +since you will not have the same trouble that we did?" + +He shook his head in the negative. + +"It is not far to the camp of my brothers; the Winnebagos are a long +ways back on the trail; they will not come up with us; my brothers have +a chance to sleep; they may have no chance when they reach the cabin; +let them sleep now." + +The natural inference from this remark was that he believed nothing more +was to be apprehended from the Winnebagos, so long as our three friends +were on their way to the cabin of the Hunters of the Ozark. The danger +would now be transferred to that point. + +"Is it not likely that some of the red men are between us and our +friends?" asked Fred, as though their guide had not thought of every +contingency. + +"There is none," was the quiet answer, and then he added the +explanation. The Winnebagos, as soon as they had captured the horses, +had mounted them and ridden off to meet Black Bear and the rest, so as +to combine with them in the attack upon the cabin in the mountains. +Being so few in numbers, they did not dare stay in the neighborhood, +but were certain to come back with the others. + +The theft of the animals was no part of the original plan of the red +men, and was therefore what may be considered poor generalship, since it +was likely to draw attention to the presence of hostiles and to put the +Hunters of the Ozark on their guard. + +Deerfoot made no such remark at the time, but he afterward expressed his +regret that he had not joined Fred and Terry earlier in the day, so that +he could have been with them when they met the horse thieves. Had he +done so, there can be no doubt that they would have recaptured every one +of the animals, even if they had had to shoot each thief from the back +of his stolen steed. Such a result would have changed the whole course +of the events that followed. + +Since the Shawanoe advised them to stay where they were until morning, +the natural query of the lads was as to the degree of danger they ran. +They had thought there was little to be feared from Indians, but after +the fire was started, both had misgivings--afterward intensified no +doubt by the little trick played upon them by Deerfoot. + +He assured them that there was nothing to be feared from Indians. There +was and would be none near them through the night. They were at a safe +distance from the trail, so that if any one should pass back or forth he +could not possibly catch a glimpse of the camp. + +"I never dispute a man's sintimints," said Terry, "onless it happens to +disagraa with me own, so I'll say ye are right because we think the same +way; but it's within me own ricolliction that whin ye enj'yed the honor +of our coompany night before last, ye kipt guard all the night; +Frederick and mesilf will now return the coompliment and take charge of +the honors oursilves. If ye have any disputation that ye want to inter +into, we'll sittle it by maans of a wristling match." + +Deerfoot was inclined at first to act as sentinel, just as he had done +before, but he had already declared that there was nothing to be feared, +and his friends were so in earnest that he could not well refuse their +request. He would have preferred that they should gain all the sleep +they could, so as to lay up a stock, as may be said, against what was +likely to come at the cabin, but he yielded. He agreed to their wishes, +and in doing so, indulged in one of his smiles, the depth of whose +meaning neither of the youths fully comprehended. In fact it simply +meant that he understood their ability in that respect better than they +did themselves. + +And so, after reading his Bible, a portion of it aloud, he lay down upon +the blanket of Terry, as he did two nights before, and soon fell asleep. + +"I'm glad to obsarve the same," remarked Terry; "for the good lookin' +spalpeen must be in naad of slumber. I say, Fred, did ye iver saa the +loikes of him? We must git him to run a race and jump and swim and stand +on his head and show jist what he can do. I'm glad as I say to obsarve +that he is aslaap, for he must naad the same. I say, Fred, let's stay +awake till daylight, so as to fool him." + +"I am glad to do that in return for the watch he kept over us the other +night; but if you and I undertake to sit up at the same time we shall +fail. So I'll lie down and sleep awhile. When you find yourself getting +drowsy, wake me up and then I shall be able to keep my eyes open until +morning. In that way Deerfoot may have a whole night of rest." + +"I'm agraaable to the same." + +The plan was carried out, that is, a part of it, Fred Linden soon +dropped asleep, and, within an hour, Terry Clark did the same. When +Deerfoot threw his blanket off his face and assumed the sitting +position, he saw just what he expected to see and he allowed them to +slumber peacefully until daylight. + + + + +CHAPTER XXXVIII. + +CONCLUSION. + + +The awaking of the boys was of the most pleasant character. The sky had +cleared and the sunlight penetrated between the branches from which the +autumn leaves were fast falling. The crispness which is felt at that +season of the year, stirred the young hearts and enlivened the spirits +in spite of the serious situation in which all three found themselves. + +The odor of broiling fish was snuffed by the lads, and nothing could +have been more delicious and appetizing. They were very hungry, and the +night before they supposed they would have to wait indefinitely for +their morning meal, but they opened their eyes to find that Deerfoot had +provided the most toothsome breakfast that could be imagined. + +In the early morning light, fully two hours before the sun appeared, +Deerfoot crossed the stream in his own canoe, and, taking the trail, +ran several miles at the highest speed. While he did not go far enough +to see the camp-fire of the main war party of Winnebagos, he did not +pause until certain that they had stayed in camp all night and would not +cross the stream where the boys lay asleep until the forenoon was half +gone. So the Shawanoe hastened back, and dropped a short distance down +stream in his canoe, having obtained his paddle, to an eddy where it +took but a few minutes for him to coax a half dozen fish from the cool, +clear depths, and these were just browning to a turn when the boys +opened their eyes. + +Fred and Terry looked in each other's faces and laughed. They knew what +an absurd failure they had made. They had promised to watch while +Deerfoot slept, and then left him to act as sentinel until morning. + +"It was your fault," whispered Fred, hunting in his pocket for the +package of salt and pepper which survived, despite the wetting it had +received; "why didn't you wake me up, as I told you to do?" + +"How could I wake ye up when I was aslaap mesilf?" was the pertinent +query of Terry; "I think I was only a half minute behind yersilf in +beginning me swate dreams." + +"Even if you had roused me," said Fred, "I suppose I would have dropped +to sleep the same as you; no one can keep awake (unless it is Deerfoot) +while sitting on the ground. Well, I am sure I shan't say any thing +about it if _he_ doesn't." + +"Let us shake on that," whispered Terry, stealthily extending his hand. + +Deerfoot acted as though unaware that any such lapse had occurred. The +browned fish were spread on the green leaves, and Fred sprinkled the +seasoning upon the portions to be eaten by himself and Terry; the +Shawanoe preferred none on his. + +"If nothing unexpected happens," said Fred, "we will arrive at the cabin +to-day." + +The Shawanoe inclined his head by way of answer. + +"When will the Winnebagos that are following us come to this stream?" + +Deerfoot pointed to a portion of the sky which the sun would reach in +about three hours from that time. + +"The Winnebagos are together; there may be a few coming from different +parts of the wood, but Black Bear has most of his warriors with him, and +he feels strong enough to destroy the cabin and our brothers who are +there." + +"There are three there now, and when we join them there will be six. If +father and the rest have fair notice of their coming, they ought to be +able to put every thing in good shape for a defense. It won't take them +long to gather enough food to last for weeks, but how about water?" + +"They have no water; our brothers know not why they should have it." + +The Shawanoe meant to say that the men, seeing no reason why they should +collect any store of water within their primitive structure, never did +so. It was at their door, and, when they wished to drink, they had but +to stoop down and drink. Believing no such emergency as now threatened +could arise, they failed to make any provision against it. + +"I've been thinkin'," said Terry, "that bein' as how we started from +Greville to j'in the Hunters of the Ozark, with the idaa of spindin' the +winter with the same, that from the time we started we were mimbers of +the same, but timporarily separated by a wide stritch of woods; what are +yer own idaas?" + +"I am not sure that I understand what you are trying to get at, but if +you mean to say that we may call ourselves two of the Hunters of the +Ozark, I see no objection if we are a few days behind the rest in +reaching the beaver runs." + +"Oblige me by tistifying to the same," said Terry, rather effusively, +shoving his hand toward his friend, who suspended operations with the +fish long enough to salute him. + +The breakfast was quickly finished, and the boys helped each other with +their knapsacks, caught up their guns and followed Deerfoot as he led +the way back to the trail. He did not hint any thing about their failure +to keep guard for him the night before, though they felt sure that they +would hear from him at some time not very far distant. + +When they found themselves following the path that had become so +familiar, they glanced furtively behind, half expecting to hear the +Winnebago war whoop and to see the warriors rushing after them; but not +a living soul beside themselves was in sight, and the quiet assurance of +their leader very nearly removed all such fear from them. + +"Are there any more streams to cross?" asked Fred, a moment after they +started along the trail. + +"There are none." + +"That is good, and since we are several hours in advance of the Indians, +we ought to be able to reach the cabin in time to give them warning, +that is, if they are in need of it." + +"How can they help being in need?" asked Terry. + +"The horses were turned loose to look after themselves, and though I +can't know for some time how it is, it seems to me that it could well +happen that they would not miss the animals for several days and +possibly not for a week or two." + +The best ground for doubting that the Hunters of the Ozark were aware of +the theft of the horses was the fact that there had been no pursuit. +Those men, it is safe to say, would not have stayed idle had they known +that three vagabond Indians were astride of their property and riding to +the northward. With the three fleeter animals at command, they would +have been after them in a twinkling: they would not have been obliged to +wait till they met Fred Linden before receiving some rifle shots. + +Fred was confirmed in this theory by Deerfoot, who declared that such +was his explanation of the failure of the hunters to pursue the thieves. + +For two hours the trail which they were following steadily ascended, +until they were considerably higher than when they left camp in the +morning. The undergrowth was abundant, and the wood in some places was +so dense that they could see only a short distance on either hand. The +trail was sinuous, winding in and out among the rocks in a way that +would have bewildered any one not used to such traveling. + +At last they reached the ridge of the elevation up which they had been +climbing, and found themselves on the margin of a plateau or rather +valley, beyond which rose the rugged, precipitous Ozarks. Since the +ground sloped away from them, in the direction of the mountains, their +view was extended over many square miles of forest, stream and natural +clearing, to the mountain walls beyond, looking dim and soft in the +distance, with the hazy air between. + +"Do my brothers see the gleam of the water yonder?" asked Deerfoot, +pointing to a winding stream, large enough to be called a river, though +it was half hidden by the woods. Its course was in the main at right +angles to the trail which the boys had been following, though, at times +it seemed to run straight toward and then away from them. + +The youths answered that they could not very well look in the direction +indicated by their friend, without seeing the stream to which he +directed their attention. + +The Shawanoe placed himself so that he stood in front of the two. + +"Now," said he, "let my brothers follow Deerfoot's finger and tell me +what they see." + +Pointing well to the right, he slowly swung his index finger toward the +left, until he had described about a quarter of a circle. + +Since it was not easy for the two to look exactly at the point meant, at +the same time, Terry Clark first tried it. Removing his cap, he closed +one eye and carefully peered along the extended arm of the Shawanoe as +though it was a rifle which he was about to aim and fire. + +"What is it?" asked Fred, a moment later, with some impatience over the +plodding deliberation of his companion. + +"I obsarve a big lot of traas, some rocks, some water and a claarin' +where ye could raise a big lot of praties, and--and--and--" + +"I see what you mean!" exclaimed Fred in some excitement; "right in the +middle of the clearing stands a large cabin made of logs." + +"It's mesilf that obsarves the same," added Terry, replacing his cap and +looking inquiringly at the Shawanoe, who let his extended arm fall as +he faced about and said: "That is the home of my brothers; that is the +cabin of the Hunters of the Ozark." + +"Hurrah!" called out Terry; "we're purty near there." + +"But we don't know how matters stand," said Fred; "even Deerfoot can not +tell whether they are all alive or dead." + +"I know bitter than that," remarked Terry, appealing straight to the +Shawanoe, who, without directly answering the question, notified them of +an interesting fact: a thin column of smoke was rising from the cabin. + +"That shows that some one is in there," said the Irish lad, "but whither +he is white or rid, I don't s'pose the Shawanoe, with all his smartness, +can tell even at this distance." + +"My brother speaks truth," said Deerfoot; "our brothers may be well and +they maybe dead and the Winnebagos may have built the fire to lure us to +them: we shall soon know." + + * * * * * + +Here for the present we must pause, for we have already filled the space +assigned to us; but we propose soon to tell you all about the +adventures of Deerfoot, Fred and Terry, and of their friends the Hunters +of the Ozark, whom they were trying to help. The story in which this +will be related will appear under the title of + +"THE CAMP IN THE MOUNTAINS." + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + + FAMOUS STANDARD JUVENILE LIBRARIES. + + ANY VOLUME SOLD SEPARATELY AT $1.00 PER VOLUME + + (Except the Sportsman's Club Series, Frank Nelson Series and Jack + Hazard Series.). + + Each Volume Illustrated. 12mo. Cloth. + + HORATIO ALGER, JR. + +The enormous sales of the books of Horatio Alger, Jr., show the +greatness of his popularity among the boys, and prove that he is one +of their most favored writers. I am told that more than half a million +copies altogether have been sold, and that all the large circulating +libraries in the country have several complete sets, of which only two +or three volumes are ever on the shelves at one time. If this is true, +what thousands and thousands of boys have read and are reading Mr. +Alger's books! His peculiar style of stories, often imitated but never +equaled, have taken a hold upon the young people, and, despite their +similarity, are eagerly read as soon as they appear. + +Mr. Alger became famous with the publication of that undying book, +"Ragged Dick, or Street Life in New York." It was his first book for +young people, and its success was so great that he immediately devoted +himself to that kind of writing. It was a new and fertile field for a +writer then, and Mr. Alger's treatment of it at once caught the fancy +of the boys. "Ragged Dick" first appeared in 1868, and ever since then +it has been selling steadily, until now it is estimated that about +200,000 copies of the series have been sold. + + --Pleasant Hours for Boys and Girls. + +A writer for boys should have an abundant sympathy with them. He +should be able to enter into their plans, hopes, and aspirations. He +should learn to look upon life as they do. Boys object to be written +down to. A boy's heart opens to the man or writer who understands him. + + --From Writing Stories for Boys, by Horatio Alger, Jr. + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + +RAGGED DICK SERIES. +6 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $6.00 +Ragged Dick. Rough and Ready. +Fame and Fortune. Ben the Luggage Boy. +Mark the Match Boy. Rufus and Rose. + +TATTERED TOM SERIES--First Series. +4 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $4.00 +Tattered Tom. Phil the Fiddler. +Paul the Peddler. Slow and Sure. + +TATTERED TOM SERIES--Second Series. +4 vols. $4.00 +Julius. Sam's Chance. +The Young Outlaw. The Telegraph Boy. + +CAMPAIGN SERIES. +3 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $3.00 +Frank's Campaign. Charlie Codman's Cruise. +Paul Prescott's Charge. + +LUCK AND PLUCK SERIES--First Series. +4 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $4.00 +Luck and Pluck. Strong and Steady. +Sink or Swim. Strive and Succeed. + +LUCK AND PLUCK SERIES--Second Series. +4 vols. $4.00 +Try and Trust. Risen from the Ranks. +Bound to Rise. Herbert Carter's Legacy. + +BRAVE AND BOLD SERIES. +4 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $4.00 +Brave and Bold. Shifting for Himself. +Jack's Ward. Wait and Hope. + +NEW WORLD SERIES. +3 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $3.00 +Digging for Gold. Facing the World. +In a New World. + +VICTORY SERIES. +3 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $3.00 +Only an Irish Boy. Adrift in the City. +Victor Vane, or the Young Secretary. + +FRANK AND FEARLESS SERIES. +3 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $3.00 +Frank Hunter's Peril. Frank and Fearless. +The Young Salesman. + +GOOD FORTUNE LIBRARY. +3 vols. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $3.00 +Walter Sherwood's Probation. A Boy's Fortune. +The Young Bank Messenger. + +RUPERT'S AMBITION. +1 vol. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $1.00 + +JED, THE POOR-HOUSE BOY. +1 vol. By Horatio Alger, Jr. $1.00 + +----------------------------------------------------------------------- + + HARRY CASTLEMON. + + HOW I CAME TO WRITE MY FIRST BOOK. + +When I was sixteen years old I belonged to a composition class. It was +our custom to go on the recitation seat every day with clean slates, and +we were allowed ten minutes to write seventy words on any subject the +teacher thought suited to our capacity. One day he gave out "What a Man +Would See if He Went to Greenland." My heart was in the matter, and +before the ten minutes were up I had one side of my slate filled. The +teacher listened to the reading of our compositions, and when they were +all over he simply said: "Some of you will make your living by writing +one of these days." That gave me something to ponder upon. I did not say +so out loud, but I knew that my composition was as good as the best of +them. By the way, there was another thing that came in my way just then. +I was reading at that time one of Mayne Reid's works which I had drawn +from the library, and I pondered upon it as much as I did upon what the +teacher said to me. In introducing Swartboy to his readers he made use +of this expression: "No visible change was observable in Swartboy's +countenance." Now, it occurred to me that if a man of his education +could make such a blunder as that and still write a book, I ought to be +able to do it, too. I went home that very day and began a story, "The +Old Guide's Narrative," which was sent to the _New York Weekly_, and +came back, respectfully declined. It was written on both sides of the +sheets but I didn't know that this was against the rules. Nothing +abashed, I began another, and receiving some instruction, from a friend +of mine who was a clerk in a book store, I wrote it on only one side of +the paper. But mind you, he didn't know what I was doing. Nobody knew +it; but one day, after a hard Saturday's work--the other boys had been +out skating on the brick-pond--I shyly broached the subject to my +mother. I felt the need of some sympathy. She listened in amazement, and +then said: "Why, do you think you could write a book like that?" That +settled the matter, and from that day no one knew what I was up to until +I sent the first four volumes of Gunboat Series to my father. Was it +work? Well, yes; it was hard work, but each week I had the satisfaction +of seeing the manuscript grow until the "Young Naturalist" was all +complete. + + --Harry Castlemon in the Writer. + +GUNBOAT SERIES. +6 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $6.00 +Frank the Young Naturalist. Frank before Vicksburg. +Frank on a Gunboat. Frank on the Lower Mississippi. +Frank in the Woods. Frank on the Prairie. + +ROCKY MOUNTAIN SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +Frank Among the Rancheros. Frank in the Mountains. +Frank at Don Carlos' Rancho. + +SPORTSMAN'S CLUB SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.75 +The Sportsman's Club in the Saddle. +The Sportsman's Club The Sportsman's Club Afloat. +Among the Trappers. + +FRANK NELSON SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.75 +Snowed up. Frank in the Forecastle. The Boy Traders. + +BOY TRAPPER SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +The Buried Treasure. The Boy Trapper. +The Mail Carrier. + +ROUGHING IT SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +George in Camp. George at the Fort. +George at the Wheel. + +ROD AND GUN SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +Don Gordon's Shooting Box. The Young Wild Fowlers. +Rod and Gun Club. + +GO-AHEAD SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +Tom Newcombe. Go-Ahead. No Moss. + +WAR SERIES. +6 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $6.00 +True to His Colors. Marcy the Blockade-Runner. +Rodney the Partisan. Marcy the Refugee. +Rodney the Overseer. Sailor Jack the Trader. + +HOUSEBOAT SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +The Houseboat Boys. The Mystery of Lost River Canon. +The Young Game Warden. + +AFLOAT AND ASHORE SERIES. +3 vols. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +Rebellion in Dixie. A Sailor in Spite of Himself. +The Ten-Ton Cutter. + +THE PONY EXPRESS SERIES. +3 vol. By Harry Castlemon. $3.00 +The Pony Express Rider. The White Beaver. +Carl, The Trailer. + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's The Hunters of the Ozark, by Edward S. 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