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@@ -1,35 +1,4 @@
-Project Gutenberg's South from Hudson Bay, by E. C. [Ethel Claire] Brill
-
-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
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-
-
-Title: South from Hudson Bay
- An Adventure and Mystery Story for Boys
-
-Author: E. C. [Ethel Claire] Brill
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2013 [EBook #43905]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOUTH FROM HUDSON BAY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43905 ***
“WHEN LAROQUE’S BOAT REACHED THE LANDING, THE SHORE WAS LINED
WITH PEOPLE.”
@@ -8803,360 +8772,4 @@ will be followed with breathless interest by thousands._
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of South from Hudson Bay, by
E. C. [Ethel Claire] Brill
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+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43905 ***
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-Project Gutenberg's South from Hudson Bay, by E. C. [Ethel Claire] Brill
-
-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: South from Hudson Bay
- An Adventure and Mystery Story for Boys
-
-Author: E. C. [Ethel Claire] Brill
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2013 [EBook #43905]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOUTH FROM HUDSON BAY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
- "WHEN LAROQUE'S BOAT REACHED THE LANDING, THE SHORE WAS LINED
- WITH PEOPLE."
- "South from Hudson Bay." (See Page 82)
-
-
-
-
- SOUTH FROM
- HUDSON BAY
-
-
- AN ADVENTURE AND MYSTERY
- STORY FOR BOYS
-
- BY
- E. C. BRILL
-
- _ILLUSTRATED_
-
- CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
-
- ADVENTURE AND MYSTERY
- STORIES FOR BOYS
-
-
- _By_ E. C. BRILL
-
-
- Large 12 mo. Cloth. Illustrated.
-
-
- THE SECRET CACHE
- SOUTH FROM HUDSON BAY
- THE ISLAND OF YELLOW SANDS
-
-
- Copyright, 1932, by
- Cupples & Leon Company
- PRINTED IN U. S. A.
-
-
- Copyright, 1932, by
- Cupples & Leon Company
- PRINTED IN U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- I The New Land 9
- II Fort York 14
- III The Selkirk Colony and the Rival Fur Traders 24
- IV The Start from Fort York 32
- V The Black Murray 39
- VI Toiling Up Stream 45
- VII Norway House 53
- VIII The Missing Pemmican 61
- IX Hunger and Cold 67
- X The Red River at Last 74
- XI Fort Douglas 81
- XII By Cart Train to Pembina 89
- XIII The Red-Headed Scotch Boy 97
- XIV Pembina 108
- XV The Ojibwa Hunter 118
- XVI Letters from Fort Douglas 124
- XVII Christmas at Pembina 134
- XVIII Mirage of the Prairie 140
- XIX Blizzard 147
- XX A Night Attack 154
- XXI The Burned Cabin 161
- XXII The Painted Buffalo Skull 167
- XXIII Unwelcome Visitors 176
- XXIV A Sore Hand 186
- XXV The Travelers without Snowshoes 193
- XXVI Elise's Story 200
- XXVII Why the Periers Came to Pembina 207
- XXVIII The Land to the South 214
- XXIX The Coming of the Sioux 225
- XXX With the Buffalo Hunters 231
- XXXI The Charging Buffalo 239
- XXXII To the Sheyenne River 245
- XXXIII A Lonely Camp 253
- XXXIV Danger 261
- XXXV In the Chief's Tipi 270
- XXXVI The White Trader 280
- XXXVII Flight 289
- XXXVIII The Fight at the Bois des Sioux 299
- XXXIX Safe 309
- XL Conclusion 316
-
-
-
-
- I
- THE NEW LAND
-
-
-Before Walter Rossel was wholly awake, even before he opened his eyes, he
-realized that the ship was unusually quiet. There was only a slight
-rolling motion from side to side, a dead roll. Was she caught in the ice
-again, or had she reached Fort York at last? Could it be that the long
-voyage was really over? Walter hurried into the few clothes he had taken
-off, and ran up on deck, hoping to see land close by.
-
-He was disappointed. He could see nothing but gray water, a line of white
-where waves were breaking on a long bar, and the dim, shadowy forms of
-the other ships, hulls, masts, and spars veiled in dense fog. There was
-no ice in sight, yet all three vessels were riding at anchor.
-
-Eagerly the boy turned to a sailor who was scrubbing the deck. Walter's
-native tongue was French, but he had picked up a little English during
-the voyage, enough to ask why the ships were at anchor, and to understand
-part of the man's reply. They had crossed the bar in the night, the
-sailor said, and were lying in the shallow water of York Flats. Over
-there to the south, hidden in the fog, was the shore.
-
-The news that they had arrived off Fort York spread rapidly among the
-passengers on the _Lord Wellington_. Men, women, and children crowded on
-deck, gazed into the fog, questioned one another and the sailors in
-French, German, and broken English, and talked and laughed excitedly. A
-little boy of seven and his older sister, a bright-faced girl of thirteen
-with hazel eyes and heavy braids of brown hair, joined Walter and poured
-out eager questions.
-
-"They say we are at the end of our voyage," cried the girl, "but where is
-the land?"
-
-Walter pointed to the south. "We'll see it when the fog lifts. Does your
-father know we are almost at Fort York?"
-
-"Yes, he is coming on deck. There he is now."
-
-A middle aged man, thin and somewhat stooped, was coming towards them,
-his pale face smiling and eager. "Well, my boy," he greeted Walter, "this
-is good news indeed. We shall soon be settled on our own farm. Think of
-that, children, our own farm, a far larger one than we could ever dream
-of having in Switzerland."
-
-"Yes, Monsieur Perier," replied Walter, "the voyage is almost over,
-and----"
-
-"Look, Walter," Elise interrupted. "The fog is thinner. See how red it is
-in the east. And look at that dark line, like a shadow. Can that be the
-shore?"
-
-The fog was certainly thinning. A wider stretch of water had become
-visible, and the outlines of the other ships were clearer. Though steam
-power was coming into use for river navigation on both sides of the
-Atlantic, there were no ocean-going steamships in 1821. The _Lord
-Wellington_, the _Prince of Wales_, and the _Eddystone_ were sailing
-vessels, sturdily built craft with extra heavy oak sheathing and
-iron-plated bows, suitable for cruising ice-strewn, northern waters. That
-all three had been in contact with the ice, their scraped and battered
-hulls betrayed. From each mizzen peak fluttered the British red ensign,
-and the mainmast head bore a flag with a red cross and the letters H. B.
-C., the flag of the Hudson Bay Company.
-
-The immigrants aboard the _Lord Wellington_ wasted scarcely a glance on
-the other ships. It was the land they were interested in. As the rising
-sun drank up the fog, and the shore line grew clearer, the eager faces of
-Elise and Walter sobered with disappointment. A most unattractive shore
-was revealed. It was low, swampy, sparsely clad with stunted trees, a
-desolate land without sign of human dwelling. Fort York could not be
-seen. It was fifteen or twenty miles in the interior, on the Hayes River.
-
-Unpromising as the land appeared, it was land nevertheless, and everyone
-longed to set foot upon it. To the one hundred and sixty Swiss
-immigrants, the voyage had seemed endless. On May 30 they had sailed from
-Dordrecht in Holland. Now it was the last of August. For nearly three
-months they had been on shipboard. Delayed by stormy weather and crowding
-ice, they had spent a whole month navigating Hudson Straits and Bay.
-Luckily for them they did not realize what a long and toilsome way they
-had yet to travel before they reached their destination, the Selkirk
-Colony on the Red River of the North.
-
-Though many of the new colonists looked thin, worn, and even ill from the
-hardships of the long voyage, they appeared to be neat, self-respecting
-folk, intelligent and fairly well to do. Some wore the peasant dress of
-their native cantons, but the majority were townspeople,--shopkeepers and
-skilled workmen. Mr. Perier was a chemist and apothecary.
-
-Walter Rossel had not one blood relation in the whole company, but he
-considered himself one of the Perier family. For the past two years, as
-an apprentice in Mr. Perier's shop, he had lived with them. When his
-master had decided to emigrate, he had offered to either release Walter
-from his apprenticeship or take the boy with him. Walter had decided
-quickly, and his father and stepmother had given their consent.
-
-The Periers and Walter had breakfasted, packed their personal belongings,
-and were on deck again, when a small, open sailboat came in sight from
-the direction of the shore. It headed for the _Eddystone_ and disappeared
-on the other side of that ship. Presently it reappeared, visited the
-_Prince of Wales_, and finally came on to the _Lord Wellington_.
-
-As the little boat drew close, Elise, Walter, and Max looked curiously
-down on the crew of sun-tanned, bearded men, strangely dressed in hooded
-coats of bright blue or of white blanketing, bound about the waists with
-colorful silk or woolen sashes. The man in command came aboard, climbing
-the ladder up the side. He was broad shouldered and strongly built, with
-reddish hair, bristly beard, and skin burned red-brown. With his blue
-coat and bright red sash, he wore buckskin trousers fringed at the seams,
-and the queerest footgear Walter had ever seen, slipper-like, heel-less
-shoes of soft leather embroidered in colors. They were Indian moccasins
-ornamented with dyed porcupine quills.
-
-After glancing about him and inclining his head slightly in a general
-greeting, the newcomer shook hands with the Master of the ship and with
-Captain Mai, the man in charge of the Swiss immigrants, who had hurried
-forward to greet him. He went below with them, but remained only a few
-minutes.
-
-As soon as the red-haired man was overside again, the Swiss crowded
-around their conductor to ask when they were to go ashore. Captain Mai
-pointed to the other ships. Their sails were up and they were getting
-under way.
-
-"A pilot has just gone aboard the _Eddystone_," he said. "We are to
-follow her."
-
-Even before Captain Mai had finished speaking, the _Lord Wellington_ was
-waking to activity. The anchors came up, the sails were set, and caught
-the breeze. In a few moments the immigrant vessel was following the
-supply ships towards the mouth of the Hayes River.
-
-
-
-
- II
- FORT YORK
-
-
-The first view of Fort York was as disappointing as the first glimpse of
-shore. To Elise and Walter a fort meant massive stone walls and towers,
-rising from some high and commanding position. A stretch of log fencing
-in a bog was not their idea of fortification. It had the interest of
-novelty, however, for it was very different from anything they had ever
-seen before. The logs were set upright and close together, and above this
-stockade rose the flat, leaded roofs of the buildings. Near the fort
-stood a cluster of strange dwellings, quite unlike the Eskimo summer huts
-of stones, sod, and skins, with which the Swiss had become familiar since
-reaching Arctic waters. These queer skin tents were roughly cone-shaped,
-and the ends of the framework of poles projected at the peak. They were
-Cree Indian summer lodges. Up the wide board walk from the dock to the
-fort gates, men were carrying sacks and boxes. The unloading of the
-supply ships had begun.
-
-The Perier family were among the last of the immigrants to go ashore.
-Very much like a homeless wanderer, motherless Elise Perier felt as she
-stood on the river bank beside her father, with Max clinging to her hand,
-and their scanty belongings piled around them. It was good to be on land
-again of course, but this was such a strange land. In spite of cramped
-quarters, poor food, seasickness, and the other hardships of the voyage,
-the _Lord Wellington_ seemed almost homelike compared to this wild,
-barren country. Elise tried bravely to smile at her father and Walter,
-but she felt as if she must cry instead.
-
-Captain Mai was calling them. "Go right up to the fort, Perier. I want to
-get you all together."
-
-Walter picked up as much of the luggage as he could carry. Mr. Perier was
-looking doubtfully at a heavy wooden chest, when a boyish voice at his
-shoulder said in French, "Let me help, M'sieu. If you will put that on my
-back, I will carry it for you."
-
-Walter dropped his own load, and he and Mr. Perier lifted the chest and
-placed it so it rested on the portage strap, as the young Canadian
-directed. Then the latter led the way up the walk. He was a slender,
-supple lad, not as tall as Walter, but he carried the heavy load with
-apparent ease. The Swiss boy admired the young fellow's strength as much
-as he liked his face, with its bright brown eyes and clean-cut features.
-
-The log stockade proved to be more imposing and fort-like than it had
-appeared from the river. It was about twenty feet high, with bastions at
-the corners pierced with openings for cannon. The massive entrance gates
-stood open, and in front of them was a tall flagstaff, bearing the
-Company flag with the letters H. B. C. and the curious motto, "_Pro pelle
-cutem_,"--"Skin for skin." Entering the gates and passing within the
-double row of stockades, their guide led the Perier family among
-workshops and cabins to an inner court, which was surrounded with
-substantial log structures where the officers lived and where the
-merchandise and furs were stored. In this court the Swiss were gathered.
-
-Mr. Perier tried to thank the friendly lad, but he shook his head. "It is
-nothing, nothing, M'sieu," he replied, a quick smile displaying his even,
-white teeth. "I must not linger. There is much to do." And he was off at
-a run.
-
-When all of the Swiss were assembled, one of their leaders suggested that
-it was fitting they should give thanks to God that the dangerous ocean
-voyage was over and they were safe on land once more. They stood with
-bowed heads while he led the prayer. The lump in Elise's throat
-disappeared and she felt better.
-
-In the meantime, Captain Mai had been arranging with the Chief
-Factor,--as the Hudson Bay Company officer in charge of the fort was
-called,--for quarters for the immigrants. There was not room for all in
-the buildings, so many of the men and boys would have to sleep in tents.
-A place in one of the houses was found for the Periers, but Walter was
-assigned to a tent with Mr. Scheidecker and his sons, German Swiss from
-Berne.
-
-That first night on land was a miserable one for Walter. Fort York stood
-in a veritable bog or muskeg, firm and hard enough the greater part of
-the year, when it was frozen, but wet and soft in the short summer
-season. The ground was damp of course, and Walter's one blanket did not
-keep out the chill. To make matters worse, he and his companions were
-pestered by the bloodthirsty mosquitoes that bred in inconceivable hordes
-in the swampy lowlands. But the discomfort of the night was quickly
-forgotten the next day.
-
-A busy and interesting place the Swiss boy found York Factory, as the
-Hudson Bay men called the fort. It was not a factory in our common
-meaning of the word,--not a _manufactory_,--for nothing was manufactured
-there except boats for river traffic, dog sleds, wooden kegs, and such
-articles of use and trade as an ordinary carpenter, blacksmith, or
-tinsmith could make with simple tools. _Factory_ in the fur trade meant a
-trading post in charge of an officer called a _factor_, a commercial
-agent who bought and sold.
-
-For more than a century York Factory had been the principal port of entry
-for the Hudson Bay Company. There the Company's ships from England
-brought the supplies and trade goods destined for all the widely
-separated posts in the interior. To York Factory, in bark canoes and
-wooden boats, down rivers and lakes, from all parts of the Company's
-great domain, came the bales of costly furs to be sorted and repacked and
-shipped. A considerable staff was employed at the place, a Chief Factor,
-a Chief Trader, a surgeon, several clerks and apprentice clerks, a
-steward, a shipwright, a carpenter, a mason, a cooper, a blacksmith, a
-tailor, laborers, cooks, and servants. The boatmen or _voyageurs_ who
-went to and fro into the interior were hired independently for each trip.
-
-Until he sailed for America, Walter had never even heard of the Hudson
-Bay Company or the fur trade. Everything in the fort was novel and
-interesting to him. A good-natured apprentice clerk, who spoke French
-readily, showed him the Indian store, a large room well filled with all
-sorts of goods used in the Indian trade, from bales of heavy blankets,
-blue and red woolens, calicos of every color, long-barreled trading guns,
-kegs of powder, and big iron and copper kettles, to drawers of useful
-little things, gun flints, fire steels, files, awls, needles, fish hooks,
-twine, beads of all imaginable tints, and ochre, vermilion, and other dry
-colors, used by the Indians to adorn both their handiwork and themselves.
-
-"I never saw so many different things in one shop," Walter commented.
-
-The clerk laughed. "The worst of it is that we have to keep the closest
-account of it all. We must know what is in every package sent out and
-what post it goes to. Being a fur trader isn't all adventure I can tell
-you. There is a lot of office drudgery, with all the bookkeeping,
-invoicing, and checking of lists. We can't afford to make mistakes," he
-added soberly. "The very lives of the men in some far-away post may
-depend on their getting the right supplies. Why, last year----" He broke
-off suddenly, and switched to English. "I spoke to the Chief Trader about
-your proposal. He says it can't be done. It's not the policy of the
-Company to send voyageurs out to trade, especially on such long trips."
-
-Walter had turned to see to whom the clerk was speaking. He had heard no
-footsteps, but there, close behind him, was a tall man in blue coat,
-deerskin leggings, and moccasins. In his surprise, the boy drew back a
-little and stood staring. Of all the men he had seen since coming ashore,
-this one was the strangest and most striking. He was tall, powerfully
-built, and very dark of skin, with high cheek bones and high-bridged
-nose. His long, coarse black hair, slick and shining with grease, was
-worn in what seemed to the Swiss boy a curious fashion for a man, parted
-in the middle and plaited in two braids bound with deerskin thongs and
-hanging one over each shoulder.
-
-"You not give me goods?" The man's voice was peculiarly deep, not
-unmusical but of a hard, metallic quality. His small, dark eyes looked
-straight into the clerk's large blue ones.
-
-The young man shook his head. "No, your plan is too wild, too much risk
-in it. That sort of thing is against the Company's policy."
-
-The voyageur's brown face stiffened. His hard eyes seemed to catch fire
-as they rested first on the clerk and then, for a moment, on Walter.
-Without a word he turned and with long, soft-footed stride, left the room
-as noiselessly as he had entered it.
-
-"Pleasant manners," commented the clerk. "He needn't have included you in
-his wrath."
-
-"What did he want?" asked Walter. He had understood but little of the
-brief conversation.
-
-"A lot of goods on credit. He claims to have great influence with the
-Sioux, and he wants an outfit to go and trade with them. Of course we
-can't let him have it."
-
-"You don't trust him?"
-
-"We don't know anything about him, except that he is a good voyageur.
-It's against the Company's policy to send voyageurs out to trade. And his
-scheme is a crazy one. The Sioux country is a thousand miles away. He
-said he would bring all the furs back here and take whatever commission
-we chose to give, but probably we should never hear of him or the goods
-again."
-
-"Is he an Indian?"
-
-"Half-breed I imagine. Finely built fellow, isn't he? Has the strength of
-a moose, they say. He is an expert voyageur."
-
-"I don't like him," Walter commented.
-
-"Neither do I, and I suppose he has a grudge against me now, though the
-refusal wasn't my doing of course. Well, I must stop talking and get to
-work checking this new stuff that has come in."
-
-Thus dismissed, Walter wandered out into the court, through the open
-gates and down to the shore. Everywhere was bustle and activity. There
-was much to be done, and done quickly. With the least possible delay the
-ships must be unloaded and loaded again with the furs waiting packed and
-ready for the voyage to England. The little fleet must get away promptly
-while Hudson Straits were still open. All the goods and supplies received
-had to be checked, examined, and sorted. The things to be sent to trading
-posts in the interior were repacked for transport in open boats up the
-rivers, and every package was invoiced and plainly marked. Boats must be
-made ready and equipped and provisioned, not only to carry the supplies
-and trade goods, but the one hundred and sixty new settlers as well. The
-twelve hours a day that the employees of the Company were required to
-work in summer, if necessary, were not enough. Most of the men were
-simply doing all they possibly could each day until the rush should be
-over.
-
-Down by the river Walter found the young fellow who had carried Mr.
-Perier's chest. He was putting a new seat in one of the large, heavily
-built boats ranged along the bank. Looking up from his work, he greeted
-the Swiss boy with a cheery "_Bo jou_," which the latter guessed to be
-the Canadian way of saying "_Bon jour_" or "Good day." Walter, who was
-handy with tools, offered his help.
-
-As they worked they talked. His new acquaintance's French was fluent, but
-Walter found it puzzling. To a Swiss, the Canadian dialect seemed a
-strange sort of French, differing considerably in pronunciation and in
-many of its words from his own native tongue. Yet Walter and Louis
-Brabant managed to understand each other fairly well.
-
-"I suppose this is your home, here at the fort," said Walter.
-
-"My home? _Non_, I live at the Red River."
-
-"Why, that is where we are going!"
-
-"You go to the Selkirk Colony at Fort Douglas. It is not there that I
-live, but at Pembina, farther up the river."
-
-"Is Pembina a town?"
-
-"Not what you would call a town. It is a settlement and there are trading
-posts there, a Hudson Bay post and a Northwest Company post. Now the two
-companies have united, one of the forts will be abandoned I suppose. You
-may be glad the fighting between them is over. There will be better times
-in the Selkirk Colony now. They have had a hard time and much trouble,
-those poor settlers!"
-
-"What do you mean by fighting,--and trouble?" asked the surprised Walter.
-"What is the Northwest Company? Isn't the Hudson Bay the only trading
-company? Doesn't it own all the country where the Indians and the fur
-bearing animals are?"
-
-"Oh no," returned Louis with a smile and a shake of his head. "Farther
-south there is fur country that belongs to the United States. The Hudson
-Bay Company has no power there. It is true that the Company claims all
-the northern fur country, but the Northwest Company said they had a right
-to trade and trap there too, and that was how the trouble began. Have you
-never heard of the Northwest Company, and how for years they have fought
-the Hudson Bay men for the furs, and how they drove the settlers from the
-Selkirk Colony and captured Fort Douglas and killed the Governor?"
-
-Walter shook his head in bewilderment, and Louis went on to tell, briefly
-and vividly, something of the conflict between the two great trading
-companies, and the disasters that conflict had brought upon the settlers.
-The Swiss boy listened in amazement, understanding enough of the story to
-grasp its significance.
-
-"But why didn't Captain Mai tell us all that?" he cried. "Why did he let
-us think that everything was all right?"
-
-"Perhaps he thought you would not come if you knew. But those old
-troubles are all over. Last spring the two companies became one."
-
-Louis' story troubled Walter. He retold it to Mr. Perier and Mr.
-Scheidecker, and they carried it to other leading men of the prospective
-settlers. Several of them sought out Captain Mai and demanded to know why
-they had not been informed of all those wild doings in the colony.
-Unsatisfied by their conductor's explanations, they asked for an
-interview with the Chief Factor, and put their questions to him. He
-confirmed the statement that the fur-traders' rivalry and warfare were at
-an end. About five months before the arrival of the Swiss, the two great
-trading companies had united under the Hudson Bay name. The colony on the
-Red River would now have a chance to develop in peace.
-
-In spite of this assurance, the Hudson Bay officer's replies to some of
-their queries left the Swiss in no happy mood. Mr. Perier was stunned to
-learn that they still had some seven hundred miles to travel, all the way
-through untamed wilderness. But he had no thought of turning back. He had
-signed an agreement with Captain Mai, and had paid for his family's
-passage,--a moderate sum, but he could ill afford to lose it. To pay
-their fare back again would leave him penniless. Fertile land, one
-hundred acres of prairie,--that would not have to be cleared,--had been
-promised him rent free for a year. After that he was to pay a rent of
-from twenty to fifty bushels of wheat from his crop, or he might buy the
-land outright for five hundred bushels. The offer was enticing, and he
-and Walter had made many plans for the future.
-
-
-
-
- III
- THE SELKIRK COLONY AND THE RIVAL FUR TRADERS
-
-
-What was the Selkirk Colony, and how did it happen that this party of
-Swiss had come so far to join it?
-
-When Thomas Douglas, Earl of Selkirk, one of the famous Douglas family of
-the Scottish border, planned the settlement on the Red River of the
-North, his purpose was to find homes and livelihood for the
-poverty-stricken Scotch Highlanders. Hundreds of those unfortunate people
-had been turned out of their homes through changes in the system of
-management of the great landed estates in Scotland, and there was little
-opportunity in the old country for them to make a living. Though a
-Lowlander himself, Lord Selkirk had often visited the Highland glens. He
-knew the people, and had learned their native Gaelic language. He
-sympathized with them in their misfortunes. Seeking for some way to help
-them, he realized that their only chance for prosperity and success lay
-in emigration to a country where land was cheap and plentiful. He had
-heard of the rich soil of the Red River valley, and decided that was the
-place to plant his colony.
-
-The lower Red River valley was included in the vast domain of the Hudson
-Bay Company. The charter from King Charles II of England issued in 1670
-had given to Prince Rupert and the "Company of Adventurers of England,
-trading into Hudson Bay"--"the whole trade of all those seas, streights,
-and bays, rivers, lakes, creeks, and sounds,--that lie within the
-entrance of the streights commonly called Hudson's Streights, together
-with all the lands, countries, and territories upon the coasts and
-confines of the seas, streights, bays, lakes, rivers, creeks, and sounds
-aforesaid, which are not now actually possessed by any of our subjects,
-or by the subjects of any other Christian prince or State." Not only did
-the royal charter grant the "Adventurers" the trade of that vast
-region,--which, in the widest interpretation of the terms, included a
-quarter or a third of the whole of North America,--but it conferred upon
-the Company the right to hold the land "in free and common socage" which
-means absolute proprietorship. Whether King Charles really had the right
-to give away this vast territory to anyone may be questioned, but the
-Hudson Bay Company claimed proprietorship under the charter.
-
-The Red River empties into Lake Winnipeg, and the northern end of the
-lake drains into the Nelson River which flows to Hudson Bay. Accordingly
-the valley of the Red was included in the territory claimed by the
-Company. However, before the time of this story, the purchase from France
-by the United States of a vast extent of country west of the Mississippi
-River,--the Louisiana Purchase--and the boundary treaties with the
-British government, gave the greater part of the Red River to the United
-States. Only the stretch from what is now the northern limit of Minnesota
-and North Dakota to Lake Winnipeg remained in English possession. It was
-to this lower part of the valley that Lord Selkirk wished to take his
-colonists. He knew well enough that the Hudson Bay Company would not be
-inclined to part with any of its domain for such a purpose, but he had
-set his heart upon planting his colony in that particular spot.
-
-Accordingly he laid his plans to get possession of the required land.
-Quietly, by buying shares himself and persuading his friends to buy also,
-he obtained control over a majority of the stock of the great trading
-company. Then he offered to purchase a wide strip of land on the Red and
-Assiniboine rivers. As he controlled the majority of votes in the
-Company, he got what he wanted, about one hundred and sixteen square
-miles, of which he became absolute proprietor.
-
-The first settlers he sent over were of course Scotch Highlanders, with a
-few Irish. They arrived at Fort York in the autumn of 1811, too late to
-go to the Red River that year. The next summer they reached their new
-home on the Red, and were followed within three years by other parties,
-numbering in all a little more than two hundred, most of them Scotch.
-
-The troubles of the settlers were many and discouraging. Had the Earl of
-Selkirk been a more practical man he would scarcely have undertaken to
-plant a farming colony in the midst of a wilderness, hundreds of miles
-from any other settlement, and without communication with the civilized
-world except by canoe and rowboat over long and difficult river trails.
-Not all of the colonists' troubles were due to natural conditions
-however.
-
-The Hudson Bay Company had a strong trading rival in the Northwest Fur
-Company. The latter was a Canadian organization with headquarters at
-Montreal, while the Hudson Bay Company was strictly English, its chief
-offices in London. The Northwest men had established trading posts along
-the Great Lakes and far to the west and north beyond Lake Superior. They
-had penetrated farther and farther into the country claimed by the Hudson
-Bay Company. The Hudson Bay men themselves had done almost nothing to
-develop trade in the interior, until the Canadian traders began to go
-among the Indians and secure furs that might otherwise have been brought
-to the posts on the Bay. Awakening to the realization that the Northwest
-Company was actually taking away the trade, the Hudson Bay men also
-sought the interior. In this way began a race and a fight for the furs
-that grew hotter and fiercer with each year. Everywhere on the principal
-lakes and streams of the west and northwest, rival posts were
-established, sometimes within a few hundred rods of each other.
-
-The rivalry between the fur traders was approaching its height when Lord
-Selkirk founded his colony. From the first, the Northwest Company opposed
-the scheme. The fur trader never likes to see the country from which the
-pelts come opened up to settlement. He knows that as the land is settled
-the wild animals disappear. Moreover Lord Selkirk was now the controlling
-power in the Hudson Bay Company, and the Northwesters suspected him of
-some deep laid plan to interfere with and ruin their trade. Several years
-before, they had established a post called Fort Gibraltar at the junction
-of the Red and the Assiniboine, and their route to the rich fur districts
-of the west lay up the latter river. They believed that the settlement
-was merely a scheme to cut off their trade. So they looked with
-unfriendly eyes upon the colony, and even persuaded a considerable number
-of the colonists to leave and settle on lands farther east in Canada.
-Most of the Northwest traders were of Scotch blood, many of them of
-Highland descent, and doubtless they honestly thought that their
-countrymen would find better homes elsewhere. The chance that the Red
-River settlement would ever succeed seemed, to practical-minded men, very
-slender indeed.
-
-The ill feeling between the two great trading companies and between the
-Northwest Company and the Selkirk settlement grew stronger and bitterer
-as time went on. Mistakes and high handed acts on both sides, in a land
-where there was no law, led at last to open conflict. In 1815 the
-colonists were driven from their homes and obliged to flee to the shelter
-of a Hudson Bay post at the northern end of Lake Winnipeg. The Hudson Bay
-men made reprisals by capturing the Northwesters' posts and interrupting
-their trade. The settlers were rallied and taken back to their homes,
-only to face a worse disaster the next year. An open fight between the
-men of Governor Semple of the colony and a party of half-breeds in the
-employ of the Northwest Company resulted in the killing of the Governor
-and his twenty followers, and the capture of their stronghold, Fort
-Douglas.
-
-Lord Selkirk was in America at the time seeking from the Canadian
-government some means of protection for his colonists. Failing to get
-satisfaction from a government whose sympathies were with the Northwest
-rather than with the Hudson Bay company, he had hired, to guard his
-colony, one hundred men from two regiments of mercenary soldiers that had
-been disbanded after the War of 1812. While he was traversing Lake
-Superior on his way west with these men, he met canoes bringing word of
-the disastrous fight of Seven Oaks, the death of Governor Semple, and the
-capture of Fort Douglas. Skirting the shores of the lake, Lord Selkirk
-went to Fort William, the headquarters of the Northwest Company on
-Thunder Bay. There he demanded the release of the prisoners who had been
-brought from the Red River. The controversy that followed finally led to
-his taking possession of the fort. The fact that he had been appointed a
-magistrate for the Indian country and sought the arrest of the
-Northwesters who had taken part in or instigated the troubles at Fort
-Douglas, gave his action some color of legal right. From Fort William he
-went on to his disordered and devastated colony, and gathered together
-all the settlers who were willing to remain.
-
-In spite of all the settlement had been through, Lord Selkirk had no
-intention of giving up his plans. So many of the colonists had been
-driven or enticed away and would not return, that he sought to find
-others to take their places. It was then that he hit upon the idea of
-bringing over the steady, hard-working Swiss, who would, he believed,
-make the very best of settlers.
-
-Captain Mai or May,--the English spelling of his name,--a Swiss who had
-served as a mercenary soldier in the British army, and other agents were
-sent to Switzerland to secure settlers. Throughout the cantons of
-Neuchatel, Vaud, Geneva, and Berne, they traveled, explaining the
-advantages of emigration to the Red River country. The pamphlets they
-distributed, printed in French and German, gave a highly colored and
-alluring description of that country with its many miles of fertile soil
-to be had for the asking. Like all emigration agents, Captain Mai and his
-assistants told all the good things about both country and colony and
-left out the bad. About the civil war between the fur companies and the
-troubles it had led to, they said nothing.
-
-Early in May 1821, about one hundred and sixty emigrants were gathered
-together at a small village on the Rhine near Basel. In great barges they
-were taken down the Rhine, a delightful trip on that famous river with
-its beautiful and striking scenery, to Dordrecht in Holland. There they
-embarked on the _Lord Wellington_ for the trip to Hudson Bay. The voyage
-took far longer than they had realized it would take, the food provided
-was inferior to what they were used to, the drinking water became bad,
-and storms and ice caused delay. At Hudson Straits the _Lord Wellington_
-overtook the two Hudson Bay Company supply ships, and the three were held
-for three weeks in the ice with which the Straits were filled. The heavy
-swell coming in from the open ocean and rushing between the icebergs,
-caused rapid tides and currents in which sailing ships were almost
-helpless. Luckily the _Lord Wellington_ escaped serious injury, but one
-of the supply ships was nearly wrecked and badly damaged by collision
-with a berg. Not far away were two other vessels also caught in the ice,
-the _Fury_ and the _Hecla_ carrying Captain Parry and his Arctic
-exploring expedition. The _Hecla_ had one of her anchors broken and
-several hawsers carried away.
-
-The Swiss emigrants were a hopeful, cheerful folk. They had been together
-so long they had become like a large family party, and they made the best
-of their hardships. When it was safe to do so, the young and active
-climbed down from the ship to the solid ice field, ran races, and even
-held a dance on a particularly smooth stretch. At last the ships
-succeeded in entering the bay. Skirting the barren shores, the three
-vessels destined for the Hudson Bay post reached anchorage off York
-Factory in safety.
-
-
-
-
- IV
- THE START FROM FORT YORK
-
-
-Finding transport for so large a party of settlers taxed the resources of
-the Hudson Bay Company. Several new boats had to be built, and every one
-of the immigrants who could handle wood-working tools was called upon to
-help.
-
-The boats were to be despatched in two divisions or brigades. Walter had
-taken for granted that he would travel with the Periers, but he found
-himself assigned to the first division, the Periers to the second. He
-asked to be transferred to their boat, but Captain Mai declared the
-change could not be made. Only young people were to go in the first
-brigade which was expected to make the best possible speed. Walter was
-young and strong and without family. The boy protested that he was one of
-the Perier family, he had come with them, and was to live with them in
-the settlement, but his protest was of no avail. Elise and Max were as
-much distressed as he was at the arrangement, and he had to comfort them
-with the assurance that they would all be together soon at the Red River.
-
-It was well after noon on the day appointed for departure, when the start
-was made. The boat carrying the guide, who was really the commanding
-officer of the brigade, was propelled by oars out into the stream, and
-the square sail raised. With shouts, cheers, and farewells, the long,
-open craft, well laden with settlers, supplies, and goods, was away up
-the river.
-
-When Walter took his place he was pleased to find himself in the same
-boat with Louis Brabant. In spite of his disappointment at not traveling
-with the Periers, the Swiss boy was in high spirits to be away at last,
-headed for the wonderful Red River country where his fortune, he felt
-sure, awaited him. He waved his hat and shouted himself hoarse in
-farewells to those on shore.
-
-It was a picturesque crowd massed on the dock and fringing the river
-bank. Mingled with the Swiss were brown-skinned, long-haired post
-employees and voyageurs with bright colored sashes, beaded garters tied
-below the knees of their deerskin or homespun trousers, caps of fur or
-cloth, or gaudy handkerchiefs bound about their heads. A little to one
-side stood a group of Indians from the wigwams, in buckskin, bright
-calicos, blankets, feathers, and beadwork. One old Cree was proudly clad
-in a discarded army coat of scarlet with gold lace and a tall black hat
-adorned with feathers. The dress of the Swiss, though in general more
-sober, was brightened by the gay colors of shawls, aprons, and kerchiefs,
-of short jackets or long-tailed coats with metal buttons, and of
-home-knit stockings. As various as the costumes were the shouts and
-farewells and words of advice exchanged between boats and shore in a
-babel of tongues, English, Scots English, Swiss French, Canadian French,
-German, Gaelic, and Cree.
-
-The sail was raised and caught the breeze. Sitting at his ease, Walter
-turned his attention to what lay ahead. The surrounding country was not
-very pleasing in appearance. Scantily wooded with a scrub of willow,
-poplar, tamarack, and swamp spruce, it was low and flat, especially on
-the west, where the York Factory stood between the Hayes and the Nelson
-rivers. The Nelson, Louis said, was the larger stream, but the Hayes was
-supposed to afford a better route into the interior. Certainly the latter
-river was not attractive, with its raw, ragged looking, clay banks,
-embedded with stones, its muddy islands, and frequent bars and shallows
-that interfered with navigation.
-
-The immigrants were not suffered to sit in idleness all that afternoon.
-There were two or more experienced rivermen in each boat, but the new
-colonists were required to help. When the wind went down before sunset,
-Walter expected to be called upon to wield an oar. But the current of the
-Hayes was too strong and rapid to be stemmed with oars. The boat was
-brought close to the bank, and the sail lowered. Standing in the stern,
-the steersman surveyed his crew. Walter, in the other end of the boat,
-had not noticed the steersman before. Now, he recognized the tall man
-with the braided hair, who had come up behind him so noiselessly in the
-Indian trading room at the fort.
-
-In his deep, metallic voice the steersman began to speak, pointing first
-at one man, then at another. When his bright, hard little eyes alighted
-on Walter, and his long, brown forefinger pointed him out, the boy was
-moved by the same strong, instinctive dislike, almost akin to fear, he
-had felt when he first looked into the half-breed's face. The fellow's
-French was so strange that Walter could not grasp the meaning. With a
-questioning glance, he turned to Louis Brabant.
-
-"You are to go ashore," Louis explained. "Murray has chosen you in his
-crew. The tracking begins now."
-
-Walter had no idea what tracking might be, but he rose to obey. With
-several others, including Louis, he jumped from the boat to the muddy bit
-of beach. The steersman handed each a leather strap, and Louis showed
-Walter how to attach his to the tow-line and pass the strap over his
-"inshore" shoulder. Like horses on a tow-path, the men were to haul the
-boat, with the rest of the party in it, up stream.
-
-The steep, clay banks were slippery from recent rains. Fallen trees, that
-had been undermined and had slid part way down the incline, projected at
-all angles. The willing, but inexperienced tracking crew slipped,
-stumbled, scrambled, and struggled along, tugging at the tow-line. With
-maddening ease the tall steersman, in the lead, strode through and over
-the obstacles, turning his head every minute or two to shout back orders
-and abuse. He seemed to have the utmost contempt for his greenhorn crew,
-but he tried to urge and threaten them to a pace of which they were quite
-incapable. Every time a man slipped or stumbled, jerking the tow-line,
-Murray poured out a torrent of violent and profane abuse, in such bad
-French and English, so intermixed with Gaelic and Indian words, that,
-luckily, the Swiss could not understand a quarter of it.
-
-Walter understood the tone, if not the words. He grew angrier and
-angrier, as he strained and tugged at the rope and struggled to keep his
-footing on the slippery bank. But he had the sense to realize that he
-must not start a mutiny on the first day of the journey. He held his
-tongue and labored on. The boy was thin, not having filled out to his
-height, but he was strong. He was mountain bred, with muscular legs, good
-heart and lungs. Nevertheless when at last Murray gave the order to halt,
-only pride kept Walter from dropping to the ground to rest.
-
-The second shift was led by a fair-haired, blue-eyed man from the Orkney
-Islands, off the coast of Scotland, where the Hudson Bay Company
-recruited many of its employees. Before his crew were through with their
-turn at the tow-line, they came in sight, on rounding a bend, of the
-first two boats with bows drawn up on a stretch of muddy beach. Farther
-back on higher ground tents were going up and fires being kindled. Murray
-ordered out the oars, and boat number three was run in beside the others.
-
-After the tent, bedding, and provisions for the night were unloaded, the
-tall steersman, without troubling to help with the camp making, took
-himself off. It was young Louis Brabant who took charge. He selected the
-spot for the one tent and helped to pitch it. Then he sent a man and a
-boy to collect fuel, and Walter and another into the woods to strip
-balsam fir branches for beds. Louis himself started the cooking fire,
-between two green logs spaced so that the big iron kettle rested upon
-them. From a chunk of dried caribou meat,--so hard and dry it looked a
-good deal like sole leather,--he shaved off some shreds. After he had
-ground the bits of meat between two stones, he put the partly pulverized
-stuff to boil in a kettle of water. This soup, thickened with flour, was
-the principal dish of the meal. Several handfuls of dark blue saskatoon
-or service berries, gathered near by, served as dessert. By the time
-supper was ready, the young Canadian's swift, deft way of working, his
-skill and certainty, his good nature and helpfulness, had won the good
-will of everyone.
-
-Walter asked Louis how long it would be before the second brigade left
-Fort York.
-
-"That I cannot tell. As soon as all is ready. You regret to be separated
-from your family?"
-
-"They aren't really my family. I am apprenticed to Monsieur Perier."
-
-"The young Englishmen who come over to be clerks for the Company," Louis
-remarked, "sign a paper to serve for five years. Is it so with you?"
-
-"Something like that, and in return Monsieur Perier agrees to give me a
-home and teach me the business. When he decided to come to America, he
-really released me from the agreement though. He offered to treat me like
-his own son if I came with him."
-
-"If you are twenty-one you can get land of your own in the Colony."
-
-"I'm not sixteen yet."
-
-"Is it so?" cried Louis. "Then we are the same age, you and me. Fifteen
-years last Christmas day I was born. So my mother told Pre Provencher
-when I was baptized."
-
-"My birthday is in February," Walter replied. "I thought you must be
-older than that. How long have you been a voyageur for the Company?"
-
-"For the Hudson Bay Company only this summer. This is the first time I
-have come to Fort York. Last year, after my father died, I went to the
-Kaministikwia with the Northwest men. But always since I was big enough I
-have known how to carry a pack and paddle a canoe. The birch canoe,--ah,
-that is the right kind of boat! These heavy affairs of wood," Louis
-shrugged contemptuously. "They are so slow, so heavy to track and to
-portage. You have the birch canoe in your country? No? Then you cannot
-understand. When you have voyaged in a birch canoe, you will want no more
-of these heavy things."
-
-"Why does the Company use them?"
-
-Louis shrugged again as if the ways of the Hudson Bay Company were past
-understanding. "The wooden boats will carry greater loads," he admitted,
-"and they are stronger, yes. Sometimes you get a hole in a canoe and you
-must stop to mend it. Yet I think you do not lose so much time that way
-as in dragging these heavy boats over portages."
-
-The wavering white bands of the aurora borealis were mounting the
-northern sky before the camp was ready for the night. The one tent
-carried by boat number three was given up to the women and children.
-Walter rolled himself in a blanket and lay down with the other men on a
-bed of fir branches close to the fire. The air was sharp and cold, and he
-would have been glad of another blanket. But he had been well used to
-cold weather in his native country, and had become still more hardened to
-it during the long voyage in northern waters.
-
-
-
-
- V
- THE BLACK MURRAY
-
-
-Louis' voice, almost in Walter's ear, was crying, "_Leve, leve_,--rise,
-rise!"
-
-Surely the night could not be over yet. Walter threw off his blanket,
-scrambled up, shook himself, and pulled out his cherished silver watch.
-It was ten minutes to five.
-
-In a few moments the whole camp was stirring. Following the usual
-voyageur custom, the boats got off at once, without delaying for
-breakfast. After a spell of tracking, the Swiss boy was more than ready
-for the pemmican and tea taken on a small island almost in midstream. The
-Swiss lad had never tasted tea until he sailed on an English ship, but
-after the drinking water had turned bad, he had been driven to try the
-strange beverage and had grown accustomed to it. Tea was the universal
-drink of the northern fur country, where coffee was practically unknown.
-He was amazed at the quantity of scalding hot, black stuff the voyageurs
-could drink.
-
-Pemmican, the chief article of food used in the wilderness, he had eaten
-for the first time at Fort York. The mixture of shredded dried meat and
-grease did not look very inviting, but its odor, when heated, was not
-unappetizing. He tasted his portion gingerly, and decided it was not bad.
-The little dark specks of which he had been suspicious proved to be dried
-berries of some kind. Walter had a healthy appetite, and the portion
-served him looked small. He was surprised to find, before he had eaten
-all of it, that he had had enough. Pemmican was very hearty food indeed.
-
-That was a day of back-breaking, heart-breaking labor towing the heavy
-boats up the Hayes. The clay banks grew steeper and steeper. Sometimes
-there was a muddy beach at the base wide enough for the trackers to walk
-on. Often there was no beach whatever, and they were forced to scramble
-along slippery slopes, through and over landslips, fallen trees,
-driftwood, and brush. Where tiny streams trickled down to join the river,
-the ground was soft, miry, almost impassable. The forest crowning the
-bank had become thicker, the trees larger and more flourishing. Poplars
-and willows everywhere were flecked with autumn yellow. The tamarack
-needles,--which fall in the autumn like the foliage of broad leaved
-trees,--were turning bronze, and contrasted with the dark green of the
-spruce. There was more variety and beauty in the surroundings than on the
-preceding day, but Walter, stumbling along the difficult shore and
-tugging at the tow-line, paid little attention to the scenery. With
-aching back and shoulders and straining heart and lungs, he labored on.
-Each time his shift was over and he was allowed to sit in the boat while
-others did the tracking, he was too weary to care for anything but rest.
-
-The boats were strung out a long way, some crews making better speed than
-others. Some of the leaders were more considerate of their inexperienced
-followers, though most of the voyageurs could scarcely understand why the
-Swiss could not trot with the tow-line and keep up the pace all day, as
-the Canadians and half-breeds were accustomed to. The steersman of boat
-number three drove his men mercilessly. When at the tow-rope himself, he
-kept up a steady flow of profane abuse in his bad French, almost equally
-bad English, occasional Indian and Gaelic. Even when seated in the boat,
-he grumbled at the slowness and lack of skill of those on shore, and
-shouted orders and oaths at them.
-
-At noon, when a short stop was made for a meal of cold pemmican and hot
-tea, Walter said to Louis, "If our steersman doesn't take care he will
-have a mutiny on his hands. You had better tell him so. We have kept our
-tempers so far, but we can't stand his abuse forever."
-
-Louis shrugged. "I tell him? No, no. I tell _le Murrai Noir_ nothing,
-_moi_. It would but make more trouble. With a crew of voyageurs he would
-not dare act so. They will endure much, but not everything. Someone would
-kill him. As a voyageur the Black Murray is good. He is strong, he is
-swift, he knows how to shoot a rapid, he is a fine steersman. But as a
-man--bah! Being in charge of a boat has turned his head."
-
-"He may get his head cracked if he does not change his manners."
-
-"We would not grieve, you and me, eh, my friend? But this is certain,"
-the Canadian boy added seriously. "_Le Murrai Noir_ can hurt no one with
-his tongue. Heed him not, though he bawl his voice away. It is so that I
-do."
-
-Of all the men in the boat, the one who found the tracking hardest was a
-young weaver named Matthieu. He was a lank, high-shouldered fellow, who
-looked strong, but had been weakened by seasickness on the way over, and
-had not regained his strength. Matthieu did his best, he made no
-complaint, but he was utterly exhausted at the end of his shift each
-time. The weaver was next to Murray in line, and much of the steersman's
-ill temper was vented on the poor fellow.
-
-Late in the afternoon, Murray's crew were tracking on a wet clay slope
-heavily wooded along the rim and without beach at the base. In an
-especially steep place Matthieu slipped. His feet went from under him.
-The tow-rope jerked, and Walter barely saved himself from going down too.
-Murray, his moccasins holding firm on the slippery clay, seized the rope
-with both hands and roared abuse at the weaver. Exhausted and panting,
-the poor fellow tried to regain his footing. Walter dug his heels into
-the bank, and leaned down to reach Matthieu a hand, just as the enraged
-steersman gave the fallen man a vicious and savage kick.
-
-The boy's anger flamed beyond control. He forgot that he was attached by
-the left shoulder to the towline. Fists doubled, he started for Murray.
-The rope pulled him up short. As he struggled to free himself and reach
-the steersman, one of his companions intervened. He was a big, strong,
-intelligent Swiss, a tanner by trade, who had assumed the leadership of
-the immigrants in boat number three. His size, his authoritative manner,
-his firm voice, had their effect on Murray. The half-breed paused, his
-foot raised for another kick.
-
-"There must be no fighting here," said the tanner, "and no brutality.
-Rossel, help Matthieu up. He must go back to the boat."
-
-Murray began to protest that he would allow no man to interfere with his
-orders. The Swiss was quiet, but determined. The steersman had no right
-to work a man to death, or to strike with hand or foot any member of the
-party. The settlers were not his slaves.
-
-Murray growled and muttered. His hard little eyes glowed angrily. When
-Louis shouted to the Orkneyman to bring the boat to shore to receive the
-worn-out Matthieu, the steersman opened his mouth to countermand the
-order, but thought better of it and merely uttered an oath instead. He
-could recognize the voice of authority,--when numbers were against him.
-
-After Matthieu had been put aboard, the work was resumed. Murray, very
-ugly, plodded sullenly ahead. He seized every opportunity to abuse
-Walter, but the boy, now that one victory had been scored over the Black
-Murray, did not heed his words.
-
-The sky had clouded over, and rain began to fall, a chilly, sullen
-drizzle. Yet the trackers toiled on. The oars were used only when
-crossing from one side of the river to the other to find a possible
-tow-path.
-
-As darkness gathered, camp was made in the rain. The pemmican ration was
-eaten cold, but by using under layers of birch bark shredded very fine,
-and chopping into the dry heart of the stub of a lightning-killed tree,
-Louis succeeded in starting a small blaze and keeping it going long
-enough to boil water for tea.
-
-After supper the tanner asked Walter to go with him to talk to the
-voyageur in charge of the entire brigade. Laroque, the guide, a
-middle-aged, steady-eyed French Canadian, listened to the complaint in
-silence, then shook his head gravely.
-
-"_Le Murrai Noir_ is not the best of men to be in control of a
-boat,--that I know," he admitted, "but it was hard to find men enough. He
-can do the work, and do it well,--and there is this to say for him. You
-settlers know nothing of voyaging. You are so slow and clumsy it is
-trying to the patience. I find it so myself. _Le Murrai Noir_ has little
-patience. It is you who must be patient with him."
-
-"But he has no right to strike and abuse men who are doing their best,
-men who are not even employees of the Company," protested the tanner.
-
-Laroque nodded in agreement. "That is true."
-
-"Can't you put someone else in as steersman of our boat?"
-
-"No, there is no man of experience to be spared. Let the young man who is
-sick remain in the boat with the women and children, until he is strong
-again. I will speak to _le Murrai_ in the morning, and I think things
-will go better. These first few days, they are the hardest for all."
-
-Wet, chilled, aching with weariness, and a bit discouraged, Walter
-trudged back to his own camping place. Louis and the Orkneyman had laid
-the mast and oars across the boat and had covered them with the sail and
-a tarpaulin. Under this shelter the men spent the night, packed in so
-closely there was scarcely room to turn over.
-
-
-
-
- VI
- TOILING UP STREAM
-
-
-Things did go better next day, as the guide had foretold. What he had
-said to Murray in that early morning talk, no one learned, but the
-steersman attempted no more kicks and blows. He took his revenge upon
-those who had complained of him by riding in the boat all day, devoting
-his whole time and attention to steering. Not once did he touch the
-tow-line, Louis taking his place. All the men, except the two voyageurs,
-were lame and muscle sore from the unaccustomed work, but they were
-gradually learning the trick of it. In comparison with trained rivermen,
-they made slow time, but they got along better than on the day before. To
-Walter it was a great relief to be freed from Murray's brutality. He was
-on his mettle to show the steersman that just as good progress could be
-made without him.
-
-On the fourth day of the journey a fork in the stream was reached, where
-the Shamattawa and the Steel rivers came together to form the Hayes.
-There Murray and Louis took down the mast and threw it overboard. There
-would be no more sailing for a long way, Louis explained.
-
-Up the winding course of the Steel the boats were hauled laboriously. The
-banks were higher than those of the Hayes, but less steep, affording a
-better tow-path. In appearance the country was far more attractive than
-the low, flat desolation around Fort York, and the woods were at their
-best in full autumn color. Utterly wild and lonely was this savage land,
-but by no means devoid of beauty. It seemed to the Swiss immigrants,
-however, that they were but going farther and farther from all
-civilization. Towns and farms, the homelike dwellings of men, seemed
-almost as remote as though on some other planet.
-
-Walter was surprised to see so little game in the wilderness, until he
-realized that the constant talking, laughing, and shouting back and forth
-must frighten every bird and beast. Wild creatures could not be expected
-to show themselves to such noisy travelers. Only the "whiskey-johneesh,"
-as Louis called the bold and thievish Canada jays, dared to cry out at
-the passing boats and come about the camps to watch for scraps.
-
-Just as the Swiss were growing used to the labor of the tow-rope, they
-were given a new task, portaging. Below the first really bad rapid, the
-boat was beached, everyone was ordered ashore, and the cargo unloaded.
-The traders' custom was to put all goods and supplies in packages of from
-ninety to one hundred pounds' weight. One such package was considered a
-light load. An experienced voyageur usually carried two. That the new
-settlers might help with the work, part of the food, clothing, and other
-things had, for this trip, been made into lighter parcels.
-
-The Orkneyman was the first to receive a load. He adjusted his portage
-strap, the broad band across his forehead, the ends passing back over his
-shoulders to support his pack. Picking up a hundred pound sack of
-pemmican, Murray put it in position on the small of the Orkneyman's back,
-then placed another bulky package on top of the sack. The load extended
-along the man's spine to the crown of his head, and weighed nearly two
-hundred pounds, but the Orkneyman, his body bent forward, trotted away
-with it. It was the steersman's work to place the packages, and the ease
-with which Murray had swung the hundred pound sack into position revealed
-one reason why he had been chosen.
-
-Walter's pack of forty or fifty pounds did not seem heavy. He felt
-confident that he could carry it easily enough, and imitated the
-Orkneyman by starting off at a trot. The portage trail was an unusually
-good one, neither very rough nor very steep, yet the boy soon found that
-he could not keep up the pace. He slowed down to a walk. His burden grew
-heavier. The muscles of his neck began to ache. He tried to ease them a
-little, and his pack twisted, pulling his head back with a wrench. He
-stumbled, went down, strove to straighten his load and get up again. One
-of his companions, plodding along, overtook him, stopped to laugh, tried
-to help him, and succeeded only in dislocating his own pack. Louis had to
-come to the rescue of both. Walter's confidence in his own strength had
-diminished, and he had discovered several new muscles in his back and
-neck. Moreover he had learned that balancing a pack is an art not to be
-acquired in a moment.
-
-Another forking of the streams had been reached, where the Fox and the
-Hill rivers joined to form the Steel. The Hill River proved shallower and
-more rapid than the Steel. Ledges, rocks, and boulders obstructed the
-current, and portages became so frequent that Walter got plenty of
-practice in carrying a pack. Sometimes the empty boats could be poled or
-tracked through the rapids or warped up the channel by throwing the line
-around a tree and pulling. In other places the men, standing in the
-water, lifted the heavy craft over the stones. Around the worst stretches
-they dragged it over the portage trails.
-
-At Rock Portage, where a ridge extends across the river and the water
-rushes down in rapids and cascades between small islands, each boat and
-its cargo had to be carried clear over one of the islands. Then, to the
-great relief of the crews, they were able to row a short distance to Rock
-House, a storehouse for goods and supplies for the Selkirk Colony. There
-more pemmican, dried meat, flour, tea, and a little sugar were taken
-aboard. To make room for the provisions, some of the personal belongings
-of the settlers had to be unloaded, but the man in charge of Rock House
-promised to send the things to Fort Douglas at the first opportunity.
-
-Traveling up stream had now become an almost continual fight with rapid
-waters through rough and rocky country. Walter's muscles were hardening
-and he was learning how to use his strength to the best advantage, but
-each night when camp was made, he was ready to roll in his blanket and
-sleep anywhere, on evergreen branches, on the hard planks of the boat, or
-on the bare ground.
-
-How was Mr. Perier standing the tow-path and the portage, the boy
-wondered. The apothecary was far from robust. He had been so hopeful,
-too, looking forward so eagerly to the rich land of the Red River. He
-seemed to think of that land in the Bible terms, as "flowing with milk
-and honey." They would be too late to do any real farming this year, he
-had said, but they could plow their land and have it ready for seeding in
-the spring. Of course they would be provided with a house, fuel, and food
-for the winter. The contract he and Captain Mai,--in Lord Selkirk's
-name,--had signed, promised him such things on credit. He had brought
-with him some chemist's supplies; dried and powdered roots and other
-ingredients used in medicines. He and Walter would set up a shop and earn
-enough to buy whatever they needed during the cold weather. Walter had
-shared his master's hopefulness, but now, after questioning Louis about
-affairs in the Colony, he was beginning to doubt whether it would be so
-easy to make a fortune there as Mr. Perier believed.
-
-September was advancing. Most of the time the weather held good, but the
-nights were chilly and the mornings raw, often with fog on the river. One
-night, after the boat had been dragged through several short rapids, or
-"spouts," and carried over two portages,--the whole day's progress less
-than two miles,--snow fell heavily. When Walter, stiff with cold, crawled
-out from under the tarpaulin in the morning, the ground was white.
-
-"This looks more like Christmas than September," he grumbled between
-chattering teeth. "I'm glad of one thing, Louis, we're headed south, not
-north."
-
-"Oh, the winter is not quite so long at the Red River as in this
-country," Louis returned with a cheerful grin, "but it is long
-enough,--yes, quite long enough,--and cold enough too, on the prairie."
-
-So the journey went slowly on, rowing, poling, tracking, warping, and
-carrying the heavy boats up stream, and there was little enough rowing
-compared with the poling and portaging.
-
-Five or six miles had become a fair day's progress. In the worst
-stretches only a mile or two could be made by working from dawn to dark.
-The Swiss would have been glad to rest on Sundays, and had expected to
-observe the day as they were accustomed to, but the guide and the
-voyageurs would not consent. It was too late in the season, the journey
-was too long, the food supply too scanty, to permit the losing of one
-whole day each week. The immigrants had to be content with a brief prayer
-service morning and evening. The Swiss were Protestants, while all of the
-voyageurs, except two or three Orkneymen, belonged to the Roman Catholic
-church, so they worshiped separately. It surprised Walter at first to see
-the wild-looking rivermen kneeling with bowed heads repeating their
-"Aves" before lying down to rest. He never saw _le Murrai Noir_ in that
-posture, however. He wondered if the steersman was a heathen.
-
-There were accidents in the brigade now and then. Once when the
-Orkneyman's shift were tracking, the rope broke and boat number three
-began to swing broadside to the current. At Murray's fierce yell of
-command, the men in the boat jumped into the water nearly to their waists
-and held it headed straight, while Louis, keeping his footing with
-difficulty in the swift current, carried the remains of the line to
-shore.
-
-The next day the boat ahead met with misfortune, while it was being poled
-through rapids. To avoid a great rock, the bowman turned too far out into
-the strong current. The rushing water swung the clumsy craft about and
-bore it down the rapids. It struck full on its side on a rock that rose
-well out of water, and was held there by the strength of the current.
-There were but two men in the boat, and it was separated from shore by a
-channel of rushing white water. The crew of number three turned their own
-craft in to shore, and ran to help. Walter, carrying the tow-line,
-reached the spot first and attempted to throw the rope to the imperiled
-boat. The end fell short. Then Louis tried his hand, but succeeded no
-better. He was preparing for another attempt, when the line was snatched
-from his hands, and Murray sent the coiled end hurtling out across the
-water and into the boat.
-
-Growling and cursing, the half-breed took control of the rescue. Under
-his leadership, the men on shore succeeded in pulling the boat away from
-the rock, and warping it, half full of water, up the rapids. Walter's
-fondness for the Black Murray had certainly not increased as the days
-went by, but he had to admit that the brutal steersman knew how to act in
-an emergency.
-
-The toilsome ascent of Hill River was over at last when camp was made
-late one afternoon on an island which Louis called Sail Island. The
-reason for the name became apparent when Murray, after carefully
-examining the trees, selected a straight, sound spruce and ordered Louis
-and the Orkneyman to cut it down. The spruce was to be trimmed for a
-mast. If a mast was needed, thought Walter, the worst of the journey must
-be over. The night was cold and snow threatened, but there was plenty of
-fuel, and the camp on Sail Island was a cheerful one.
-
-
-
-
- VII
- NORWAY HOUSE
-
-
-The first thing Walter did when he woke the next morning was to notice
-the direction of the wind. Though light it was favorable. That made a day
-of easy, restful sailing. The weary men sat and lay about in as lazy
-positions as the well-filled boat would permit, while the women busied
-themselves with knitting and mending. The journey was a hard one on
-clothes, even of the stoutest materials, but by mending and darning
-whenever they had a chance, and by washing soiled things out at night and
-hanging them around the fire to dry, the Swiss managed to keep themselves
-fairly neat and clean. They had not been in the wilds long enough to grow
-careless.
-
-The following day's journey commenced with a portage. The brigade was
-going up the Jack River, which was short but full of rapids. All the
-rivers in this country were made up of rapids, it seemed to Walter. Then
-came another period of ease on Knee Lake, so called from an angle like a
-bent knee. About twenty miles were made that day, one of the best of the
-trip.
-
-The hard work was not over by any means. On Trout River were some of the
-worst portages of all. A waterfall, plunging down fifteen or sixteen
-feet, obstructed the passage. The boats were unloaded and dragged and
-carried up a rugged trail, to be launched again over steep rocks.
-
-On Holey Lake,--named from a deep spot believed by the Indians to be
-bottomless,--was Oxford House, a Hudson Bay Company post. The boats made
-a short stop there, then went on to pitch camp on one of the islands. The
-waters abounded in fish. With trolling lines Walter and his companions
-caught lake trout enough for both supper and breakfast. The fish, broiled
-over the coals, were a luxury after days of pemmican and hard dried meat.
-
-A narrow river, more portages, a little pond, a deep stream flowing
-through flat, marshy land, followed Holey Lake. In strong contrast was
-the passage called Hell Gates, a narrow cut with sheer cliffs so close on
-either hand that there was not always room to use the oars.
-
-A whole day was spent in passing the White Falls, where everything had to
-be carried a long mile. Three of the crews made the crossing at the same
-time, crowding each other on the portage. The Swiss caught the voyageurs'
-spirit of good-natured rivalry and entered heartily into the contest to
-see which crew would get boat and cargo over in the shortest time. With a
-ninety pound sack of pemmican, Walter trotted over the slippery trail and
-won a grin from Louis.
-
-"You will make a good voyageur when you have gone two or three voyages,"
-said the young Canadian.
-
-By the time Walter had helped to drag the heavy boat across three rock
-ridges, which caused three separate waterfalls, he felt that one voyage
-would be quite enough. Yet he was not too tired to dance a jig when he
-learned that his boat had won.
-
-Small lakes, connected by narrow, grassy streams, gave relief from
-portaging, tracking, and poling. Muskrat houses, conical heaps of mud and
-dbris, rose above the grass in the swamps, and ducks flew up as the
-boats approached. The sight of those ducks made Walter's mouth water. His
-regular portion of pemmican or dried meat left him hungry enough to eat
-at least twice as much. He had not had a really satisfying meal since
-leaving Holey Lake. Yet he could do a harder day's work and be far less
-tired than at the beginning of the trip. His muscles had hardened, and he
-carried not one pound of extra weight. During the cold nights he would
-have been glad of a layer of fat to keep him warm.
-
-The boat was sailing along a sluggish, marshy stream, when Louis, who was
-in the bow picking the channel, raised a shout. "The Painted Stone," he
-cried, pointing ahead.
-
-"I don't see any stone, painted or not," Walter returned, gazing in the
-same direction.
-
-Louis laughed. "There used to be such a stone,--so they say. The Indians
-worshiped it."
-
-"But why make such a fuss about a stone that isn't there?"
-
-Again Louis laughed. "Do you see that flat rock? Perhaps it was painted
-once, I do not know, but it marks the Height of Land. All the way we have
-come up and up, but from there we go down stream,--until we come to Sea
-River, which is a part of the Nelson and takes us to Lake Winnipeg. Isn't
-that something to make a fuss about?"
-
-"It's the best news I have heard in many a day," Walter agreed.
-
-A short portage at the Height of Land brought the boats to the Echemamis
-River, where they were headed down stream into a rush-grown lake,
-connected by a creek with the Sea River. This stream is a part of the
-Nelson, which rises in Lake Winnipeg, so the brigade had to go against
-the current to Lower Play Green Lake and Little Jack River.
-
-From a log cabin on the shore of Little Jack, a bearded, buckskin-clad
-man came down to the water's edge. Louis called to ask if he had any
-fish. The man shook his head. The first boat had taken all he could
-spare. The fisherman, Louis explained, supplied trout and sturgeon to
-Norway House.
-
-Many a time during the trip Walter had heard of Norway House, an
-important Hudson Bay Company post. "Isn't that on Lake Winnipeg?" he
-cried. "Are we so near the lake?"
-
-"We shall be there to-morrow."
-
-Before sunrise next morning, the voyageurs bathed and scrubbed in Little
-Jack's cold, muddy-looking water. They appeared at starting time in
-clean, bright calico shirts, and new moccasins elaborately embroidered.
-Louis and the Orkneyman wore gaudy sashes. A broad leather belt girt the
-steersman's middle and held his beaded deerskin pouch. Around his oily
-black hair he had bound a scarlet silk handkerchief. The Orkneyman had
-trimmed his yellow beard. No hair seemed to grow on Murray's face.
-Possibly it had been plucked out, Indian fashion.
-
-Little Jack River is merely a channel winding about among the islands
-that separate Lower and Upper Play Green lakes, extensions of Lake
-Winnipeg. Louis told Walter that the "play green" was on one of the
-islands, where two bands of Indians had been accustomed to meet and hold
-feasts and games of strength and skill.
-
-Not a hundred yards behind the guide's boat, number three came in sight
-of Norway Point, the tip of the narrow peninsula separating Upper Play
-Green Lake from Lake Winnipeg proper. Shouts and cheers greeted the log
-wall of Norway House and the flag of the Hudson Bay Company. The Swiss
-were in high spirits. Once more they were nearing a land where men dwelt.
-Their journey would soon be over, they believed. Not yet could they grasp
-the vastness of this new world.
-
-As the boats drew near the post, dogs began to bark and men came running
-down to the shore. Voices shouted greetings in English and French, not
-merely to the voyageurs, but to the immigrants as well. Though the fur
-traders, trappers, and voyageurs were reluctant to see their wilderness
-opened up to settlement, yet the arrival of the white strangers, even
-though they were settlers, was too important a break in the monotony of
-life at the trading post for their welcome to be other than cordial.
-Moreover the white men and half-breeds at Norway House, and even the
-Indians camped outside the walls, were curious to see these new
-immigrants. So the Swiss were welcomed warmly by bronzed white men and
-dusky-faced mixed bloods, while the full blood Indians looked on with
-silent but intent curiosity.
-
-The first boats to arrive made a stay of several hours at the post, and
-Walter, conducted by Louis, had a good chance to see the place. Like York
-Factory, Norway House consisted of a group of log buildings within a
-stockade, but it stood on dry ground, not in a swamp, and its
-surroundings were far more attractive than those of the Hudson Bay fort.
-
-As the two boys were coming out of the big gate, after their tour of
-inspection, Walter, who was ahead, caught sight of a tall figure
-disappearing around one corner of the stockade. He glanced towards the
-shore. The boats were deserted. The voyageurs had sought friends within
-the stockade or in the tents and cabins outside the walls. The Swiss were
-visiting the fort or wandering about the point.
-
-"Do we take on more supplies here?" Walter asked his companion.
-
-"If we can get them," Louis returned. "They can spare little here, they
-say. Are you so starved that you think of food all the time?" he
-questioned smilingly.
-
-"No, I'm not quite so hungry as that. I just saw Murray carrying a sack,
-and I wondered what he had." Louis looked towards the boats. "Where is
-he? I don't see him."
-
-"He didn't go to the boat. He was coming the other way. He went around
-the corner of the wall."
-
-"With an empty sack?"
-
-"No, a full one."
-
-Louis stared at the corner bastion. "He was going around there, carrying
-a full sack? You are sure it was Murray?"
-
-"I saw his back, but I'm sure. He has that red handkerchief around his
-head, you know."
-
-"Well, it was not anything for us he was taking in that direction," Louis
-commented, "and we brought nothing to be left at Norway House. It is some
-affair of his own. He----"
-
-"Ho, Louis Brabant! What is the news from the north?"
-
-Louis had swung about at the first word. Two buckskin-clad men, one old,
-the other young, were coming through the gate. Louis turned back to
-reply, and Walter followed him to listen to the exchange of news between
-the newly arrived voyageur and these two employees of the post. The Swiss
-boy was growing used to the Canadian French tongue, and during the
-conversation he learned several things that surprised him.
-
-Walter had taken for granted that the journey would be nearly over when
-Lake Winnipeg was reached. Now he was amazed to learn that he had still
-more than three hundred miles to go to Fort Douglas, the stronghold of
-the Red River colony.
-
-"But how far have we come?" he cried.
-
-"About four hundred and thirty miles the way you traveled," the
-leather-faced old man answered promptly.
-
-"The rest of the voyage will not be so hard though," Louis said
-reassuringly. "There are few portages. If the wind is fair, we can sail
-most of the way. Of course if there are storms on the lake----"
-
-"There are always storms this time of year," put in the old voyageur
-discouragingly.
-
-The prospect of bad weather on Lake Winnipeg did not disturb Walter so
-much, however, as a piece of news which the old man led up to with the
-question, "How is it that settlers are still coming to the Colony on the
-Red River now that Lord Selkirk is dead?"
-
-"Lord Selkirk dead?" cried Walter and Louis together.
-
-"But yes, that is what people say. I was at Fort Douglas in June, and
-everyone there was talking about it, and wondering what would happen to
-the settlement."
-
-"They did not tell us that at Fort York," cried Walter. "When did he die?
-Since we left Europe in May?"
-
-"No, no, the news could not come to the Red River so quickly. It was last
-year some time he died."
-
-"You haven't heard of this before, Louis?" Walter turned to his
-companion.
-
-"No, I heard nothing of it when I came down the Red River in the spring.
-I left Pembina as soon as the ice was out, and at Fort Douglas I took
-service with the Company, but I did not stay there long. They sent me on
-here to Norway House. I heard no such story. Perhaps it is not true, but
-only a false rumor started by someone who wishes to make trouble in the
-colony."
-
-"That must be it," agreed Walter. "If Lord Selkirk died last year they
-would surely have heard it at Fort York. Captain Mai would have known it
-anyway before we left Switzerland. No, it can't be true."
-
-But the old voyageur shook his head. "Everyone at Fort Douglas believed
-it," he said.
-
-
-
-
- VIII
- THE MISSING PEMMICAN
-
-
-About the middle of the afternoon, Laroque the guide began to round up
-crews and passengers. His shout of "Embark, embark" was taken up by one
-man after another, and the idle sled dogs, that wandered at will about
-the post and the Indian village, added their voices to the chorus.
-
-Walter and Louis ran down to the shore at the first call. Most of the
-Swiss obeyed the summons promptly. Their fear of being left behind was
-too great to permit taking risks. Several of the voyageurs, however, were
-slow in appearing. When they did come, they gave evidence of having been
-too generously treated to liquor by their friends at the post. After
-everyone else was ready to start, Laroque had to go in search of Murray.
-Carrying a bundle wrapped in a piece of old canvas, Black Murray came
-back with the guide, his sullen face set and heavy, his small eyes
-shining with a peculiar glitter. He showed no other sign of drunkenness,
-but walked steadily to the boat, placed his bundle in the stern, and
-stepped in.
-
-Laroque sprang to his own place, oars were dipped, sails raised, and the
-boats were off, amid shouts of farewell and the howling of dogs. Leaving
-the handling of the sail to the Orkneyman, Murray remained stolidly
-silent in the stern. His steering was careless, even erratic, but no one
-ventured to try to take the tiller. Luckily the wind was light, the lake
-smooth, and the boats had not far to go. Camp was pitched on a beach of
-the long point, where the travelers had an unobstructed view down the
-lake to the meeting place of sky and water.
-
-"It seems as if we had come to another ocean," Walter confided to Louis.
-"Why do they call this Norway Point, and the trading post Norway House?
-What has Norway to do with Lake Winnipeg?"
-
-"I have heard," Louis replied, "that some men from a country called
-Norway were brought over by the Company and stationed here. Then too I
-have heard that the point was named from the pine trees that grow here,
-because they look like the pines in that country of Norway. Which story
-is true I know not. The post has been here a long time, and always, I
-think, it has been called Norway House. When the Selkirk colonists were
-driven from the Red River by the Northwesters, they came this way and
-camped on the Little Jack River."
-
-That night's camp was one of the most comfortable of the whole journey.
-The evening was fine, there was plenty of wood, and an abundance of fish
-for supper. The Swiss sat about their fires later than usual, talking of
-the journey, speculating on what was to come, and planning for the
-future. Nearly three weeks they had been on the way from Fort York. Now
-they looked out over the star-lit waters stretching far away to the
-south, and cheered their hearts with the hope and belief that the worst
-was over. At least they would not have to track up stream and portage
-around rapids for some days to come.
-
-"How long will it take us to reach the Red River?" The question was asked
-over and over again, with varying replies from the voyageurs. Walter
-asked it of Louis, and the young Canadian shook his head doubtfully. If
-the weather was good, the winds favorable, they might go the whole length
-of Lake Winnipeg in a week, but if the weather should be bad, no one
-could tell how long they might be delayed.
-
-The autumn weather showed its fickleness that very night. The wind
-shifted, the sky clouded over, and the morning dawned raw and
-threatening. The breeze was almost directly east, however, a favorable
-direction for the travelers, whose route lay along the north and west
-shores. So the boats got away early, and, with sails raised, held to the
-southwest, well out from land. They made good progress before the brisk
-wind, but as it grew stronger the lake roughened. Along the north shore
-high cliffs towered, with narrow stretches of beach here and there at the
-base. Safe landing places were few, but the waves were growing
-dangerously high, and the open boats were too heavily laden to ride such
-rough water buoyantly.
-
-Laroque changed his course, tacking in towards a bit of beach. Murray's
-boat was not far behind, and the half-breed handled it with skill and
-judgment. At just the right instant, he ordered the sail down, the oars
-out. The boat was run up on the sand without shipping a drop of water.
-
-The rest of the brigade were some distance behind. They were forced to
-put in close under the cliffs, but by using the oars managed to reach the
-beach.
-
-"We'll have to open that last bag of pemmican," said Walter to Louis who
-was kindling a fire.
-
-"Yes, but we must make it last through the voyage."
-
-Walter brought the rawhide sack, and Louis cut the leather cord with
-which it was sewed. An exclamation of surprise and anger escaped him.
-"What devil's trick is this? Look, Walter!"
-
-Walter looked, in amazement. "Why, it's not pemmican. How on earth----"
-
-"It is a fraud, a cheat." Walter had never seen Louis so angry. "Some
-fiend has filled this sack with clay and leaves and sold it to the
-Company for good pemmican."
-
-"See here, Louis." Walter lowered his voice. "This isn't the bag I
-carried over the portage at the White Falls." He turned the sack over and
-examined the other side. "There is no Company mark. Our pemmican has been
-stolen and this trash left in its place."
-
-"No one from the other boats would steal our supplies." Louis was
-puzzled. "It must have been done at Norway House. Yet I think the Indians
-would hardly dare to steal from a Company boat under the very walls of
-the post. And they did not take the tea. The Indians like tea so well
-they can never get enough."
-
-"Murray had a sack on his shoulder when I saw him dodge around the corner
-of the wall, and the sack had the Company mark." Walter's voice had sunk
-to a whisper. "But why in the world should he steal the provisions from
-his own boat?"
-
-Louis was thoughtful. "There might be a reason, yes," he said. "_Le
-Murrai_ might sell that pemmican for something he wanted. He has a bundle
-that he did not have before."
-
-"But how could he?" Walter objected. "They would know at Norway House
-that there was something wrong if the steersman of one of the boats
-offered to sell them a sack of pemmican."
-
-"That is true, but he might have traded it to the Indians, or some Indian
-friend of his might have sold it for him. I would like to know what is in
-that bundle. He slept with his head on it last night."
-
-"Shall we tell Laroque about this?"
-
-"That this sack is not good, yes, but not about _le Murrai_, no, not yet.
-We can prove nothing. It may not have been the pemmican he had."
-
-"I'm sure it was," Walter insisted stubbornly.
-
-Louis shrugged. "I am no coward, Walter, but I will not accuse _le
-Murrai_ of stealing and then voyage in the same boat with him. We have
-yet far to go."
-
-Louis was right and Walter knew it. Together they went to Laroque and
-told him of the fraud, but said nothing about their suspicions of Murray.
-
-The guide was much disturbed. He examined the sack of clay, and
-questioned Murray and the Orkneyman. Both disclaimed any responsibility.
-The Orkneyman agreed with the boys that the sacks brought from Fort York
-had all borne the Company mark. Murray said he had not noticed. He had
-had nothing to do with provisioning the boats. If the Company had been
-cheated, that was no affair of his.
-
-From his own supplies, Laroque lent boat number three a little pemmican
-for supper. The Swiss were indignant at the fraud. Some of them even
-wanted to return to Norway House and seek for the culprit.
-
-Before the scanty meal was over, rain began to fall. The beach was not a
-good camping ground. If the wind shifted to the south, the waves would
-wash over the narrow margin of sand and break against the perpendicular
-cliffs. To find a better place was impossible, for the lake was far too
-stormy to venture out upon. The boats were pulled well up, the tents
-pitched with one wall almost against the cliff, and the sails, masts, and
-oars converted into additional shelters. Luckily the campers were
-protected from the strong wind, which had become more northerly. But the
-water came down the cliffs in cascades, digging pools and channels in the
-sand and shingle.
-
-Fortunately the worst of the storm did not last long. The rain became
-fine and light like mist driven by the wind, and before sundown ceased
-entirely. As the wind shifted farther towards the north, the water
-receded from the base of the cliff, leaving a wider stretch of sand. The
-lake was still too rough for the boats to go out, but as long as the wind
-remained in the north, the beach was a safe camping place.
-
-A little dry driftwood had been collected and put under shelter before
-the rain began. So everyone was able to warm and dry himself before
-creeping between his blankets. Laroque assigned the voyageurs to watches,
-and cautioned each man to walk the beach while on guard and keep an eye
-on wind and waves.
-
-
-
-
- IX
- HUNGER AND COLD
-
-
-The guide aroused the camp before daylight. Wind and waves had fallen,
-and the boats got away quickly. All day they went ahead under sail or
-oars along the north shore. Camp was made on a narrow ridge of sand
-separating a large bay from the main body of water. A contrary wind kept
-the boats at Limestone Bay,--as it was called from the fragments of
-limestone strewn along its shores,--until late the following day.
-
-Among the reeds and wild rice ducks were feeding. The voyageurs succeeded
-in shooting a number of the birds, made a stew of some, and buried the
-rest, unplucked, in ashes and hot sand. A fire was kept going above them
-for several hours until they were well cooked. When they were taken out
-and the skins stripped off, Walter found his portion very good eating
-indeed.
-
-Two days later the mouth of the Saskatchewan River was reached. Walter
-was beginning to understand why the length of time required to traverse
-Lake Winnipeg could not be foretold. The lake is about two hundred and
-sixty miles long in a direct course, but the open boats were obliged to
-keep well in towards shore, making the journey upwards of three hundred.
-When the weather was favorable, sails were raised and good speed made,
-but the autumn gales had set in, and contrary winds were frequent.
-Skirting the shore in head winds and high waves was both slow and
-dangerous. Sometimes the boats had to be beached through surf, the men
-jumping into the water and dragging them above the danger line. By the
-time camp was pitched, both voyageurs and settlers were not only tired
-and hungry, but usually wet and chilled to the bone.
-
-October came with unseasonable cold, even for that northern country. With
-darkness the temperature sank far below the freezing point. One night
-Matthieu the unfortunate went to sleep without drying his wet shoes and
-stockings, and frosted both feet so that they were sore for the rest of
-the journey.
-
-Whenever it was possible to go on, whether at daybreak, noon, or
-midnight, the boats were away. Meals were irregular and food scanty. Much
-of the time the lake was too rough for fishing, but sometimes ducks were
-shot. To Murray's boat the loss of the sack of pemmican was serious. The
-supplies were reduced to tea and a little barley meal.
-
-The boats did not always make the same camping ground, though they tried
-to keep together. How far behind the second brigade might be, no one
-could guess. Walter worried about the Periers. Surely this must be a hard
-experience for Elise and little Max, and for Mr. Perier also.
-
-For two days the guide's boat and Murray's were windbound on an exposed
-beach where everything had to be carried well above the water line.
-
-Fishing was impossible in this open, wind-swept spot, but Louis shot a
-white pelican. The clumsy looking bird with its great pouched beak was a
-curiosity to Walter. If he had not been so very hungry he could not have
-eaten its fishy-tasting flesh.
-
-Suddenly the weather changed for the better. In less than eight hours
-after the boats got away from their enforced camping ground, the lake
-looked as if it had never been disturbed. There was not a breath of wind
-to catch the sail, not a wave, or even a ripple. Plying the oars, the
-crews held a course far out across the mouth of a bay. On and on they
-rowed, watching the sunset and the afterglow reflected in still water and
-the stars coming out one by one.
-
-The southern half of Lake Winnipeg is very broken in outline, with many
-points and islands. One night, reaching the sheltered head of a deep,
-sandy bay with a high background of rocks and forest, the travelers found
-the sands covered thick with the dead bodies of insects.
-
-"Grasshoppers!" exclaimed Louis. "They have come again!"
-
-Walter was gazing up and down the beach in amazement. "I never knew there
-could be so many grasshoppers in the world," he said. "Where did they all
-come from?"
-
-"From the prairie to the south. They're not ordinary grasshoppers like
-the big green ones. These are smaller and a different color, and their
-horns,"--Louis meant their antenn,--"are short. I never saw this kind
-till three years ago, and then they came all of a sudden. They ate up
-everything. Ugh, how they smell! We can't camp here."
-
-The place was indeed impossible as a camping ground. The boats put off
-again to seek a spot where the waves had washed the shores clean of the
-remains of the dead insects. Louis was right when he said that they were
-not ordinary grasshoppers. They were the dread locust,--the Rocky
-Mountain locust. At the camp fire that night, the Canadian boy told
-Walter and his companions how the locusts had come to the Red River
-valley.
-
-"I was at Fort Douglas with my father," he began. "We had just come down
-from Pembina with some carts. Everything looked well on the settlers'
-farms. The grain was in the ear and ripening. Then came the grasshoppers.
-These short-horned grasshoppers fly much higher than the ordinary kind.
-Their wings are stronger. They came in great clouds that darkened the air
-as if real clouds were passing across the sun. Late in the afternoon they
-began to alight, such hordes of them you can't imagine. Men, women, and
-children ran out into the fields, crushing grasshoppers at every step,
-the flying creatures dashing against them like hailstones. The poor
-settlers could do nothing against such an army. They saved a few half
-ripe ears of barley, the women hiding them under their aprons, but that
-was all. By the next morning everything was gone."
-
-"Do you mean that the grasshoppers ate the crops?" asked Walter, scarcely
-able to believe what he had heard.
-
-"They ate everything green," Louis replied impressively, "not only the
-grain and the gardens, but every green blade of grass on the prairie."
-
-"And they have come again this year," said Matthieu the weaver slowly,
-"and perhaps they have again taken everything." His voice sounded
-discouraged.
-
-"I fear it," was Louis' grave response.
-
-"What did the settlers do for food?" asked Walter. "Did Lord Selkirk
-supply it?"
-
-Louis shook his head. "That was a hard winter. Most of the colonists went
-to Pembina, where they could hunt the buffalo. They got some food from
-the Company and some pemmican from the Indians. But they had almost no
-seed for the next year. In the spring they sowed the little barley they
-had saved, and it came up and promised well. Then the young grasshoppers
-hatched out from the eggs left in the ground the year before, and ate it
-all. So again the settlers were without meal for the winter. The Governor
-sent M'sieu Laidlaw and other men into the Sioux country, up the Red
-River and down the St. Peter to the great Mississippi where there is a
-settlement called Prairie du Chien. It was a hard journey in winter on
-snowshoes, but they came back in June with more than three hundred
-bushels of seed wheat, oats, and peas. The seeding was too late for a
-good crop last year, but this year they hoped for a big one."
-
-"And the grasshoppers have come again," Matthieu repeated dully.
-
-Around points and among islands the boats threaded their way, hugging the
-shore most of the time, risking traverses across the mouths of bays when
-the weather permitted.
-
-No food was left in Murray's boat, nothing but a little tea. Fishing had
-to be resorted to, often with poor luck. Few animals were seen, though
-the howling of wolves had come to be a familiar sound at night. Flocks of
-ducks and geese passed high overhead, but to shoot them the hunters had
-to seek the marshy places in bays or at stream mouths. Bad weather caused
-so much delay that to take advantage of calm water or favorable wind
-everyone was compelled, more than once, to go breakfastless or
-supperless. Walter was reduced to skin, muscle and bone. He felt a
-constant gnawing hunger, was seldom warm except when exercising, and
-found his hard-won muscular strength diminishing. An hour's pulling at
-the oar almost exhausted him. He wondered at Murray, on whose strength
-and endurance starvation seemed to have no effect. Even Louis admitted
-weakness and had lost some of his cheery high spirits.
-
-At last the low shore at the south end of the lake, a long point of
-shingle and sand, came in view. When the water was high and the wind from
-the north, much of the long sand bar was covered, but luckily the lake
-was calm when the guide's boat reached the point. Murray's craft followed
-Laroque's closely.
-
-Sharing one gun between them, Louis and Walter went, with some of the
-others, hunting for their supper. They rowed along the sand spit to the
-marsh which was alive with birds,--ducks, geese, tall herons, and many
-other smaller kinds. In a little pond several graceful, long-necked swans
-were feeding. Walter did not think of firing at swans, but Louis had no
-scruples. He brought one down with his first shot.
-
-At sunset the hunters returned to camp with four fat geese, one of which
-Walter had killed, two swans, and eighteen or twenty ducks. A party from
-one of the other boats brought in almost as many. For the first time in
-many days Walter had a chance to really satisfy his appetite. Wrapped in
-his blanket, he slept soundly on his bed of sand, untroubled by hunger
-dreams.
-
-
-
-
- X
- THE RED RIVER AT LAST
-
-
-The mouth of the Red River divides into several channels that wind
-through the marsh. The guide chose one of the main waterways, of good
-depth and gentle current, and the oarsmen, eager to reach the settlement,
-pulled with a will. They had some forty miles, by water, yet to go.
-
-"Why do they call it _Red River_?" Walter asked Louis. "Not from the
-color of the water?"
-
-"It is from the Indian name, Miscousipi," was the reply. "I have heard
-that when the Saulteux and the Sioux fought a great battle on the banks,
-the water ran red with blood. Both nations claim the valley as a hunting
-ground."
-
-"Then it can hardly be a good place for settlers if the Indians fight
-over it," Walter said doubtfully.
-
-"There are only Saulteux and Crees on the lower river now. The Sioux no
-longer dare venture here. The upper river is the dangerous country."
-
-Where the marsh gave way to firmer ground, in an open space on the low
-bank of a creek coming in from the west, stood a group of Indian lodges.
-As the boat passed, the Swiss boy looked with interest at the low, round
-topped structures of hides and rush mats.
-
-"Those are Saulteur wigwams," Louis explained.
-
-"No one seems to be at home to-day."
-
-"No, but they intend to come back or they would have taken down the
-lodges. There was a fight in this place many years ago. A band of Crees
-came down that stream, and the old people and children camped here, while
-the young men went to Fort York with their furs. That was before the
-Hudson Bay Company had posts in this part of the country. While the
-braves were all away, the Sioux came and killed the old people and took
-the children captive. So the stream is called Rivire aux Morts--the
-river of the dead."
-
-"What a fiendish thing to do," Walter exclaimed, "and cowardly."
-
-Louis shrugged expressively. "It is the Indian way of fighting. The Sioux
-are not cowards, but fiends, yes. And so are the Crees and the Saulteux
-in war. I say it though my grandmother was an Ojibwa."
-
-"Have you Indian blood, Louis?" Walter asked in surprise. "I supposed you
-were pure French."
-
-"I am _bois brul_, as we mixed bloods are called from our dark skins,
-and I am not ashamed of it. My father, he was pure French, and my mother
-is half French, but her mother was Ojibwa, Saulteur. Perhaps I do not
-look so Indian as _le Murrai Noir_." Louis lowered his voice. "They say
-he is at least half Sioux."
-
-"Sioux! Well, he certainly doesn't act like a white man."
-
-"He has the worst of both the white man and the Indian I think."
-
-As the boats went on up stream, the banks became higher and covered with
-trees, not willows and aspens only, but elms and oaks and maples. The
-frosty weather had practically stripped the trees of what leaves the
-locusts had left, yet no wide view was possible, for the river ran
-through a narrow trench with steep sides.
-
-At the foot of a stretch of rapids camp was made, and a number of small
-fish caught for supper. Early in the morning the ascent was begun. The
-fall was slight, but the current was strong, and the channel sown with
-boulders and interrupted by ledges. After the boats had been tracked
-through, the voyageurs delayed for the scrubbing and hair trimming that
-preceded their approach to the dwellings of men. Again they put on their
-best and brightest shirts, sashes, and moccasins, which they had
-carefully stowed away after leaving Norway House.
-
-After he was washed and dressed, Louis, with an air of secrecy, drew
-Walter aside. "I have seen the inside of Murray's big package," he
-whispered.
-
-"You have? How did that happen?"
-
-"He left the package in the boat. I opened it."
-
-"What did you find?"
-
-"Little things,--awls, flints, fish hooks, net twine, beads, all wrapped
-in red or blue handkerchiefs. I had no time to unwrap them, but I could
-feel some of them. I wonder what he wants of all those things."
-
-Walter remembered the conversation in the Indian room at Fort York.
-"Can't he sell them to the Indians for furs?" he asked.
-
-"The Company will not permit a voyageur to trade. Sometimes, it is true,
-they may send a man out to buy skins. Perhaps they might send Murray, but
-I do not think so, and he would need more goods, a whole canoe or cart or
-sled load."
-
-"But the Company refused to let him have them," Walter explained. "At
-Fort York he asked for a lot of goods, on credit, so he could go trade
-with the Sioux."
-
-"The Sioux?"
-
-"Yes, I heard the clerk tell him that the Chief Trader wouldn't give him
-the goods. The clerk said it was a crazy scheme. Murray must have stolen
-our pemmican and exchanged it, or got someone else to do it for him, at
-Norway House. He must have wanted those things badly to be willing to go
-hungry for them."
-
-"He can endure hunger like an Indian," Louis returned, "and one of the
-voyageurs in Laroque's boat has been sharing his food with him. I saw him
-do it. He is afraid of Murray for some reason. It may be you are right
-about his selling the pemmican. The Indians want all those little things.
-They are eager to get them. He might begin----"
-
-"Embark, embark!"
-
-The two boys hurried towards the boat. As they went, Walter whispered,
-"Are you going to tell about that package?"
-
-"I think so. Not to Laroque, but to the Chief Trader at Fort Douglas."
-
-When Murray stepped into the boat, he stooped to examine his bundle.
-Would he discover that it had been opened? It was an anxious moment for
-Louis and Walter, but the steersman took his place without even looking
-in their direction. Walter would not have thought of opening Murray's
-package. But the Canadian boy's upbringing had been different.
-
-The banks bordering the rapids were gravelly, the growth thinner and
-smaller. Then came lower, muddy shores, and Walter got his first glimpse
-of the prairie. On the west side, only a few trees and bushes edged the
-river. The country beyond stretched away flat and open, but it was not
-the fertile, green land the Swiss boy had heard about. The plain was
-yellow-gray, desolate and dead looking. In one place a wide stretch was
-burned black. Could this be the rich and beautiful land Captain Mai had
-described?
-
-Walter's disappointment was too deep for expression. All he said was, "I
-thought the prairie would be like our meadows at home. It doesn't look as
-if anything could grow here."
-
-"Oh, things grow very fast, once the ground is broken," Louis assured
-him. "Wheat, barley and oats, peas and potatoes, everything that is
-planted. And the prairie grass is fine pasture. The buffalo eat nothing
-else. It is as I feared though. The grasshoppers have taken everything.
-But the grass will grow again. It is coming now. Look at that low place.
-It is all green. Wait until spring and then you will see. The prairie is
-beautiful then, the fresh, new grass, and flowers everywhere."
-
-"And the grasshoppers come and eat it all up," Walter added dejectedly.
-
-"They may never come again. No one at Fort Douglas or Pembina had ever
-seen the short horned grasshoppers till three years ago. And they didn't
-come last year. Perhaps we shall never see them again."
-
-Walter knew that Louis was trying to cheer him, and he felt a little
-ashamed of his discouragement. He put aside his disappointment and
-forebodings, and tried to share in his friend's good spirits. In a few
-hours the long journey would be over, and that was something to be
-thankful for. He hoped it was nearly over for Elise and Max and their
-father. The second brigade could not be very far behind.
-
-The current was not strong and there were no rocks, so making their way
-up stream was not hard work for the boat crews. The first person from the
-settlement who came in sight was a sturdy, red-haired boy of about
-Walter's own age, fishing from a dugout canoe. He raised a shout at the
-appearance of the brigade, and snatching off his blue Scotch bonnet or
-Tam-o'-Shanter, he waved it around his head. Then he paddled to shore in
-haste to spread the news.
-
-Log houses came in view on the west side of the river at the place Louis
-called the Frog Pond. Lord Selkirk himself, when he had visited the
-settlement four years before, had named that part of his colony Kildonan
-Parish, after the settlers' old home in Scotland. The little cabins were
-scattered along the bank facing the stream, the narrow farms stretching
-back two miles across the prairie. From the river there was but little
-sign of cultivation and scarcely anything green to be seen.
-
-From nearly every house folk came out to watch the brigade go by. Roughly
-clad, far from prosperous looking they were, in every combination of
-homespun, Hudson Bay cloth, and buckskin. Some of the men wore kilts
-instead of trousers, and nearly all waved flat Scotch bonnets. Walter's
-heart warmed to these folk. Like himself they were white and from across
-the ocean, though their land and language were not his own. One bent old
-woman in dark blue homespun dress, plaid shawl, and white cap reminded
-him of his own grandmother.
-
-All the Swiss were waving hats and kerchiefs, and shouting "_Bon jour_"
-and "_Guten Tag_," the women smiling while the tears ran down their
-cheeks. The long journey with all its suffering and hardships was
-over,--so they believed. At last they had reached the "promised land." As
-yet it did not look very promising to be sure, but they would soon make
-homes for themselves. The thin face of Matthieu, the weaver, who had been
-so disheartened when he heard about the grasshoppers, was shining with
-happiness.
-
-
-
-
- XI
- FORT DOUGLAS
-
-
-"Where do we land, Louis?" asked Walter.
-
-"At Fort Douglas, where Governor Sauterelle lives."
-
-"I thought the Governor's name was Mc-something."
-
-"It is McDonnell, but people call him Governor Grasshopper because, they
-say, he is as great a destroyer as those pests."
-
-"What do they mean?"
-
-"They do not like their Governor, these colonists. You will soon hear all
-about him."
-
-A few cabins, set down hit or miss, less well kept than those on the west
-bank, and interspersed with several Indian lodges, came in view on the
-east shore. Black haired, dark skinned men and women, and droves of
-children and sharp nosed dogs were running down to the river.
-
-"_Bois bruls_," Louis explained, using the name he had given himself. It
-means "burnt wood" and is descriptive of the dark color of the
-half-breed.
-
-The boat made a turn to the east, following a big bend in the river.
-"This is Point Douglas, and there is the fort," said Louis, pointing to
-the roofs of buildings, the British flag and that of the Hudson Bay
-Company flying over them. Point Douglas had been burned over many years
-before, and was a barren looking place. The fort, like York Factory and
-Norway House, was a mere group of buildings enclosed within a stockade.
-
-When Laroque's boat reached the landing, the shore was lined with people;
-Hudson Bay employees, white settlers, and _bois bruls_. As each craft
-drew up to the landing place, the boatmen sprang out to be embraced and
-patted on the back by their friends. The new settlers' warmest reception
-came from a group of bearded, bold eyed, rough looking, white men. When
-one of these men spoke to Walter in German, and another in unmistakably
-Swiss French, the boy's face betrayed his astonishment.
-
-The first man, a red-faced fellow with untrimmed, sandy beard, laughed
-and switched from German to French. "Oh, I am a Swiss like you," he
-explained, "though I have not seen Switzerland for many a year. I am a
-soldier by trade, and I served the British king. We DeMeurons are the
-pick of many countries."
-
-Walter did not like the man's looks. He had seen swaggering, mercenary
-soldiers of fortune before, and he was not sorry when his bold-mannered
-countryman turned from him to make the acquaintance of his companions.
-
-The voyageurs were hastily unloading. They had reached the end of the
-journey and were in a hurry to be paid off. Murray did not even wait for
-the unloading. Carrying his big bundle, he strode quickly towards the
-fort. Louis looked after him, swung a bale of goods to his back, and
-trotted up the slope.
-
-Seeing no reason why he should stand idle when there was work to do,
-Walter shouldered a package and followed. As he reached the gate, three
-men came through, and he stepped aside to let them pass. The leading
-figure, a red-faced man of middle age and important air, cast a sharp
-glance at the boy. Walter's clothes betrayed him.
-
-"Ye're na voyageur." The man spoke peremptorily in Scotch sounding
-English. "Put down that packet and follow me. I've a few words to say to
-a' of ye."
-
-Walter had learned enough English to understand, and the tone warned him
-that obedience was expected. He left his load lying on the ground, and
-followed down the slope towards the river. From the red-faced man's
-dictatorial manner, the boy guessed him to be Alexander McDonnell, the
-"Grasshopper Governor." He was obeyed promptly, but the sullen, even
-angry, looks on the faces of the half-breeds and Scotch settlers who made
-way for him, showed that he was not popular. Only the ex-soldiers seemed
-boldly at their ease in his presence.
-
-The new colonists were quickly gathered together so that the Governor
-might address them. To make his meaning plain, he used both English and
-French. His manner was abrupt, yet what he said was reasonable enough,
-discouraging though it was to the newcomers. After a few words of welcome
-to the Selkirk Colony and an expression of hope that the Swiss would be
-industrious and would prosper accordingly, he told them frankly that they
-had come at an unfortunate time. The settlement was ill prepared for
-them. The grasshoppers had utterly destroyed the crops. The food supply
-for the coming winter was inadequate. There was not enough to feed the
-colonists already established. Most of the settlers, old and new, must
-spend the winter farther up the Red River at Fort Daer, the Colony post
-at the mouth of the Pembina. Game animals, especially the buffalo upon
-which the people must depend for food until new crops could be grown,
-were much more abundant and easily reached near Fort Daer. Pemmican could
-be obtained there from the _bois bruls_ and the Indians. Some of the
-settlers had already gone. Every one of the newcomers able to endure the
-journey must leave on the morrow. They might pitch their tents near Fort
-Douglas for the night. Fuel for their fires would be supplied and food
-for the evening meal and for the journey to the Pembina. More than this
-the Governor could not promise. At the Pembina they would find timber for
-cabin building, game for the hunting. Some other necessaries might be
-bought at Fort Daer. In the spring they could return, and land for
-farming would be assigned to them. The Swiss had arrived at a bad time
-when the Colony could do little for them. They would have to do the best
-they could for themselves.
-
-It was a sober and depressed group of immigrants who listened to Governor
-McDonnell's speech. In spite of what they had heard and seen of the
-ravages of the locusts, they had clung to the hope that their worst
-troubles would be over when they reached Fort Douglas. They had expected
-to be housed and fed for a little while at least, until they could make
-homes for themselves on their own land. Now that dream was over. They
-must go on,--all of them who could go on. And when they reached a
-stopping place at last, it would be only a temporary one, with the
-doubtful prospect of depending on hunting for a living, and perhaps
-starving before spring. No wonder discouragement and foreboding rested
-heavily upon their hearts. Even Walter Rossel, young and strong and
-hopeful, was dismayed at the Governor's words.
-
-The Swiss were a steadfast and courageous people. They soon roused
-themselves to make the best of a bad situation. Food and fuel for the
-night at least had been promised them. They left the future to
-Providence, and set about pitching camp. Heretofore the voyageurs had
-done part of that work. Now, having reached the end of their journey,
-having unloaded the boats and been paid off, they joined their own
-friends at Fort Douglas or crossed the river to the _bois brul_
-settlement on the east bank. Only Louis Brabant lingered to lend
-encouragement and help to those whom the long journey had made his
-friends.
-
-After their first curiosity, the old settlers showed little interest in
-the new. To the Scotch and Irish, the Swiss were foreigners in speech and
-ways. The colonists knew from experience the hardships of the voyage
-across the ocean and of the wilderness trip from Fort York. They could
-understand the discouraging situation in which the newcomers found
-themselves, but they could do little or nothing for them. They were not
-hard hearted, but, pinched for food themselves, they could not be
-overjoyed at the coming of all these additional hungry mouths to be fed.
-Had the Swiss been actually starving, the old settlers would have shared
-with them the last pint of meal and ounce of pemmican, yet they could
-scarcely help resenting the arrival of the strangers. Why did the heirs
-of Lord Selkirk keep on sending settlers without providing for them even
-the barest necessities? No wonder the old colonists grumbled and growled.
-If their attitude towards the new was not actually unfriendly, it was far
-from cordial or encouraging. Only the ex-soldiers mingled freely with the
-Swiss, and even invited certain families to their cabins.
-
-Walter did not like the appearance and manner of these men, but they
-aroused his curiosity. "Who are the DeMeurons?" he asked Louis. "How did
-they come here, and why do they call themselves by that name?"
-
-"They came with Lord Selkirk when he recaptured Fort Douglas from the
-Northwesters. They were soldiers brought over from Europe to fight for
-the King in the last war with the Americans. After the war they were
-discharged and Lord Selkirk engaged about a hundred of them to protect
-his colony. Because most of them had belonged to a regiment commanded by
-a man named DeMeuron, the settlers call them all DeMeurons. Lord Selkirk
-gave them land along the _Rivire la Seine_, which comes into the Red
-about a mile above here, but they do little farming, those DeMeurons.
-They would rather hunt. I blame them not for that. The other colonists
-have no love for them."
-
-"I don't like their looks myself," Walter replied, "but they seem kinder
-to strangers than anyone else here is."
-
-"The DeMeurons are all bachelors," Louis explained with a grin. "They
-seek wives to keep their houses and to help them farm their lands, and
-perhaps they think Swiss girls will work harder than _bois bruls_. So
-they are kind to the fathers and brothers that they may not be refused
-when they propose marriage to daughters and sisters. Soon there will be
-weddings I think."
-
-"I should hate to see a sister of mine marry a DeMeuron," was Walter's
-emphatic comment. He changed the subject. "Have you found out," he asked,
-"if it is true that Lord Selkirk is dead?"
-
-"Yes, it is true. He died, they say, a year ago last spring."
-
-"Then who owns the Colony now, the Hudson Bay Company?"
-
-"I don't quite understand about that," was the doubtful reply. "I asked
-one of the Company clerks at the fort and he said that the land and
-everything belong to Lord Selkirk's heirs. But M'sieu Garry, the
-Vice-Governor of the Company, as they call him, was here during the
-summer, and with him was M'sieu McGillivray, a big man among the
-Northwesters, and now, since the two companies are one, of the Hudson Bay
-also. They were much interested in the settlement, the clerk said, and
-made plans about what should be done."
-
-"Lord Selkirk was one of the owners of the Company, wasn't he?" Walter
-questioned. "Then his heirs must own part of it. Perhaps the Company is
-going to run the Colony for them. Does Governor McDonnell belong to the
-Company?"
-
-"That I don't know. It was Lord Selkirk who made McDonnell governor.
-Truly it is _he_ who runs the Colony now, with a high hand."
-
-Mention of Governor McDonnell brought Walter's own personal problem
-uppermost in his thoughts. "Do you suppose they will really send us on up
-the river to-morrow?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, truly. It is the only place for you to go. Here you would starve
-before spring. Perhaps a few may stay, those the DeMeurons have taken
-into their cabins. You, Walter, will go of course, and I am glad. Pembina
-is my home, and we go together."
-
-"But I can't go until the Periers come," the Swiss boy protested. "I
-intend to stay with them wherever they are, and I ought to wait for
-them."
-
-Louis shook his head. "I think the Governor will not let you. What good
-would it do? As soon as the second brigade arrives, they will be sent on
-to Pembina. You can wait for them there as well as here. Come with me
-to-morrow. My mother will make you welcome, and we will find a place for
-your friends. Perhaps we can have a cabin all ready for them. They would
-be glad of that."
-
-
-
-
- XII
- BY CART TRAIN TO PEMBINA
-
-
-Louis slept with friends on the other side of the river, Walter remaining
-with his country people. The weather was sharp and cold, but Governor
-McDonnell's promise of fuel and food was fulfilled. After a hearty meal,
-the newcomers, in spite of their disappointment, passed a more
-comfortable night than many they had endured during the long journey.
-They were somewhat disturbed, however, by the sounds of revelry borne on
-the wind from Fort Douglas. That the voyageurs and their friends would
-celebrate hilariously, the Swiss had expected, but not that such wild
-revels would take place within the fort walls, where lived the Governor
-and his household.
-
-"The Colony is short of food, so they say," Matthieu the weaver
-complained bitterly, "but the folk in the fort must have plenty to eat
-and drink and make merry with."
-
-Walter clung to the hope that the departure for Pembina might be delayed
-until after the arrival of the second boat brigade. But early in the
-morning word came from Fort Douglas that the Swiss must make ready to
-leave at once. The boy resolved to ask the Governor to let him remain. He
-went up to the fort, and felt encouraged when he was admitted at the gate
-without question, but his request to see the Governor met with flat
-refusal. The Governor was busy and could not be disturbed. He had given
-his orders and those orders must be obeyed. Walter was well and strong
-and able to travel. He had no friends in the settlement to take him in.
-Well, then, he must go on to Pembina.
-
-Finding it useless to plead his cause to the Governor's underlings and
-impossible to get to McDonnell himself, the angry, discouraged lad left
-the fort. He found Louis Brabant at the Swiss camp, and poured out his
-story wrathfully. "I have a notion to stay here anyway," he concluded
-stubbornly. "I can find someone who will give me lodging for a few days."
-
-"Yes," Louis admitted. "At St. Boniface, across the river, I can ask my
-friends to take you in, but if the Governor learns you have disobeyed his
-command he will be most angry."
-
-"What can he do to me? I have a right to be here."
-
-"Perhaps, but when the Governor is angry, he does not think of the rights
-of others. You would have to go anyway, tied in a cart as a prisoner, or
-he would shut you up in the fort, or send you out of the Colony."
-
-"Where could he send me except to Pembina?" Walter questioned, still
-unconvinced.
-
-"To Norway House,--to be taken to Fort York in the spring and sent back
-to Europe in a ship," was the startling reply. "Oh, yes, as Governor of
-the Colony, he could do all that."
-
-"But surely he wouldn't do it, for such a little thing?"
-
-"Governor 'Sauterelle' does not think it a little thing when he is
-disobeyed. He is not gentle to one who opposes his will. No, no, Walter,
-you must not think of it. At Pembina you will be far enough away to do as
-you please, but not here. Come, you shall stay at my home, and we will
-find a place for your friends and make all ready for them. It won't be
-long until they join you."
-
-Reluctantly Walter yielded to the Canadian boy's advice. He did not want
-to yield, but, if what Louis said of the Governor was true, the risk of
-disobedience was too great. He himself had seen enough already of
-Alexander McDonnell to realize that he was not the kind of man to be
-lenient with anyone who disobeyed his orders. So the Swiss boy set about
-getting his own scanty belongings ready for the journey. He had taken for
-granted that the party would travel by boat, but he had returned to the
-camp on the river bank to find his companions' baggage being loaded into
-carts.
-
-Clumsy looking things were those carts,--a box body and two great wheels
-at least five feet tall, with strong spokes, thick hubs, and wooden rims
-three inches wide and without metal tires. Between the shafts, which were
-straight, heavy beams, a small, shaggy, sinewy pony, harnessed with
-rawhide straps, stood with lowered head and tail and an air of dejection
-or sleepy indifference.
-
-"What queer vehicles," Walter exclaimed. "Are we to travel overland?"
-
-"Yes, the journey is much shorter that way. By water, following the bends
-of the river, is almost twice as far. You never saw carts like these
-before? No, I think that is true. The _bois bruls_ of the Red River
-invented this sort of cart. It is made all of wood, not a bit of metal
-anywhere. Every man makes his own cart. All the tools he needs are an
-axe, a saw, and an auger or an Indian drill. I have a cart at home I made
-myself, and it is a good one. In this country you must make things for
-yourself or you have nothing."
-
-Examining one of the queer contrivances, Walter found that Louis had
-spoken the simple truth. No metal had been used in its construction.
-Wooden pegs and rawhide lashings took the place of nails and spikes. Even
-the harness was guiltless of a buckle. The carts were far from beautiful,
-but they were strong and serviceable. The Swiss boy, who knew something
-of woodworking, admired the ingenuity and skill that had gone into their
-making. Enough vehicles had been supplied to transport the few belongings
-of the Swiss and to allow the women and children to ride. Now other
-carts,--with the families and baggage of the Scotch settlers who were
-leaving for Pembina,--began to arrive at the rendezvous, the discordant
-squeaking and screeching of their wooden axles announcing their approach
-some time before they came in sight.
-
-It took so long to gather the cart train together and make everything
-ready for departure, that Walter kept hoping for the appearance of the
-boat brigade. But not a craft, except a canoe or two, came into view
-around the bend of the river, and no songs or shouts of voyageurs were
-heard in the distance. The boy, still determined to plead his cause, kept
-a lookout for Governor McDonnell, but he did not appear. He left the
-carrying out of his commands to his assistants.
-
-The start was made at last. At the sharp "_Marche donc!_" of the drivers,
-the sleepy looking ponies woke into life and were off at a brisk trot.
-The carts pitched and wobbled, each with a gait of its own, over the
-rough, hard ground, the ungreased axles groaning and screeching in every
-key. The discord set Walter's teeth on edge, as he walked with Louis
-beside the vehicle the latter was driving.
-
-At the head of the column the guide in charge, Jean Baptiste Lajimonire,
-rode horseback, followed closely by the cart carrying his wife and
-younger children. The whole family had come from Pembina a short time
-before to have the newest baby christened by Father Provencher, the
-priest. Behind the Lajimonires, the train stretched out across the
-plain, the two wheeled carts piled with baggage and household belongings
-or occupied by the women and children sitting flat on the bottom, their
-heels higher than their hips. The drivers sat on the shafts or walked
-alongside. The Swiss men and boys went afoot, but some of the Scotch and
-Canadians rode wiry ponies and drove a few cattle. The riders used
-deerskin pads for saddles and long stirrups or none at all. Spare cart
-horses ran loose beside their harnessed companions.
-
-Not all of the Swiss were in the party. Several families, taken into the
-cabins of the DeMeurons, had been allowed to remain. Matthieu and his
-wife also stayed behind. The baby was ill and Matthieu himself scarce
-able to travel. The Colony had started a new industry, the manufacture of
-cloth from buffalo hair, and the weaver was to be given employment. When
-Walter learned that Matthieu was to remain, the boy entrusted to him a
-letter for Mr. Perier, explaining how he had been forced to go on to
-Pembina.
-
-Leaving Point Douglas, the cart train turned southeast, traveling a
-little back from the west bank of the river, along a worn track across
-open prairie. Beyond the narrow valley, scattered cabins could be seen
-among the trees on the east side.
-
-"That is St. Boniface settlement," Louis told his companion. "Pre
-Provencher is building a church there."
-
-About a mile south of Point Douglas, the carts approached the junction of
-the Assiniboine River with the Red, the place Louis called _Les
-Fourches_, the Forks. On the north bank of the Assiniboine stood a small
-Hudson Bay post, and not far from it were piles of logs for a new
-building or stockade.
-
-"The Company is going to make a new fort," Louis explained. "M'sieu Garry
-and M'sieu McGillivray chose this spot. There was an old Northwest post,
-Fort Gibraltar, here, but five years ago M'sieu Colin Robertson, a Hudson
-Bay man, seized it, and Governor Semple had it pulled down. The logs and
-timber were taken down river to Fort Douglas. Fort Gibraltar had been
-here a long time, and so has this trading house. Les Fourches is an old
-trading place. Men say there was a fort here a hundred years ago, when
-all Canada and the fur country were French, but nothing is left of those
-old buildings now."
-
-The cart train halted near the trading post, as some of the men had
-business there, and Louis asked Walter to go with him to see the Chief
-Trader. "At Fort Douglas I told a clerk how our pemmican disappeared and
-about _le Murrai's_ package of trade goods. _Le Murrai_ had received his
-pay and had left the fort. The clerk knew not where he had gone. He told
-me to report the affair to M'sieu the Chief Trader here. Come with me,
-and we will tell what we know."
-
-The men of the little post were busy outfitting boats to go up the
-Assiniboine with goods and supplies for stations farther west, but the
-two boys had a few minutes' conversation with the Chief Trader. Louis
-told the story and Walter corroborated it. The trader looked grave and
-shook his head perplexedly. The charge against Murray,--stealing supplies
-and exchanging them for goods with which to trade on his own
-account,--was a serious one. Could it be proved? The trader did not doubt
-the story of the contents of the bundle, but Murray might have come by
-the things honestly and for a legitimate purpose.
-
-"He is due here to-day to go with the Assiniboine brigade," the trader
-explained, "but I have seen nothing of him. You have no proof that he
-took the pemmican and substituted the bag of clay. If he denies it, the
-only thing I can do is to report the matter to Norway House at the first
-opportunity. They ought to know whether anyone exchanged pemmican for
-goods while your brigade was there. Of course Murray didn't make the
-bargain himself. Someone else did it for him. It won't be necessary to
-mention your names at present, to Murray I mean. You would find the Black
-Murray a bad enemy."
-
-"Yes," Louis agreed. "He does not love either of us now. I thank you,
-M'sieu."
-
-"The thanks are due to you, from the Company, for reporting this matter.
-Don't you want to sign for the Assiniboine voyage? We can use you both."
-
-Walter shook his head. He had had quite enough voyaging for the present.
-Louis answered simply, "No, M'sieu. I go to my mother at Pembina."
-
-
-
-
- XIII
- THE RED-HEADED SCOTCH BOY
-
-
-Instead of continuing on the west bank of the Red River and crossing the
-Assiniboine, the cart train turned to the east, followed a well-traveled
-track down to the Red, and forded that river below the Forks. The country
-just south of the Assiniboine was marshy and thickly wooded with willows
-and small poplars. By following the east bank of the Red the almost
-impassable low ground was avoided.
-
-The carts were now on the St. Boniface side, where the stream that Louis
-called _Rivire la Seine_, and the Scotch settlers, German Creek, entered
-the river. Some of the DeMeuron cabins were near at hand, and the Swiss
-who were to remain there were on the lookout for a chance to say good-bye
-to their friends. Walter saw again the red-faced ex-soldier who had
-boasted that he and his comrades were the pick of many countries. He
-carried a gun on his shoulder and looked as if he had been drinking. The
-boy liked him even less than before.
-
-The carts crossed the creek, which was narrow and shallow where it joined
-the river. Ten or twelve miles farther on, they forded the Red again,
-above the mouth of the _Rivire la Sale_, a small, muddy stream coming in
-from the west.
-
-Their way now lay across the open prairie west of the Red River; treeless
-plains such as the Swiss immigrants had never seen before. Trees grew
-along the river bank only. The few elevations in sight seemed scarcely
-high enough to be called hills. This was the fertile, rich soiled land of
-which the new settlers had been told. Its grass ravaged by locusts, dried
-by the sun, withered by frost, in some places consumed by sweeping fires;
-the prairie showed little outward sign of its fertility. The immigrants
-gazed across the yellow-gray expanse and the unsightly black stretches,
-and shook their heads wonderingly and doubtfully. Many a heart was heavy
-with homesickness for native mountains and valleys.
-
-Walter Rossel was not a little heartsick, as he walked beside the loaded
-cart or took a turn at riding on the shafts and driving the shaggy pony.
-He was trudging along, absorbed in his own thoughts, when he was startled
-by the sudden dash of a horse so close that he instinctively jumped the
-other way. Looking up, he saw a freckled, red-haired lad in a
-Tam-o'-Shanter, grinning cheerfully down from the back of the wiry, black
-pony he had pulled up so short it was standing on its hind legs.
-Instantly Walter recognized the horseman. This red-headed boy was the
-first of the settlers he had seen when the brigade approached the Scotch
-settlement of Kildonan. He was the fisherman who had waved his blue
-bonnet to the boats.
-
-The Scotch lad was greeting Louis as an old friend, and the Canadian
-responded smilingly. "_Bo'jou_, Neil MacKay," he cried. "So your family
-goes again to Pembina."
-
-"What else can we do?" was the question. "We must eat, and there is sure
-to be more food at Pembina this winter than at Kildonan. We will hunt
-together again, Louis."
-
-"Yes, you and I and my other friend here, Walter Rossel."
-
-Walter and Neil responded to this introduction by exchanging nods and
-grins. The red-haired lad dismounted, and, leading his pony, fell into
-step by Walter's side. The conversation of the three was carried on
-principally in French. The Scotch boy had learned that language during
-his first winter at the Red River. That winter, and several of the
-succeeding ones, he had spent at Pembina. Among the French and _bois
-bruls_ he had had plenty of practice in the Canadian tongue. Indeed he
-spoke it far better than English, for his native speech was the Gaelic of
-northern Scotland. Already familiar with Louis' Canadian French, Walter
-had little difficulty in understanding Neil, except when he introduced a
-Gaelic word or phrase.
-
-The Scotch boy answered the newcomer's questions readily and told him
-much about the Colony. Neil had come from Scotland with his father and
-mother, brothers and sisters, before he was nine years old. He was just
-fifteen now. When the MacKays and their companions had reached the Red
-River, they had found the settlement deserted, the houses burned. The
-settlers were gathered together again and spent the winter at Pembina,
-returning to Fort Douglas in the spring. Then came Cuthbert Grant and his
-wild _bois brul_ followers. Governor Semple was killed and Fort Douglas
-captured for the Northwest Company. The colonists, including the MacKays,
-were compelled to go to Norway House. They had returned when Lord Selkirk
-and his DeMeurons arrived and had gone on with their farming.
-
-There were some two hundred settlers at Kildonan now, Neil said, and
-about a hundred DeMeurons along German Creek. How many Canadians and
-_bois bruls_ really belonged at St. Boniface it was hard to tell, they
-came and went so constantly. "They do little farming on the east side of
-the river," the boy remarked. "Hunting and fishing are more to their
-taste. I don't blame them. They can get enough to eat more easily that
-way. Raising crops here is discouraging work. You will learn that soon
-enough."
-
-"Isn't the soil good?" asked Walter. "We were told it was rich."
-
-"Oh, the soil is all right, after you get the ground broken. Breaking is
-hard work though, when you have nothing but a hoe and a spade. There is
-scarcely a plow in the Colony. There hasn't been an ox till just lately.
-The Indian ponies aren't trained for farm work. Things grow fast once
-they are planted, but what is the good of raising them when the
-grasshoppers take them all? I would go to Canada, as so many have done,
-or to the United States, but my father is stubborn. He won't leave
-Kildonan. He has worked hard and he doesn't want to give up his land. Yet
-if the grasshoppers keep coming every year, they will drive even him
-away." Neil shook his red head, his face very sober.
-
-The settlers, he went on to say, had no sheep and few pigs. Until a few
-weeks before, they had had no cattle. Alexis Bailly, a _bois brul_
-trader had come, during the summer, clear from the Mississippi River with
-a herd of about forty.
-
-"He got a good price for the beasts," Neil commented, "but he deserved
-it, after bringing them hundreds of miles through the Sioux country. Why
-the Indians didn't get every one of them I can't understand."
-
-"It was a great feat truly," Louis agreed. "But most of those cattle will
-be killed for food this winter."
-
-"I'm afraid so. It will be hard times in the Colony, and everyone is deep
-in debt to the store now."
-
-"The prices are high there I hear," Louis remarked.
-
-"High? Yes, and that's not the worst of it. The Colony store isn't run
-honestly. So many of the settlers can't read or write, it is easy to
-cheat them. My father can write and he keeps account of everything he
-buys, but they won't let him have anything more until he settles the bill
-they have against him. Half of that bill is for things he never had, and
-he swears he won't pay for what he didn't buy."
-
-"I should think not," cried Walter indignantly. "Why doesn't he appeal to
-the Governor?"
-
-Neil laughed shortly. "He tried, but it did him no good. If the Governor
-doesn't do the cheating himself, he winks at it. Governor 'Grasshopper'
-is one of the Colony's worst troubles. He thinks he is a little king,
-with his high-handed ways, and the court he keeps at Fort Douglas, and
-the revels he holds there."
-
-"We heard something of that last night."
-
-"Aye, it's no uncommon thing. McDonnell is not the man to be at the head
-of the Colony. We're all hoping he won't last much longer. Many
-complaints have been made to the Company, to Nicholas Garry and Simon
-McGillivray when they were here in the summer, and even by letter across
-the sea."
-
-The prairie track the carts followed ran well back from the wooded river
-banks. As the sun was setting behind a far distant rise of land across
-the plain, the guide turned from the trail. The squeaking carts followed
-his lead, bumping, pitching, and wobbling over the untracked ground.
-Supposing that Lajimonire was seeking the shelter of the woods, Walter
-was surprised when the guide reined in his mount at a distance of at
-least a half mile from the nearest trees. His cart stopped also and the
-flag it bore was lowered, as a signal to the rest of the train. Camp was
-to be made on the prairie in the full sweep of the sharp northwest wind.
-
-"This is a poor place it seems to me," the Swiss boy commented. "Farther
-over, among the trees, there would be shelter, and plenty of wood."
-
-"Lajimonire prefers the open. It is safer."
-
-"What is there to fear?"
-
-"Nothing probably, but we can't be sure." Neil MacKay spoke quietly but
-seriously. "Out here on the prairie, we can see anyone approaching."
-
-"You mean Indians? I thought the Saulteux and Crees were friendly."
-
-"They are. Lajimonire is thinking about Sioux. Whether the Sioux are
-friendly or not is an open question just now. Didn't you hear what
-happened at Fort Douglas a few weeks ago?"
-
-"The visit of the Sioux?" questioned Louis. "I was told of it last night
-at St. Boniface. It was a most unfortunate affair."
-
-"What was it?" Walter asked. "I didn't know the Sioux ever came to Fort
-Douglas. Louis told me their country was farther south."
-
-"So it is," replied the Scotch lad. "A Sioux seldom ventures this far
-down the Red River nowadays, but a party of them did come clear to the
-fort a while ago. They said they had heard how fine the Company's goods
-were and what generous presents the traders gave. So they came to pay a
-visit to the Hudson Bay white men. They were friendly, almost too
-friendly. They expected drink and gifts. The Governor was away, and one
-of the Company clerks was in charge. He didn't know just what to do with
-such dangerous guests. He told them there wasn't any rum in the fort, and
-gave them tea instead. Then he fed them and distributed a few trinkets
-and little things. If they would go back to their own country, he said,
-the Company would send traders to them with goods and more presents."
-
-"The Company will get into trouble with the American traders if goods are
-sent to the Sioux country beyond the border," Louis commented.
-
-"Yes, but he had to promise something to get rid of the fellows. If they
-stayed around, he was afraid of trouble with the Saulteux. The Sioux
-seemed satisfied when they left the fort. But several Saulteux were
-hiding in ambush in the fort garden. They fired on the Sioux, killed two,
-and wounded another, then escaped by swimming the river and dodging
-through the willows. Of course the Sioux were furious. They said the
-white men had given the Saulteux powder and shot to kill friendly
-visitors. One of them boasted to a _bois brul_ from St. Boniface,--who
-is part Sioux himself and speaks their language,--that they were going
-back to the fort to scalp the clerk. The half-breed went right to the
-fort with the story. Things looked serious. If the party of Sioux had
-been larger they might have attacked the fort or massacred all of us, but
-they knew they were far outnumbered. Somehow they learned that the men in
-the fort had been warned of their plot. They decamped suddenly, and
-nothing more has been seen of them. Probably they have gone back to their
-own country, but no one knows. They may be hiding somewhere waiting for a
-chance to attack any Saulteur or _bois brul_ or white man who comes
-along."
-
-Louis nodded soberly. "When an Indian seeks revenge he is not always
-careful what man he strikes. Lajimonire does well to camp in the open."
-
-Neil's story had sent a chill up Walter's spine. Hardship he had become
-used to during the journey from Fort York, hardship and danger from the
-forces of Nature; water and wind, cold and storm. But this was the first
-time in his life that real peril from enemy human beings had ever
-confronted him. He had known of course that there might be danger from
-Indians in this wild land to which he had come, but he had never actually
-sensed that danger before. He glanced towards the woods, and saw, in
-imagination, half naked, copper colored savages concealed in the shadows
-and watching with fierce eyes the approaching carts.
-
-Although camp was pitched out of musket range from that belt of trees,
-the woods nevertheless must be penetrated. The beasts must be taken to
-the river. Water and fuel must be brought back. After listening to Neil's
-story, Walter was surprised at the apparent light-hearted carelessness of
-the men and boys who started riverward with the horses and cattle. Neil
-had a cow and three ponies to water, and he offered one of the latter to
-Walter.
-
-"Ride the roan," he advised, "if you're not used to our ponies. He is
-older and better broken."
-
-Neil took for granted that Walter wanted to go with Louis and himself,
-and the Swiss boy, who was far from being a coward, did not think of
-declining. He had not been on a horse for several years, but before his
-apprenticeship to Mr. Perier, he had been used to riding. The roan was
-unusually well broken and sedate for a prairie pony. Though obliged to
-ride bareback and with only a halter instead of bridle and bit, Walter
-had no trouble with the animal. The horse knew it was being taken to
-water and needed no guidance to keep with the other beasts.
-
-The boy could not help a feeling of uneasiness as he approached the
-woods, and he noticed that Louis, though he seemed to ride carelessly,
-kept one hand on his gun. The irregular cavalcade of mounted men and boys
-and loose animals passed in among the trees,--sturdy oaks, broad topped
-elms, great basswoods, which Louis called _bois blanc_,--white wood,--and
-Walter _lindens_. All were nearly leafless now, except the oaks, which
-retained part of their dry, brown foliage, but the trunks stood close
-enough together to furnish cover for any lurking enemy. Without alarm,
-however, the animals threaded their way through the belt of larger growth
-to the river bank. The steep slopes and narrow bottom were covered with
-smaller trees and bushes, aspen poplar, wild plum and cherry, highbush
-cranberry, saskatoon or service berry, prickly raspberry canes, and,
-especially along the river margin, thick willows.
-
-Following a track where wild animals had broken a way through the bushes
-and undergrowth, dogs, cattle, horses, and men made their way down the
-first slope, along a shelf or terrace, and on down a yet steeper incline
-to the river bottom. The sure-footed, thirsty beasts made the descent in
-quick time, and crashed eagerly through the willows to the water. The Red
-River ran sluggishly here. It was smooth and deep, with muddy shores. In
-the dried mud along the margin were the old tracks of the animals that
-had broken the trail down the slope.
-
-When the boys had dismounted to water their horses, Louis pointed out the
-prints, which resembled those of naked feet. "Somewhere near here," he
-said, "the bears must cross. They have regular fords. Once in the fall I
-watched a band of bears cross the Pembina. I was up in a tree and I
-counted nineteen, old and young, but I was too far away for a good shot."
-
-The bear tracks led up stream. Leaving the horses to bathe and splash,
-Louis and Walter, who preferred to drink at a less muddy spot, pushed
-their way among the willows. A hundred yards up stream, they came to a
-bend and shallows, caused by a limestone cliff.
-
-"This is the bears' fording place," said Louis, "and a good one too. Not
-only bears but men have been here," he added quickly, "and not long ago.
-Look."
-
-On the bit of beach at the base of the cliff lay a little heap of charred
-wood and ashes. Near by, clearly imprinted in the damp sand, were foot
-tracks and marks that must have been made by the bow of a boat.
-
-"Indians?" questioned Walter, the chill creeping up his spine again.
-
-"Or white men," Louis returned. "These are moccasin prints, but the color
-of the feet inside those moccasins I know no way to tell. There were two
-men, that is plain, and one is tall, I think, for his feet are long. They
-were voyaging, those two, and stopped here to boil their tea. They have
-not been gone many hours. That fire was burning since last night's
-frost." The Canadian boy's tone was careless. His curiosity had in it no
-suggestion of fear.
-
-Walter was more concerned. "Those Sioux," he ventured. "Do you
-suppose----"
-
-"No, no," came the prompt reply. "The Sioux had horses. They didn't come
-by river. Sioux seldom travel by water. These men were white, or _bois
-bruls_, or Saulteux, or other Ojibwas. They had a birch canoe. No clumsy
-wooden boat or dugout made that mark." Louis examined the footprints
-again. "That one man is a big fellow truly. See how long his track is."
-The boy placed his own left foot in the most distinct of the prints. "He
-must be as tall as _le Murrai Noir_."
-
-
-
-
- XIV
- PEMBINA
-
-
-Without alarm or hint of lurking enemy, men and beasts made their way
-slowly up the steep river bank and through the woods to the prairie. The
-carts, shafts out, had been arranged in a circle, and within this
-defensive barricade camp had been pitched. Families fortunate enough to
-have tents had set them up. Others had devised shelters by stretching a
-buffalo skin, a blanket, or a square of canvas over the box and one wheel
-of a cart. The ponies, hobbled around the fore legs or staked out with
-long rawhide ropes, were left to feed on the short, dry prairie grass,
-and to take care of themselves, but the few precious oxen and cows were
-carefully watched and guarded against straying.
-
-With the fuel brought from the woods fires were kindled within the
-circle. Kettles were swung on tripods of sticks or on stakes driven into
-the hard ground and slanted over the blaze. Pemmican and tea had been
-supplied to the Swiss. The older settlers had, in addition, a little
-barley meal for porridge and a few potatoes which they roasted in the
-ashes. Louis and Walter eked out their scanty supper with a handful of
-hazelnuts that had escaped the notice of the squirrels in the woods. The
-autumn was too far advanced for berries of any kind.
-
-After the meal, Walter made the acquaintance of the MacKay family, Neil's
-burly, red-bearded father, his mother, his two sisters, and next younger
-brother. The eldest brother, who was married, had gone to Pembina nearly
-a month earlier. Mrs. MacKay, a tall, thin woman with a rather stern
-face, spoke little French, but with true Highland hospitality she made
-Walter and Louis welcome to the family fire. Wrapped in a blanket and
-knitting a stocking, she sat on a three-legged stool close to the blaze.
-At her right was her older daughter patching, by firelight, the sleeve of
-a blue cloth capote. On the other side, the father was mending a piece of
-harness, cutting the ends of the rawhide straps into fine strips and
-braiding them as if he were splicing a rope. Neil too was busy cleaning
-and oiling his gun, and his younger brother, a sandy-haired lad of ten,
-was whittling a wooden arrow. The two little children had been put to bed
-in a snug nest of blankets and robes underneath the cart. The sight of
-this family gathering around the fire gave Walter a feeling of
-homesickness and loneliness that brought a lump to his throat. The
-feeling deepened as he and his companion strolled from cart to cart and
-fire to fire. Everyone in the camp but Louis and himself had his own
-family circle, and Louis was on the way to home and mother.
-
-It was the Lajimonires who gave the two boys the warmest welcome and
-made the Swiss lad forget his homesickness. They were old friends of the
-Brabant family, and Louis called Madame Lajimonire "_marraine_." She had
-acted as his godmother when Pre Provencher baptized him. Indeed she was
-godmother to so many of the Canadian children at St. Boniface and Pembina
-that the younger members of the two settlements seldom called her by any
-other name. There was no Indian blood in Marie Lajimonire, and she had
-lived in the valley of the Red River longer than any other white woman.
-Several years before the first band of Selkirk settlers had reached the
-forks of the Assiniboine and the Red, she had come with her husband to
-the Red River country from Three Rivers on the St. Lawrence. When, in
-1818, the Roman Catholic missionaries, Father Provencher and Father
-Dumoulin, had arrived in the Selkirk Colony, Madame Lajimonire had
-received them with warmth and enthusiasm. She was a devout member of
-their church, and she gladly stood sponsor for the Canadian and _bois
-brul_ children brought to the priests for baptism. Louis had a warm
-affection for his _marraine_, and Walter took an immediate liking to her
-and her family.
-
-One of the Lajimonire children was a girl of about Elise Perier's age, a
-slender, black-haired, red-cheeked girl named Reine. When Reine, somewhat
-shyly, questioned the Swiss boy about his long journey from Fort York, he
-told her of Elise and Max and Mr. Perier, and how anxious he was about
-their welfare.
-
-"Oh, we will all help to make them comfortable and happy when they come
-to Pembina," Reine eagerly assured him. "It will be delightful to have a
-new girl, just my age, who speaks French. The Scotch girls are so hard to
-talk to, when you don't know their language or they yours. I shall like
-your sister I know, and I hope she will like me."
-
-At Louis' urging, Jean Baptiste Lajimonire told Walter of the greatest
-adventure of his adventurous life. In the winter of 1815 and '16 he had
-gone alone from Red River to Montreal. He carried letters to Lord
-Selkirk,--who had come over from England,--telling how the Northwesters
-had driven away his colonists. All alone, the plucky voyageur faced the
-perils and hardships of the long wilderness journey. He came through
-safely, to give the letters into Lord Selkirk's own hands and relate to
-his own ears the story of the settlers' troubles. Lajimonire told his
-tale well, and the boy forgot his own perplexities as he listened. Not
-until the story was finished did Walter realize how late the hour was,
-long past time to seek his blanket. Madame Lajimonire and the children
-had already disappeared under their buffalo skin shelter, Louis had
-stolen quietly away, and the whole camp was wrapped in silence.
-
-Walter thanked the guide, said good night, and hurried back to his own
-camping place. The horses and cattle had been brought within the circle
-and picketed or tied to cart wheels. The settlers were taking no chance
-of Indian horse thieves making away with their beasts. Everyone in the
-camp, except the guards stationed outside the barricade, was sleeping,
-and the fires were burning low. The night was dark, without moon or
-stars. How lonely and insignificant was this little circle of carts, with
-the prairie stretching around it and the vast arch of the sky overhead!
-The flickering light of the fires, only partly revealing picketed beasts,
-clumsy carts, and rude shelters, seemed merely to intensify the darkness,
-the vastness, the loneliness beyond.
-
-Not a wild animal, except a few gophers, had been seen all day; the cart
-train was too noisy. But now the wind that swept the prairie brought a
-chorus of voices, the high-pitched barking of the small prairie wolves,
-and the long-drawn howling of the big, gray timber ones. The dogs
-answered, until their masters, waking, belabored them into silence. The
-camps along the rivers and the shores of Lake Winnipeg had seemed remote
-enough from civilization, but not one had impressed the mountain-bred lad
-with such an overwhelming sense of loneliness as did this circle of carts
-on the prairie.
-
-He found Louis already asleep, and crawled in beside him. There he lay,
-listening to the wolves and, when their howlings ceased for a time, to
-the faint and far-away cries of a flock of migrating birds passing high
-overhead. Then he drifted away into sleep.
-
-The approach of dawn was beginning to gray the blackness in the east when
-every dog in the camp suddenly began to growl. The horses grew restive,
-neighing and moving about. Startled wide awake, Walter, thrilling at the
-thought of a Sioux attack, asked his comrade what the matter was. Louis
-did not know. He had thrown aside his blanket and was crawling out from
-under the cart. As Walter followed, he heard the guide calling to the
-watchers beyond the barricade. The guards replied that all was quiet on
-the prairie. They could see nothing wrong, discern no moving form.
-
-For a few minutes everyone in the camp was awake, anxious, excited, but
-nothing happened, no war whoop came out of the darkness. The dogs ceased
-growling, the ponies neighing, and soon all was silence again. What had
-caused the alarm, whether prowling wild beast or skulking man, or the
-mere restlessness of some sleepless dog or nervous horse, no one could
-tell.
-
-The camp was astir before the sun was up, and the first task was to water
-the horses and cattle. Louis remained behind to get breakfast while
-Walter rode the pony to the river.
-
-The late start from Fort Douglas made getting to Pembina that day
-impossible. After plodding along the prairie track and crossing several
-small streams, the cart train passed a cold and stormy night in the open
-beyond the wooded bank of a muddy creek that Louis called Rivire aux
-Marais. Pembina was reached next day in a driving storm of rain, sleet
-and snow.
-
-The Pembina River took its name from _anepeminan_, the Ojibwa term for
-the shrub we call highbush cranberry. The junction of the Pembina with
-the Red was an old trading place. The Northwest men had established
-themselves there before the close of the eighteenth century, and in the
-early years of the nineteenth all three rival companies, the Northwest,
-the Hudson Bay, and the New Northwest or X. Y. Company, as it was called
-by the old Northwesters, maintained posts a short distance from one
-another. Those old posts were gone,--burned or torn down,--long before
-the time of this story. The two forts then standing had been built at a
-later date. Fort Daer, the Selkirk Colony post, dated from the autumn of
-1812, when the first of the colonists, under the leadership of Miles
-McDonnell, had come to the Pembina to winter. It stood on the south bank
-of that river near where it empties into the Red. Just opposite, across
-the Pembina, was a former Northwest fort, which had become, since the
-uniting of the companies, a Hudson Bay trading post.
-
-Some of the Scotch settlers and all of the Swiss except Walter were to be
-lodged at Fort Daer until they could build cabins of their own. Louis had
-asked Walter to be his guest. The cart he was driving, which was not his
-own, was loaded with the household goods of some of the settlers, and had
-to be taken to Fort Daer. After leaving the fort, the two boys, carrying
-their scanty belongings in packs, made their way to Louis' home. The
-little village of log cabins was not actually on the Pembina, but near
-the bank of the Red a mile or more from the junction point. The arrival
-at Fort Daer of a cart train from down river was an important event, but
-the abominable weather curbed curiosity, and the boys saw few people as
-they made their way against the storm to the Brabant cabin.
-
-Louis' mother, hoping that he might have come with the party from Fort
-Douglas, was on the lookout for him. Before he could reach the door, it
-flew open. Followed by the younger children and three shaggy-haired sled
-dogs, Mrs. Brabant ran out into the sleet and snow. Very heartily Louis
-hugged and kissed her. When he presented his companion, she welcomed
-Walter warmly. The children greeted him shyly. The dogs, inclined at
-first to resent his presence, concluded, after a curt command and a kick
-or two from the moccasined toe of Louis' younger brother, to accept the
-newcomer as one of the family.
-
-To the Swiss lad, weary, soaked, and chilled through, the rude but snug
-cabin with a fire blazing in the rough stone fireplace, promised a
-comfort that seemed almost heavenly. He had not spent a night or even
-eaten a meal inside a building for many weeks. The warmth was so
-grateful, the smell from the steaming kettle that hung above the blaze so
-appetizing, that for a few minutes he could do nothing but stand before
-the fire, speechless, half dazed by the sudden transition from the wet
-and the bitter cold.
-
-He was roused by Mrs. Brabant who offered him dry moccasins and one of
-the shirts she had been making for Louis during his absence. Walter had a
-dry shirt in his pack, but he accepted the moccasins gratefully. His
-shoes were not only soaked, but so worn from the long journey that they
-scarcely held together. The cabin, one of the best in the settlement,
-boasted two rooms, and Louis' mother and sisters retired to the other one
-while the boys changed their clothes. As soon as they were warm and
-partly dry, supper was served.
-
-The household sat on stools and floor in front of the fire, each with his
-cup and wooden platter. From the bubbling pot standing on the hearth
-Madame Brabant ladled out generous portions. The rich and savory stew was
-made up of buffalo meat, wild goose, potatoes, carrots, onions, and other
-ingredients that Walter did not recognize but enjoyed nevertheless. It
-was the best meal he had tasted in months, and he ate until he could hold
-no more.
-
-The hunters had returned only a few days before from the great fall
-buffalo chase, and there was abundance of meat in the settlement. It was
-during the autumn hunt two years before that Louis' father had been
-accidentally killed, and the Brabant family had not accompanied the
-hunters since that time, but Mrs. Brabant's brother had brought her a
-supply of fresh and dried meat and pemmican. The goose thirteen-year-old
-Raoul had shot, and the potatoes and other vegetables were from the
-Brabant garden. The grasshopper hordes had missed Pembina. Mrs. Brabant
-expressed sympathy for the poor Selkirk colonists who had lost all their
-crops. She listened with lively interest to the boys' account of the trip
-from Fort York, and asked the Swiss lad many questions about his own
-people.
-
-Walter was so grateful for shelter, warmth, food, and the kindly welcome
-he was receiving that he could not have been critical of the Brabant
-family whatever they had been. As it happened, he liked them all
-heartily. He was to discover, within the next few days, that this
-household was considerably superior to most of those in Pembina. The
-interior of the cabin was neat and clean, differing markedly in this
-respect from many of the _bois brul_ dwellings. Her straight black hair,
-smoothly arranged in braids hanging over her shoulders, her dark skin,
-and high cheek-bones betrayed the Ojibwa in Louis' mother, but in every
-other way, especially in her ready smile, lively speech, and alert
-movements, she seemed wholly French. She wore deerskin leggings with
-moccasins, but her dark blue calico dress, belted with a strip of bright
-beadwork, was fresh and clean. Her little daughters were dressed in the
-same fashion, except that Marie, the elder, who was about ten years old,
-wore skirt and tunic of soft, fringed doeskin, instead of calico. The
-dark eyes of both little girls sparkled when Louis, unknotting a small
-bundle wrapped in a red handkerchief, handed each one a length of
-bright-colored ribbon, one red, the other orange, to tie in their long
-black braids. For his mother he brought a silk handkerchief, a gilt
-locket, and a packet of good tea, the kind, he had been told, the Chief
-Factor at Fort York drank. Raoul was made happy with a shiny new knife.
-
-Louis and Walter were tired enough to take to their blankets early. Mrs.
-Brabant and the girls slept in a great box bed, made of hand-hewn boards
-painted bright blue, that stood in the corner of the room where the
-fireplace was. In the smaller room, which was nothing but a lean-to shed
-with a dirt floor, was a curious couch for the boys. It was made of
-strips of rawhide stretched tightly on a frame of poles, and was covered
-with buffalo robe and blankets. This cot Louis shared with Walter, who
-found the rawhide straps not nearly so hard as bare ground. Raoul rolled
-himself in a robe and lay down in front of the fire.
-
-
-
-
- XV
- THE OJIBWA HUNTER
-
-
-Walter was anxious to get a place ready for the Periers, but he found
-that every one of the fifty or sixty log cabins in Pembina was full to
-overflowing. Indeed he marveled at the number of men, women, and children
-of all sizes that could be packed into a one-room cabin. The houses were
-built of logs chinked with clay and moss, and roofed with bark or grass
-thatch, and few had more than one room.
-
-A straggling, unkempt place was the settlement, the cabins set down hit
-or miss, with cart tracks wandering around among them. The tracks and
-dooryards were deep in mud, which was stiff with frost when the boys
-started out that morning. As the sun softened the ground, Walter found
-walking in the sticky stuff something like wading through thick glue, it
-clung to his moccasins so. Gardens were rare. The surroundings of most of
-the cabins were very untidy, cluttered with broken-down carts, disorderly
-piles of firewood, odds, ends, and rubbish of all sorts. Shaggy, unkempt
-ponies, hobbled or staked out, and wolfish looking sled dogs, running
-loose, were everywhere.
-
-The people were most of them _bois bruls_ whose hair, skin, and features
-showed all degrees of mixed blood from almost pure white to nearly pure
-Indian. They seemed good-natured and very hospitable. The merrymaking in
-celebration of the return of the hunt was not yet at an end. Everywhere
-Louis and his companion were urged to share in a feast of buffalo meat,
-to join in a gambling game or in dancing to the scraping of a fiddle. So
-pressing were the invitations that declining was difficult.
-
-The neatest, best kept buildings in the village were the mission chapel
-and presbytery. Father Dumoulin was setting a good example to his flock
-by cleaning up his garden patch. Looking up from his work, he greeted
-Louis by name. The priest was a striking looking man, tall and strong of
-frame, his height emphasized by his long, straight, black cassock. His
-face was strong too. Walter, though not of Father Dumoulin's church, felt
-instantly that here was a man to command the respect of white men,
-half-breeds, and savages. When the priest learned that the boy was one of
-the newly arrived immigrants, he asked a number of questions.
-
-Near Fort Daer, in the edge of the woods bordering the river, a cluster
-of better kept cabins housed some of the more thrifty of the Scotch. In
-one of the largest and best of the houses, the two lads found the MacKay
-family settled for the winter. Neil was eager to arrange for an immediate
-buffalo hunt, but Louis replied that he could not go for a while. There
-were things he must do for his mother, and Walter did not want to be away
-when his friends arrived.
-
-From the MacKay cabin the boys went on to Fort Daer. Like all the forts
-in that part of the world, Daer and Pembina House, the old Northwest
-post, consisted of log stockades enclosing a few buildings. They stood on
-opposite sides of the Pembina and the land about each had been cleared of
-most of its trees and bushes. The Pembina was a good-sized stream, deep,
-sluggish, and like the Red, colored with the mud it carried. At Fort Daer
-Walter talked with some of his countrymen, who were feeling somewhat
-encouraged. They had been well fed, and were grateful for warmth and
-shelter. Real winter, the bitterly cold winter of this northern country,
-might come at any moment now to stay.
-
-If Walter was to hunt to help supply himself and the Periers with food,
-he needed a gun. With Louis he went to the Company store at Pembina House
-to buy one. He could not pay for it in money, but hoped that he might get
-it on credit, paying later in buffalo skins and other furs. The Hudson
-Bay Company frowned on fur hunting as well as on Indian trading by the
-colonists, but the settlers would be obliged to hunt that winter if they
-wished to eat. Louis thought that if Walter agreed to turn over to the
-Company the pelts of the food animals he killed, and not to engage in
-barter with the Indians, he might arrange for a gun and ammunition.
-
-The two were explaining Walter's needs, when an Indian burst suddenly
-into the room. His buckskin clothing was covered with mud. Blood matted
-his black hair and stained one dark cheek which was disfigured by a great
-scar. His eyes glittered, and his manner was wild and excited. The boys
-thought for a moment that he was going to attack the trader. The Indian,
-however, had no weapons,--no gun, hatchet, or knife. He began to talk
-rapidly, angrily. Walter could not understand a word of Ojibwa, but he
-could see that the Indian's speech startled both Louis and the trader.
-The latter replied briefly in the same tongue, then darted out of the
-door, the Ojibwa after him. Before Walter could voice a question, Louis
-was gone too. The Swiss boy turned to follow, hesitated, and decided to
-stay where he was.
-
-In a few moments Louis was back again. "What is it? Are the Sioux
-coming?" Walter asked anxiously.
-
-"No, unless this affair is the work of spies."
-
-"What affair? Could you understand what he said?"
-
-"Most of it. He was so wild it was hard to follow him. He has been
-attacked. He was down at the river loading his canoe. Two men came along.
-While one was talking to him, the other stole up behind him, knocked him
-over the head, and 'put him to sleep.' When he came to his senses, the
-goods he had just bought and his gun and knife were gone. There was a
-hole cut in his canoe. Of course he may be lying. He may have hidden the
-things and made up the story."
-
-"Why would he do that?"
-
-"To get a double supply of goods and ammunition. The trader believes him
-though. He is sending men in search of those two fellows."
-
-When the trader returned he added further details to the story. The
-Ojibwa, he said, was an honest, trustworthy hunter, who had been bringing
-his furs to the Company for several years. He had come alone from Red
-Lake to get his winter's supplies and ammunition. Having finished his
-bargaining, he was loading his boat at the riverside when another canoe,
-with two men, appeared, coming up stream. One of the men shouted a
-greeting in Ojibwa, they turned their boat in to shore, jumped out, and
-engaged him in talk. Entirely unsuspicious of treachery, Scar Face was
-answering one man's questions, when the other struck him from behind and
-knocked him senseless.
-
-"Does he know the fellows?" questioned Louis.
-
-"He never saw them before."
-
-"Could they be Sioux passing themselves off as Ojibwa?"
-
-"No, one was a white man, he says, and the other,--the man who attacked
-him,--was in white man's clothes, but looked like an Indian. He wore his
-hair in braids, had no beard, and spoke like a Cree. He was a very tall
-man, strong and broad shouldered."
-
-"Do you think he is telling the truth?"
-
-"I'm sure he is. Scar Face is a reliable fellow, always pays his debts,
-and has never tried to deceive us in any way. You saw the blood on his
-face. He has a bad cut on the side of his head. One of our men is
-dressing it for him. No, he isn't lying. His description of the men is
-good, and he was not in the fort when they were here."
-
-"They have been here? You know who they are?"
-
-"I think so; beyond doubt. Two fellows answering to the description were
-here this morning and bought some tobacco. They said they had just come
-from St. Boniface with a letter for Father Dumoulin. The white man is a
-DeMeuron, a red-faced fellow with a sandy beard. I don't know his name.
-The other one is a _bois brul_ voyageur called Murray."
-
-"Not Black Murray?" cried Walter.
-
-"That's the name he goes by. You know him?"
-
-"_Vraiment_, we know him," put in Louis emphatically. "So he did not go
-up the Assiniboine with the western brigade, but came this way. He must
-have started before we did, to get here by water so soon. We found his
-tracks and those of his companion, where they had landed to boil their
-kettle. They were ahead of us then. He wasted little time at Fort
-Douglas, _le Murrai Noir_."
-
-"Whatever possessed him to attack that Ojibwa?" queried the puzzled
-trader.
-
-"I think I can guess," replied Louis slowly, "though I know not for sure.
-He wanted the Ojibwa's supplies. He plans, I think, to become a trader.
-To trade he must have some goods to commence with. This is not the first
-time he has obtained them dishonestly." Louis told the story of the
-missing sack of pemmican and Murray's bundle of trade articles.
-
-The Hudson Bay man listened intently and nodded thoughtfully. "That must
-be what the rascal is up to. Well, I have sent men out on horseback, up
-and down the Red River. The thieves haven't come by here on the Pembina.
-They're not likely to show themselves in the neighborhood of the forts.
-Perhaps they will be caught, though I doubt it. They have a good start
-and there is plenty of cover to hide in until the going is safe. It is
-useless to try to overtake them by canoe."
-
-
-
-
- XVI
- LETTERS FROM FORT DOUGLAS
-
-
-The white man and the half-breed were not caught. Had the thieves trusted
-merely to speed in paddling, the men sent out from the post must have
-overtaken them. Even down stream, canoemen, obliged to follow every bend
-and twist of the river, could not make as good time as mounted men riding
-along the bank. Probably the two had crossed to the other shore and had
-concealed themselves and their canoe until the search was over. There was
-little chance that Pembina settlement would see or hear anything more of
-them for a long time.
-
-The Ojibwa being a skilful hunter whose goodwill was worth retaining, he
-was supplied with another outfit. He went away contented with his
-treatment at the post, but seething with desire for vengeance on the men
-who had robbed him.
-
-When questioned, Father Dumoulin said that the white man, Kolbach, had
-brought him a letter from his superior, Father Provencher, at St.
-Boniface. "The Father said in his letter," Dumoulin explained, "that
-Kolbach had just come to tell him that he was going to Pembina. He asked
-if the Father had any message to send me. So Pre Provencher wrote
-hastily, while Kolbach waited. Kolbach is a DeMeuron, a German Swiss. He
-is a wild, unruly fellow who comes but seldom to confession. I felt
-surprised that he had taken the trouble to do Pre Provencher and myself
-a kindness."
-
-Louis and Walter had failed to find an unoccupied cabin that could be
-made ready for the Periers. When Louis suggested that they set to work at
-once to build one, his mother interposed. It would be better to wait, she
-insisted, until the Periers arrived. They could stay in her house for a
-few days. The cabin would be a little crowded to be sure, but there would
-be room enough to make three extra ones comfortable. "Then M'sieu Perier
-can decide where he wishes his house and can help to build it," she
-concluded.
-
-Walter rather doubted if the apothecary would prove of much help in cabin
-building, but he yielded to Mrs. Brabant's decision. He knew she would do
-everything in her power for the comfort of the homeless immigrants.
-
-While he waited for the coming of his friends, Walter helped Louis
-prepare the Brabant home for winter. They put fresh mud chinking in the
-holes between the logs, mended the bark roof, cut firewood and hauled it
-in Louis' cart. The cart itself had to have one new wheel rim. The rim,
-which was about three inches thick, was made in sections, and put
-together without nails. Louis wanted a new dog sled, and Walter would
-need snowshoes. For the sled, thin oak boards were bent at one end by
-steaming them over the big kettle, and lashed together. Louis called the
-affair a _tabagane_, the French version of an Indian word. Nowadays we
-spell it _toboggan_.
-
-The snowshoe frames were of birch wood bent to the required racket form,
-the toes turned up a little to prevent tripping. The netting of sinew,
-Louis explained, must be put in with the greatest care. Where the weight
-of the foot would rest he used a fine mesh of _babiche_ or twisted sinew.
-The ankle and toe loops he was careful to make just the right size to
-slip on and off easily, yet not too loose to hold the foot in the proper
-position. Walter had been trained to use his hands, and he was deft and
-sure with them. He made one of the shoes himself, and did a workmanlike
-job. Learning to walk with the awkward things might be more difficult
-than making them, he thought.
-
-Louis examined his dog harness and shook his head. "The beasts need a new
-harness truly," he said, "but that will have to wait until we can kill a
-buffalo, and get fresh _shaganappy_."
-
-Though the buffalo hunt had been postponed, Walter found plenty of
-opportunity to use his new gun. Migrating flocks of water fowl passed
-every night, and many of them stopped to rest and feed by day along the
-rivers and in the marshes. It was the boys' duty to keep up the food
-supply by shooting as many ducks and geese as possible. The weather was
-now cold enough so the birds could be kept several days. Those that the
-Brabant and MacKay families could not use were disposed of at Fort Daer.
-Neil MacKay and Raoul Brabant, who was almost as good a shot as his elder
-brother, were included in the hunting party.
-
-Every day Walter watched for the Periers. Whenever he heard the creaking
-of a cart, he hoped that another brigade was arriving from Fort Douglas.
-He never went a mile from the settlement without wondering if his friends
-would be there when he came back. As the days passed, he grew more and
-more anxious. Had disaster overtaken the boats of the second division?
-
-One day, just at dusk, as the four hunters were returning along the bank
-of the Pembina, there came to their ears, faintly at first, from the
-prairie to the north, the screeching of ungreased axles. As the noise
-grew louder, the boys realized that such a squawking and screaming could
-never come from two or three carts only. A whole brigade must be
-approaching. Leaving the woods along the river, the lads started across
-the prairie to meet the cart train. They could hear it much farther than
-they could see it in the gathering darkness.
-
-Louis was the first to make out a line of black objects against the sky.
-He and Walter were some distance ahead of their companions when they met
-the guide of the brigade riding in advance. Louis shouted a question and
-the reply in Canadian French came promptly:
-
-"We come from Fort Douglas. We bring some of the new colonists."
-
-At the guide's words, Walter dropped his gun and his birds and ran
-towards the carts. He was too impatient to wait for them to come to him.
-The first vehicle belonged to the guide and his family, but walking
-beside the second was someone Walter knew, Johan Scheidecker. He and the
-Scheidecker boys had shared the same tent at York Factory. As he greeted
-Johan, Walter looked eagerly around for some sign of his friends.
-
-"Where is Monsieur Perier?" he demanded.
-
-"He is not with us."
-
-"Not with you? Why, what has happened?"
-
-"Nothing,--to the Periers," was Johan's reassuring reply. "They remain at
-Fort Douglas. A man named Kolbach has taken them into his house. I have a
-letter for you that will explain it all." He handed Walter a folded
-packet of coarse paper.
-
-The boy was dumbfounded. The possibility that the Periers might not come
-on to Pembina had never occurred to him. It was too dark to read his
-letter, so he fell into step beside Johan and questioned him.
-
-"Are they all right? How did they stand the trip? Are they well?"
-
-"About as well as any of us."
-
-Even in the darkness Walter could see that Johan was very thin. His voice
-was husky, and he plodded along with drooping shoulders and bent head.
-"We were all nearly starved, and some of us were sick, when we reached
-Fort Douglas," he explained. "Elise and Max were as well as any, but
-Perier himself had a bad cough. One of the soldiers who live above the
-fort, a Swiss, took them into his house. My sister Marianne stays behind
-too. She was married to one of those soldiers the morning we left. Tell
-me, can we get food at Fort Daer?" he asked abruptly.
-
-"Oh, yes. Wait a moment." Walter had remembered his gun and birds. He ran
-to where they lay, and, returning, thrust the two fat geese into Johan's
-hands. "Take them," he cried. "They are good eating and we have more."
-
-Walter did not accompany the cart train to Fort Daer. He and the Brabant
-boys made speed to the cabin, where, by the light of a candle of buffalo
-tallow, he read his letters. There were two, one from Mr. Perier, the
-other from Elise. Mr. Perier's was brief. The trip had been a very hard
-one, but he and the children had come through safely. Matthieu had given
-him Walter's note, and he appreciated the boy's thought for their
-comfort. It seemed best, however, for them to remain at Fort Douglas. He
-was suffering with a bad cold and was scarcely able to travel farther.
-One of the DeMeurons had shown them great kindness. He had offered to
-share his cabin with them and had assured them that by hunting and
-fishing he could provide food for all.
-
-"I am disappointed," Mr. Perier wrote, "that I cannot open a shop. All my
-chemical and medical supplies were lost when our boat was wrecked. I
-saved only a few packages of herb seeds that I was carrying in my
-pockets. I intend in the spring to plant an herb garden. Through Matthieu
-I hope to obtain a place in the buffalo wool factory for the winter. Do
-not think that you must come back here to be with us. It would not be
-wise. If you have found food and shelter, remain where you are till
-spring. Then you can return and we will begin cultivating our land. You
-need not be concerned for us, for we have fallen among friends. Our
-nearest neighbor will be Marianne Scheidecker who is to be married
-to-morrow to one of the ex-soldiers. Several of them have found wives
-among our Swiss girls. I would not want a daughter of mine to marry in
-such haste. I am glad Elise is still a little girl."
-
-Elise's letter, dated November 4th, the day of arrival at Fort Douglas,
-told more of the journey. The second division had traveled slowly, and
-with many delays. On September the twentieth another boat from Fort York,
-carrying the Rev. John West, the English clergyman of the Selkirk Colony,
-had overtaken the Swiss. The first of October the weather had turned very
-cold, and some nights the travelers had nearly frozen, especially when
-everything was so wet or frost covered that the fires would not burn. In
-a storm on Lake Winnipeg, the boat the Periers were in was wrecked.
-
-"No one was drowned," wrote Elise, "but we were all soaked, and we lost
-most of our food and blankets and other things. The men had to cut down
-trees and split them into boards to mend our boat, and that took a long
-time. It rained and snowed, and the nights were terribly cold. M. West
-gave Max and me one of his blankets. We had plenty of wood for fires, but
-very little food left, only some barley that we boiled. The weather was
-so stormy the men could not catch fish, but they shot a few birds. We ate
-a big owl and a raven that M. West shot. It was a week before we could go
-on. Then Samuel Scheidecker was taken sick and died, and we stopped at an
-island to bury him. I feel so sorry for the Scheideckers. By the time we
-came to the mouth of the Red River we were starving, but there were
-Indians there, and the chief, Peguis, gave us dried fish."
-
-Elise went on to say that her father had a bad cough and needed a warm
-place to stay. So Sergeant Kolbach had kindly taken them in. "This house
-is only one room with a loft above that has a floor of loose boards and a
-ladder instead of a stairway. But there is a fireplace, and it is warm
-and dry. M. Kolbach sleeps in the loft and lets us have the room. It is
-rather dirty, but I have cleaned it up a little and will do more
-to-morrow. We shall be comfortable here and kind Mr. West wants Max and
-me to go to his school and learn English. We miss you very much, Walter,
-but Father says you must not come back here till spring. We are going to
-be all right now. It is so good to be warm and dry and have enough to
-eat, and in the spring we can be together again."
-
-Walter read this letter aloud to Louis and his mother. "The poor child!"
-Mrs. Brabant exclaimed again and again. At the close Louis said
-earnestly, "That is a brave little girl, your little sister."
-
-Walter was disappointed that his friends were not coming to Pembina, but
-relieved to know that they were safe and comfortable. He was quite ready
-to go back to Fort Douglas and share any hardships they might have to
-undergo, but Mr. Perier had forbidden him to do so. Apprentices in those
-days seldom thought of disobeying their masters. Moreover Walter felt
-that his return to Fort Douglas would probably do more harm than good.
-There was no employment for him, no way to earn a living, and very likely
-the Governor would not let him stay. Louis was strongly against his going
-back.
-
-Walter was not wholly at ease about his friends. "I wonder," he pondered,
-"if that DeMeuron really will provide for them. What will happen if he
-doesn't keep his promise?"
-
-"If there is not food for them they will be sent on here to Pembina
-later."
-
-"Could they make the trip when the snow is deep and the weather very
-cold?"
-
-"Oh, yes. By dog sled the journey is easier and, if the trail is good,
-quicker than by cart. Dogs can travel where ponies can not. Write to your
-friends and tell them if all is not well to send word to you here, and
-you and I will go get them. Ask someone at Fort Daer to send your letter
-the first time anyone goes to Fort Douglas. Every week or so someone
-comes and goes between the two forts. What is the name of that DeMeuron
-they live with?"
-
-Walter glanced at Mr. Perier's letter. "Kolbach, Sergeant Kolbach.
-Louis," he exclaimed, "that was the name of the man with Murray!"
-
-"Kolbach, yes, that was surely his name."
-
-"I wonder if he can be the same man who spoke to me when we landed at
-Fort Douglas. He had a red face and a sandy beard. I don't like it,
-Louis, their living with that fellow!"
-
-"No," the Canadian boy agreed thoughtfully. "We must go to Pre Dumoulin
-and ask him about that Kolbach. He may be a wild fellow, and yet be good
-to your friends. Oh, yes, that is quite possible."
-
-The two boys went to see the priest the next morning. They found him at
-the mission in the little room that served him as bedroom, living-room
-and study.
-
-"Pre Dumoulin," Louis asked, "was the man who brought you that letter
-from Fort Douglas Sergeant Kolbach?"
-
-"Sergeant Kolbach? Oh no," came the prompt reply. "It was Fritz Kolbach,
-the sergeant's brother."
-
-Walter felt relieved. "What kind of a man is Sergeant Kolbach?" he
-inquired.
-
-"Why do you ask?" The priest looked at the boy keenly.
-
-Walter explained, and Father Dumoulin listened with interest.
-
-"Sergeant Kolbach," he said thoughtfully, "is a very different person
-from his younger brother. The sergeant is a man of influence among the
-DeMeurons. I do not know him well, but I should think him a somewhat
-domineering man, used to authority and fond of exercising it, but he is
-quieter, more self-controlled, more steady going than most of the
-DeMeurons. He has usually exercised his influence over his fellows in the
-interest of law and order. I know no reason why you should fear that he
-will not treat your friends well, since he has chosen to take them into
-his house."
-
-"His brother lives with him?" asked Louis.
-
-"I do not think so. Every DeMeuron has his own land, and the Kolbachs are
-too unlike to live together peaceably."
-
-Reassured by Father Dumoulin's information, Walter did not think of
-disobeying Mr. Perier's instructions. At Fort Daer the lad obtained a few
-sheets of paper, and, borrowing quill pen and ink from a good-natured
-apprentice clerk, he wrote a letter to Mr. Perier and another to Elise,
-addressing them in Sergeant Kolbach's care. The clerk promised to send
-them at the first opportunity.
-
-
-
-
- XVII
- CHRISTMAS AT PEMBINA
-
-
-There was no reason now why Walter should hesitate to be away from the
-settlement, yet the proposed buffalo hunt was postponed again. The
-animals were far from Pembina that autumn. For miles to the south and
-west, the prairie had been swept by fires started by careless Indians or
-half-breeds who had allowed their camp fires to spread. In that blackened
-desolation there was no feed for buffalo. The boys had expected to go
-beyond the burned country in search of the herds, but, before they were
-ready to start, a heavy fall of snow made horseback travel impossible.
-Storm winds swept the prairie, and Louis shook his head at the prospect.
-
-"This will drive the beasts yet farther away," he said. "They will go
-where the snow is not so deep and where there are trees for shelter. We
-could travel with dog sleds of course, but we might search for long to
-find buffalo, and to hunt them on foot is much more difficult than on
-horseback. But perhaps this snow will not last."
-
-With the coming of deep snow Walter was given his first lessons in
-snowshoeing and dog driving. Learning to walk with the clumsy rackets was
-not easy, he found. He got more than one tumble before he mastered the
-art. Driving a dog sled looked simple enough, when Louis hitched up his
-dogs and took his little sisters for a ride. The three animals differed
-considerably in size, appearance and breed, but worked well together.
-Hitched tandem, they were off with a dash, the little bells on their
-harness jingling merrily. They followed a trail already broken by other
-sleds, and Louis ran alongside shouting and flourishing his whip. After a
-turn on the prairie, they were back again.
-
-"Come, you shall have a ride now," Louis said to Walter, as the little
-girls,--cheeks red and black eyes sparkling,--unrolled themselves from
-the fur robes.
-
-Curious to try this new mode of travel, Walter seated himself on the
-robes. "_Marche donc_," cried Louis, and the team was away, the toboggan
-slipping smoothly over the well-packed trail. Running alongside or
-standing behind Walter on the sled, Louis urged his dogs to their best
-speed. When, after a first spurt, they slowed to a steadier pace, he
-suggested that Walter try driving.
-
-"Stay where you are. You don't need to get up. There must be weight to
-hold the _tabagane_ down." Handing Walter the whip, Louis stepped off the
-sled.
-
-Louis seemed to manage the team easily, and Walter had no doubt of his
-own ability to drive. He shouted to the dogs in imitation of his friend,
-and, waving the long whip high in air, flicked the leader's back with the
-lash.
-
-The dogs must have noticed the difference in the voice. They must have
-sensed the awkwardness and inexperience of the new driver. Without
-warning, the leader,--a woolly haired, bushy tailed beast with fox-like
-head and sharp pointed ears,--swerved from the trail into untracked snow.
-In vain Walter tried to get him back on the track. The dogs were out for
-a frolic and they had it. They bounded and floundered through the soft
-spots and raced across hard packed stretches. The prairie, Walter
-discovered, was by no means so smooth as it looked. The wind had swept
-the snow into waves and billows. The toboggan mounted the windward side
-of a snow wave, balanced on the crest, and bumped down abruptly. Shouts
-and commands were of no avail. Walter could but cling to the swaying,
-jouncing, skidding sled, and let the dogs go where they would.
-
-Suddenly the beasts concluded they had had about enough of the sport. It
-was time for the grand climax. With a quick turn, they swung about
-towards home. The toboggan turned too, clear over, and Walter went
-sprawling. When he picked himself up, the provoking animals were sitting
-quietly in the snow, more or less tangled up in their traces, tongues
-hanging out, laughing at him. Louis, shouting hilariously, came running
-up on his snowshoes to right the toboggan.
-
-For a moment Walter was angry. "You knew what would happen," he cried
-accusingly. "What did you do to make them act that way?"
-
-"No, no," laughed Louis. "I did nothing. Askim knew you had never driven
-before, and so he played you a trick. He is a wise dog, Askim, but he
-deserves a beating."
-
-The leader of the team was a hardy, swift, intelligent beast, almost pure
-Eskimo, as his name indicated. The other dogs were of more mixed breed.
-Both had sharp muzzles and thick, straight hair, brown with white spots
-on one, dark wolf-gray on the other. Louis was proud of the husky, whom
-he had raised from puppyhood. Nevertheless he picked up his whip and
-started towards Askim.
-
-Walter, his flash of anger past, intervened. "No, don't thrash him. He
-was just having a little fun. He has taken the conceit out of me, but
-I'll get even with him yet. I'll learn to drive those dogs and make them
-behave."
-
-Louis was still grinning. "Truly you will learn," he hastened to say,
-"and--well--perhaps," his grin broadened, "I might have told you more
-before you tried this first time. Next time it will go better."
-
-It did go better next time, and before the winter was over, Walter could
-handle the dogs satisfactorily, though they never obeyed him as well as
-their real master.
-
-The snow remained, and the buffalo did not return to the neighborhood of
-Pembina. Winter had set in in earnest, but Walter was used to cold
-winters and the Brabant cabin was snug and comfortable. Even the bitter
-winds that swept the prairie could not find an entrance between the well
-chinked logs.
-
-The Swiss lad cherished the hope of spending Christmas with the Periers.
-He planned to go to the Selkirk settlement with a dog train that expected
-to leave Fort Daer December twenty-first or twenty-second, but he was
-disappointed. A hard snowstorm, a genuine blizzard, with a high wind out
-of the north, prevented the sleds from getting away, and he was forced to
-remain in Pembina.
-
-On Christmas morning he went with the Brabant family to Father Dumoulin's
-mission. There was no Protestant church in Pembina, he liked and
-respected Father Dumoulin, and he did not want to hurt Mrs. Brabant and
-Louis by refusing to go with them. The boy was surprised to see how
-crowded the mission chapel was with the Canadians and _bois bruls_, men,
-women, and children. Very reverently and devoutly the rough, half savage
-hunters and voyageurs joined in the service and listened to the priest's
-words.
-
-The rest of the day the simple, light-hearted people of Pembina
-celebrated in a very different fashion, feasting, dancing, gaming, and
-drinking. Gambling and fondness for liquor were the besetting sins of the
-half-breeds as well as of the Indians, though Father Dumoulin was trying
-hard to teach them to restrain these passions.
-
-Walter had come to know the rough, wild, but generous and hospitable
-_bois bruls_ well. He could not decline all their invitations to join in
-the merrymaking. Moreover he was young, and homesick, and he wanted to
-share in the festivities. He went with Louis and Neil MacKay to several
-of the cabins during the afternoon and early evening, where the three ate
-as much as they could manage of the food pressed upon them. The gaming
-was carried on principally by the older men, the younger ones preferring
-to dance. With a little diplomacy, drinking could be avoided without
-giving offence. Louis and Neil, as well as Walter, had been brought up to
-be temperate. They did not hesitate to take part in the dancing.
-
-Never had Walter seen such lively, agile jigging as some of the lithe,
-muscular, swarthy skinned half-breeds were capable of. Men and women were
-arrayed in their best, and the dark, smoke-blackened cabins were alive
-with the gay colors of striped shirts and calico dresses, fringed sashes,
-gaudy shawls, silk and cotton kerchiefs, ribbons, and Indian beadwork.
-
-After dancing until they were weary, the three boys slipped away early,
-before the fun grew too fast and furious. Walter found it good to be out
-in the clean, cold air again, away from the heat and smoke and heavy
-odors of the tightly closed cabins.
-
-The night was a beautiful one, clear and windless. To the north and
-northeast, from horizon to zenith, wavering, flashing bands and masses of
-light flooded the sky. Parting with Neil, Louis and Walter trudged
-through the snow towards the Brabant cabin. Both were absorbed in
-watching the aurora borealis, the ever changing rays and columns and
-spreading masses of white, green, and pale pink light, fading out in one
-spot only to flash up in another, in constant motion and never alike for
-two moments in succession. But when he turned from the beauty of the
-night to enter the cabin, there swept over Walter, in a great wave, the
-homesickness he had been holding at arms' length all day. He thought of
-the Christmas of a year ago in Switzerland, and he was heartsick for the
-mountains and valleys and forests of his native land,--so different from
-these flat, monotonous prairies,--heartsick for his own people and their
-speech and ways. What kind of a Christmas had this been for Elise and
-Max, he wondered. Were they homesick too?
-
-
-
-
- XVIII
- MIRAGE OF THE PRAIRIE
-
-
-Early in the New Year, Louis, Neil and Walter set out for the Pembina
-Mountains or the Hare Hills, as that ridge of rough land was sometimes
-called. New Year's day, ushered in with the firing of muskets, was
-another occasion for merrymaking and hilarity in the settlement. Indeed
-the feasting, dancing, and gaiety had scarcely ceased day or night since
-Christmas. Many a _bois brul_ family had shared their winter supplies so
-generously with their guests that they had almost nothing left and would
-have to resort to hunting and fishing through the ice. Though they might
-starve before spring, the light-hearted, improvident half-breeds did not
-grudge what had been consumed in the festivities. They would do the same
-thing over again at the first opportunity.
-
-The rapid decrease of supplies in the village gave Louis and Neil excuse
-for a hunting trip, and Walter was ready and eager to go along. At the
-Pembina Mountains they would be sure to find both game and fur animals,
-Louis asserted. He had been there the winter before and had found good
-hunting. On that trip he and his companion had come across an old and
-empty but snug log cabin that had been built by some hunting or trading
-party. He proposed to return to the old camp and stay several weeks.
-
-Walter was the more ready to go because, on the last day of the old year,
-he had received word from the Periers that they were getting along all
-right. The letter, from Elise, was brought by a half-breed who had come
-from St. Boniface to be married on New Year's day to a Pembina girl. Her
-father's cough was much better, Elise wrote. He was working at the
-buffalo wool factory with Matthieu. Max had been disappointed to find
-that Mr. West's school was a good two miles from Sergeant Kolbach's home,
-too far for the little fellow to go and come in cold weather. "But we are
-both of us learning some English without going to school," Elise added.
-
-The cabin was warm, and they had enough to eat, principally pemmican, and
-fish caught in nets set under the ice in the rivers. "You know I did not
-like pemmican," wrote Elise, "but now I am used to it. For Christmas we
-had a feast, a piece of fresh venison, and a pudding made with some wheat
-flour M. Kolbach had saved and with a sauce of melted sugar, the sugar
-the Indians make from the sap of the maple tree. Have you eaten any of
-that sugar, Walter? It is the best thing I have tasted since we came to
-this new land. You wrote to me that I must tell you if everything here
-did not go well. Of course it is not like home in Switzerland. We are not
-as comfortable or as happy as we were there, and sometimes Max and I are
-very lonely and homesick. Father does not complain of the hardships and
-is always planning what we are going to do when spring comes. We keep
-warm, we are well, and we have enough to eat, though we long for bread
-with butter, and milk, and cheese. I get the meals and wash and mend our
-clothes and keep the house clean. M. Kolbach says it is more comfortable
-than before we came. I can't really like M. Kolbach, though I know I
-ought to, it is so good of him to have us here. He is rather harsh to Max
-sometimes, but not to me, and yet I feel a little afraid of him. Isn't it
-strange that we can't like people by just trying to, no matter how hard
-we try? But I am very grateful to M. Kolbach for taking care of us."
-
-This part of the letter troubled Walter a little, but, reading it over a
-second time, he concluded that Elise was merely homesick. Kolbach was
-very likely a rough sort of man, but he must have a kind heart or he
-would not do so much for strangers. There was no mention of the younger
-brother. Probably Elise knew nothing of him. Father Dumoulin thought
-Fritz Kolbach might not be on very good terms with the Sergeant. Perhaps
-after the robbery of the Indian, Fritz had not returned to St. Boniface.
-Undoubtedly the trader at Pembina had sent an account of that affair to
-Fort Douglas. Kolbach and Murray might not dare to show their faces
-there.
-
-The day of their start for the Pembina Mountains, Louis and Walter were
-up before dawn. The morning was still and very cold. After packing their
-few supplies and belongings on the toboggan, the boys passed a long
-rawhide rope, or _shaganappy_, back and forth over the load and through
-the loops of the leather lashing that ran along the edges of the sled.
-Before the work was done their fingers were aching. They were glad to go
-back into the cabin for a breakfast of hot pemmican and tea.
-
-As he went out again, Walter paused on the threshold to stare in
-amazement. The sun was not yet above the horizon, but the whole world had
-changed. He seemed to be standing in the center of a vast bowl. On every
-hand the country appeared to curve upward. And the distance was no longer
-distant! Groves of bare branched trees, streams, heights of land that he
-knew to be miles away had moved in around the settlement until they
-seemed only a few rods distant. To the west the line of hills,--Pembina
-Mountains,--that he had never glimpsed, even on the clearest day, as more
-than a faint blue line on the horizon, loomed up a mighty, flat-topped
-ridge. Once before, in December, Walter had seen the landscape
-transformed, but it was nothing to compare with this. Louis, familiar
-from childhood with the mirage of the prairie, declared he had never
-known such an extraordinary one.
-
-Awed and wondering, the two lads stood gazing about them. Turning to the
-east, they watched a spreading ray of crimson light mount the sky from
-the soft, low lying, rose and gold bordered clouds at the horizon. The
-sun was coming up. As the horizon clouds reddened and the rim of the
-glowing disk appeared, an exclamation from his companion caused Walter to
-wheel about.
-
-Louis was pointing at two men and a dog team gliding through the
-air,--upside down! Every detail was startlingly clear, capotes with hoods
-pulled up, sashes, buckskin leggings, snowshoes. The driver with the long
-whip looked very tall. He belabored his dogs cruelly. It seemed to Walter
-that he ought to hear the man's shouts and curses, the howls and whines
-of the abused beasts. He could see their tracks in the snow, and a fringe
-of trees beyond them,--everything inverted as if he himself were standing
-on his head to watch men and dogs moving across the prairie. As he
-watched, the figures grew to gigantic stature, the outlines became
-indistinct. They vanished altogether. The sun was above the clouds now.
-The distance grew hazy. Only part of the chain of hills was visible.
-Louis turned to Walter, excitement in his voice.
-
-"I think those men go to the mountain too," he said. "Do you know how far
-away they are?"
-
-Walter shook his head. He felt quite incapable of estimating distance in
-this fantastic world, where things he knew to be miles away were almost
-hitting him in the face.
-
-"At least fifteen miles," declared Louis impressively.
-
-"Impossible. We couldn't see them so plainly."
-
-"And yet we have seen them. The mirage is always unbelievable."
-
-"What is it anyway, Louis? What causes it?"
-
-The Canadian lad shrugged his shoulders. "The Indians say the spirits of
-the air play tricks to bewilder men and make them wander off the trail to
-seek things that are not there. Once I asked Father Dumoulin and he said
-the spirits had nothing to do with it. He called it a false effect of
-light, but that does not explain it, do you think?"
-
-Again Walter shook his head.
-
-"This I have noticed," Louis went on. "I have never seen the mirage in
-winter except at dawn or sunset. In summer I have seen it in the middle
-of the day when it was very hot and still. But why it comes, winter or
-summer, I do not know."
-
-Neil's arrival stirred the others to action. The dogs were harnessed and
-good-byes said to Louis' mother and sisters and rather sulky younger
-brother. Raoul wanted to go too, but one of the boys was needed at home.
-
-Fresh and full of spirits, the dogs set off at such a pace that the boys
-had all they could do to keep up. When they left the trail and took to
-the untracked snow, speed slackened considerably. Louis now went ahead of
-the team, though track breaking was hardly necessary. Underneath an inch
-or more of dry, loose stuff, almost like sand, the snow was well packed
-and held up the dogs and sled. The line of hills had vanished, but the
-mirage did not entirely disappear and the landscape resume its natural
-appearance until the sun had been up nearly two hours.
-
-The day was cold, much colder than the lads realized at first, for, when
-the start was made and for some time thereafter, there was not a breath
-of wind. All three wore fur caps and mittens, woolen capotes, and thick
-knit stockings under their moccasins. Walter had possessed none of these
-things when he came to Pembina, but Mrs. Brabant had made him a capote
-from a Hudson Bay blanket and a cap and mittens from a rather well worn
-bearskin. She had knit warm, new stockings for both boys from yarn bought
-at the trading post. A prickling feeling in his nose was Walter's first
-warning that his flesh was freezing. Stooping for a handful of snow, he
-rubbed the prickly spot to restore circulation, and pulled the hood of
-his capote farther around his face.
-
-Their course at first lay to the north of the Pembina River, over flat
-prairie without an elevation high enough to be called a hill. On that
-January morning, the whole plain was a stretch of dazzling white. In the
-distance it appeared level, but it was actually made up of rolling snow
-waves. It was, Walter thought, like a great lake or sea, the waves of
-which had suddenly frozen while in motion and turned to snow instead of
-ice.
-
-
-
-
- XIX
- BLIZZARD
-
-
-As the sun rose higher the wind began to blow. The loose surface snow was
-set in motion, crawling and creeping up the frozen waves. The wind gained
-in strength, and everywhere the plain seemed to be moving. The glitter
-was less trying to the eyes now, for the sun had grown hazy. Louis
-glanced up at the sky, shouted to his dogs, sent his long whip flying
-through the air and flicked the leader with the lash.
-
-"A storm comes," he called to his companions. "We must make haste and
-reach the river where it bends to the north."
-
-With the increase of speed, Walter, less experienced in this sort of
-travel than his comrades, found keeping up difficult. Neither with nor
-without snowshoes was he the equal of the swift, tireless Louis. Neil too
-was his superior on snowshoes, though on bare ground Walter could outrun
-the Scotch boy. In spite of all his efforts he fell behind. Seeing his
-difficulty, Louis suggested that he ride for a while, standing on the
-rear of the sled. Glad though he was of a few minutes' rest, Walter did
-not ride long. The northwest wind soon chilled him through, and he was
-forced to run to warm himself.
-
-The dogs' pace was slackening. The course was due west, and the wind,
-striking them at an angle, slowed their progress. The surface snow,
-caught up by the gale, drove against and swirled about beasts and boys.
-
-Walter plodded after the others, head lowered, capote hood pulled down
-over his cap to his eyes. Suddenly he realized that the fine, driving,
-blinding stuff that struck against him with such force and stung wherever
-it touched his bare skin, was not merely the fallen snow whipped forward
-by the wind. Snow was falling,--or being lashed down upon him,--from
-above. The sunshine was gone. The distance, the sky were wholly blotted
-out. He and his comrades were in the grip of a hard northwest storm, a
-genuine prairie blizzard.
-
-Louis was having his hands full trying to keep a straight course. All
-landmarks blotted out, the wind was the only guide, and the dogs were
-continually edging away from the bitter blast. The French boy, of a
-naturally kind disposition and brought up by a good mother and a father
-who had no Indian blood, was far more humane than most dog drivers. He
-never abused his beasts, and he punished them only when discipline was
-necessary. Now, however, he was compelled to use the whip vigorously to
-keep them from swinging far to the south. Shouts and commands, drowned
-out by the roaring of the wind, were of little avail.
-
-Dogs and boys struggled on in the driving wind, the bitter cold, and the
-blinding snow; and the struggle saved them from freezing. The snow was
-coming so thick and fast they could see only a few feet in any direction.
-Following behind the toboggan, Walter could not make out Askim or the
-second dog. The third beast, next to the sled, was but a dim shape. Louis
-and Neil took turns going ahead of Askim. While one was breaking trail,
-the other wielded the whip and tried to keep the dogs in the track.
-
-Plodding on through a white, swirling world, fighting against wind and
-snow, his whole mind intent on keeping the shadowy, moving forms in
-sight, his feet feeling like clogs of wood, his ankles and calves aching
-with the unaccustomed exercise of snowshoeing, Walter lost all count of
-time. When the sled stopped, he kept on blindly and nearly fell over it.
-
-Louis seized him by the arm and shouted, "We can go no farther. We can't
-keep a straight course. We must camp here."
-
-Walter tried to look about him. He could see nothing but wind-driven
-snow, not a tree or hill or other sign of shelter. "We'll freeze to
-death," he protested huskily.
-
-"No, no, we will be safe and warm. Kick off your snowshoes and help Neil
-dig."
-
-Walter obeyed, slipping his feet from the thongs. Following the Scotch
-lad's example, he seized one of the shoes and, using it as a shovel,
-began to scoop up snow. Louis unharnessed the dogs and unlaced the hide
-cover, almost freezing his fingers in the process. Hastily dumping the
-supplies in a heap, he turned the sled on its side, and joined the
-diggers. In the lee of the toboggan, which kept the drifting snow from
-filling the hole as fast as they dug it out, the three boys worked for
-their lives. Down through the dry, loose surface, through the firm packed
-layer below, to the hard frozen ground, they dug. Scooping out the snow,
-they tried to make a wall, though the wind swept it away almost as
-rapidly as they piled it up.
-
-Working steadily at their best speed, they succeeded at last in
-excavating a hole large enough to hold all three. The heap of supplies
-had been converted into a mound, the toboggan into a drift. Burrowing
-into the mound, the boys pulled out robes and blankets, hastily spread
-them at the bottom of the hole, and threw in their supplies. A long pole,
-that Louis had added to the load just before starting, was laid across
-the hole, one end resting on the toboggan. Clinging to the hide cover to
-keep it from blowing away, they drew it over the pole and weighted down
-the corners with a keg of powder, a sack of bullets, and the steel traps.
-After the edges of this tent roof had been banked with snow to hold it
-more securely, the three lads crawled under it.
-
-When he had recovered his breath, Walter asked, "What has become of the
-dogs?" He had not noticed them since Louis took off their harness.
-
-"Do you think they are lost then?" said their master with a grin. "No,
-they have buried themselves in the snow to keep warm. They have earned a
-meal though, and they shall have it." Seizing three of the frozen fish he
-had brought for the dogs, Louis crawled out into the storm to find and
-feed them.
-
-He was back in a few minutes, huddling among the robes and blankets. The
-hole was none too large. When they sat up straight, their heads nearly
-touched the hide cover, and all three could not lie down at one time. But
-in the snug burrow, with the snow-banked sled to windward, they did not
-feel the wind at all.
-
-Knowing that they might have to camp where there was no fuel to be found,
-Louis had included a few small sticks among their supplies. Shaving one
-of the sticks into splinters, he struck his flint and steel and kindled a
-tiny fire on the bare ground in the center of the shelter. In the cover
-above he cut a little hole for the smoke to escape. Small though the
-blaze was, it sent out heat enough to thaw the boys' stiff fingers and
-feet, and its light was cheering in the dark burrow. Louis melted snow,
-made tea, and thawed out a chunk of frozen pemmican.
-
-By the time the meal was over, Walter found himself surprisingly warm and
-comfortable. He had not supposed he could be so comfortable in such a
-crude shelter. He was drowsy and wanted to take a nap, but one fear
-troubled him and made him reluctant to yield to his sleepiness.
-
-"If the snow covers us over, won't we smother in this hole?" he asked.
-
-Louis shook his head. "There is no danger, I think. Often men overtaken
-by storm camp in the snow like this, and I never heard of anyone being
-smothered. There is not much snow on our tent now. It banks up against
-the toboggan and blows off our roof. But even if we are buried in a
-drift, we can still breathe I think, and we won't freeze while we have
-food and a little wood to make hot tea."
-
-"And the dogs?"
-
-"They will sleep warm, covered by the snow."
-
-Reassured, Walter settled himself as comfortably as he could manage in
-the cramped quarters, and went to sleep. When he woke, he found the
-others both sleeping, Neil curled up in his thick plaid, and Louis in a
-sitting position with his head down on his knees. The fire had gone out,
-and in spite of the blanket in which he was wrapped and the buffalo robe
-spread over Neil and himself, Walter felt chilled through. It was too
-dark in the hole for him to see the figures on his watch. Trying to rub
-some warmth into his cramped legs, he roused Louis.
-
-"How long have I been asleep? Is it night?"
-
-"I think not yet," replied Louis, answering the second question. "It
-grows colder. I will make a fire and we will have some hot tea."
-
-To clear a space for the fire, Louis unceremoniously rolled Neil over and
-woke him. The Scotch lad growled and grumbled at being disturbed, but the
-prospect of hot tea restored his good humor. Looking at his watch in the
-light of the tiny blaze, Walter discovered that it was not yet five
-o'clock. The storm still raged over them.
-
-"Do we get something to eat with this?" Neil asked, as Louis poured the
-steaming tea into his tin cup.
-
-"Not now. We have only a little wood. We must not keep the fire burning.
-Warm your fingers and your feet well before it burns out."
-
-Louis was the leader of the expedition, and Neil did not question his
-decree. The three drew their blankets and robes closer about them, and
-made the most of the hot drink and the tiny fire. They were not sleepy
-now, so they talked, huddled together for warmth.
-
-After a time conversation lagged. They grew silent, then drowsy. Walter
-dropped off, and woke to find Louis kindling another little blaze. It was
-after nine, and the three made a scanty meal of thawed pemmican before
-going to sleep again.
-
-During the night Walter woke several times to rub his chilly body and
-limbs and snuggle closer to his companions. A buffalo robe and a blanket
-lay between him and the ground, his capote hood was drawn over his fur
-cap, he was wrapped in a blanket, and with his companions, covered with
-another robe, yet in his dreams he was conscious of the cold. He did not
-think of complaining. He had slept cold many a night since leaving Fort
-York. In the midst of this howling blizzard, he was thankful to be as
-comfortable as he was and in no immediate danger of freezing.
-
-
-
-
- XX
- A NIGHT ATTACK
-
-
-It must have been instinct that roused Louis and set him to shaving
-kindlings from the last stick of wood, for there was no change in the
-darkness of the hole to indicate that morning had come. The smoke no
-longer found a way out through the hide cover. Though the wood was dry
-and the blaze small, Walter was half choked and his eyes were smarting by
-the time the tea and pemmican were ready.
-
-"We are covered with snow," said Louis as, in changing his position, he
-struck his head against the sagging roof. "But I think the storm is
-over."
-
-He was right. When the three crawled out from under the hide and burrowed
-their way through the drift that covered all but the wind-swept peak of
-their shelter, they found that the flakes had ceased to fall. The wind
-still blew, though not so hard, and swept the dry, fallen snow up the
-wave-like drifts, but the sky was clear and flushed with the red of
-sunrise. It was a world of sky and snow, for the swirling clouds of fine,
-icy particles blotted out the distance.
-
-The boys did not stand gazing about them for long. The morning was too
-bitterly cold for inaction, and they wanted to be on their way.
-Floundering through the drifts, they found the dogs buried in the snow,
-and pulled them, whining piteously, out of their warm nests. Each animal
-bolted his frozen fish, then burrowed for another nap.
-
-Dismantling the almost buried shelter, digging out the toboggan and
-loading it took some time. To fasten the cover over the load, Neil had to
-take off his fur mittens to handle the stiffened lacings, and frosted
-four fingers. He was, as he said, "ready to howl" with the pain when the
-blood began to circulate in them. In the meantime Louis and Walter had
-dug out the whining dogs. Once in the harness, they ceased their
-protests. At the crack of the whip and their master's shout of "_Marche,
-marche_," they were off willingly enough.
-
-"I hope you know where we are and where we're going, Louis," said Neil as
-he fell into line. "I don't."
-
-"I think that must be the river over there where those trees are," Louis
-replied. "We cross it and go on to the west and cross it again. It makes
-a great bend to the north."
-
-The dogs were headed for the line of woods, dimly visible through the
-blowing snow. The trees proved to be on the bank of the Pembina, which
-was crossed without difficulty. The ice was thick and solid beneath its
-snow blanket. Beyond the river was open prairie again, a succession of
-snow waves, up and down, across and through which, boys and dogs made
-their way westward. Both Louis and Neil went ahead to break the track.
-Askim, the intelligent leader of the team, seemed to sense his
-responsibility and kept close behind the snowshoes.
-
-Walter brought up the rear. His ankles were lame, the muscles of his
-calves strained and sore from the snowshoeing of yesterday. He found the
-going quite hard enough, even in the trail made by two pairs of rackets,
-three dogs, and a loaded sled. The sky was clear blue overhead, the
-blowing snow particles glittered in the sunlight, but the sun seemed to
-give out no warmth. The north wind was piercingly cold. The strenuous
-exercise kept body and limbs warm, but in spite of his capote hood Walter
-had to rub and slap his face frequently. His hands grew numb in his fur
-mittens.
-
-Only one stop was made, about mid afternoon, when they reached an _le
-des bois_, or wood island. The thick clump of leafless small trees and
-bushes, though broken and trampled by buffalo, furnished plenty of fuel
-and some protection from the wind. The boys kindled a fire, not a tiny
-flame but a big blaze that threw out real heat. Close around it they
-crouched to drink hot tea and eat a little pemmican.
-
-Heartened by food and drink, they smothered their fire with snow that
-there might be no danger of its destroying the little grove, and resumed
-their march. Higher land came into view through the blowing drift, and
-Louis scanned it eagerly. He admitted that he did not know just where he
-was.
-
-"We should have crossed the river again before this," he said. "Without
-knowing it we have edged away from the cold wind and gone too far south.
-I fear we cannot find the old cabin to-night."
-
-"We must find fuel and shelter," was Neil's emphatic reply.
-
-It was after sunset when the cold and tired travelers reached an abrupt
-rise of wooded ground. Skirting the base of this tree-clad cliff, they
-came to a steep-sided gully, where a small stream, now frozen over and
-snow covered, broke through. The narrow cut was lined with boulders, but
-trees and bushes bordered the stream and grew wherever they could find
-foothold on the abrupt sides among the stones. The gully was drifted with
-snow, but it would provide protection from the bitter wind.
-
-Leaving his comrades with the sled, Louis explored until he found a
-suitable spot, where the almost perpendicular north slope cut off the
-wind. A huge boulder, partly embedded in the bank, would serve as the
-east wall of the shelter. He shouted to his companions, who joined him
-with sled and dogs.
-
-"We will dig out the snow behind this big stone," he explained, "and pile
-it up to make a wall on the other two sides. When we have put the
-toboggan and the hide cover over the top, we shall have a good warm
-lodge."
-
-The three set to work at once, Walter almost forgetting his lameness and
-weariness in his eagerness to complete the queer hut. When it was all
-done but the roof, Neil left the others to unload the sled, while he took
-the ax and climbed the bank to cut firewood.
-
-Before the shelter was finished, darkness had come, and the howling of
-wolves echoed from the hills above. On the narrow strip of frozen, sandy
-ground that had been uncovered, a robe was spread. The fire was kindled
-against the big boulder, which reflected the heat. To the cold and tired
-boys, the hut seemed very snug. Wrapped in blankets, they huddled before
-the blaze, warm and comfortable, even though the heat did not carry far
-enough to make much impression on the two snow walls.
-
-By the time Walter had eaten his portion of melted pemmican and drunk two
-cups of hot tea, he was so sleepy he could not keep his eyes open. Neil
-too was nodding, and Louis was not much wider awake. They replenished the
-fire, and stretched out side by side, feet to the blaze, and heads
-wrapped in their capote hoods.
-
-An excited barking and howling waked Walter suddenly. How could three
-dogs make such an unearthly racket? With a sharp exclamation, Louis freed
-himself from his blanket. In a flash Walter realized that the dogs were
-not guilty of all that noise.
-
-Louis was gone, Neil was following. Walter sprang up, felt for his gun,
-and could not find it. The fire was still smouldering. Remembering that
-wild animals were supposed to be afraid of fire, he seized a stick that
-was alight at one end. As he crawled from the shelter, he knew from the
-sounds that the wolves were attacking the dogs.
-
-The loud report of a gun drowned out for an instant the snarls and
-growls. The dark forms of the beasts could be seen against the white
-snow, but the light was too dim down in the gully to show friends from
-foes. Louis had fired into the air.
-
-Before the echoes of the shot had died away, Walter flung his blazing
-firebrand, with sure aim. It landed among the dark shapes. There was a
-sharp snarl, a quick backward leap of a long, thin body. Neil risked a
-shot. The snarling creature made a convulsive plunge forward, and fell in
-a heap. Black figures, three or four of them, were moving swiftly up the
-gully.
-
-Louis fired again, then called commandingly, "Askim, back!"
-
-The brave husky had started in pursuit of the wolves. At his master's
-command, he paused, hesitated, turned. Louis ran forward to seize the
-dog.
-
-Askim had been hurt, but not seriously. One of the wolves had got him by
-the throat, but the Eskimo's heavy hair had protected him and the skin
-was only slightly torn. The other dogs were uninjured. The actual attack
-had but just begun, when Walter flung his firebrand. The blazing stick
-had struck Askim's attacker on the head, and had made him loose his
-hold. It had frightened the rest of the beasts. Then Neil's quick and
-lucky shot had killed the one wolf almost instantly. The dead animal
-proved,--as the voices of the pack had already betrayed,--that the
-attackers were not the small, cowardly prairie beasts, but big, gray
-timber wolves.
-
-"It was you, Walter, who saved Askim's life," Louis exclaimed
-gratefully. "I didn't dare take aim. I couldn't tell which was wolf and
-which dog. I fired over their heads, hoping to frighten the wicked
-brutes. But you saved Askim. Come, brave fellow," he said to the dog.
-"You shall sleep in the lodge with me the rest of the night."
-
-"Will the wolves come back, do you think?" asked Walter.
-
-"If they do, the dogs will warn us. But I think they will not trouble us
-again. They have lost their leader, and they are well frightened."
-
-The boys were so thoroughly aroused that it was some time before they
-could go to sleep again. But they heard no more of the wolves, and
-finally dropped off, first Neil, then Louis, and finally Walter. Between
-his two companions, Walter slept more warmly than on the night before,
-though he woke several times when the fire had to be replenished.
-
-
-
-
- XXI
- THE BURNED CABIN
-
-
-Before sunrise Louis was stirring and woke the others. When Walter tried
-to move, he found his ankles and calves so stiff and sore that he
-wondered if he could possibly go on with the march. Of course he must go
-on. Louis and Neil seemed as spry as ever. He would not hold them back.
-Pride helped him to set his teeth and bear the pain of getting to his
-feet and moving about. His first few minutes of snowshoeing were agony.
-As he went on, some of the stiffness wore off, but sharp darts of pain
-stabbed foot, ankle, or leg at every step. Doggedly he trudged behind the
-toboggan, thankful that trail breaking through the deep snow prevented
-speed.
-
-Keeping to open, level ground at the foot of the hills, Louis watched for
-familiar landmarks. The day was clear and cold. Going north and
-northwest, the party traveled against the piercing wind. The boys walked
-with heads lowered. The dogs, every now and then, veered to one side or
-stopped and turned about in their traces. Most drivers would have beaten
-and abused the poor beasts for such behavior, but Louis was not without
-sympathy for them. He himself had to turn his back to the wind
-occasionally. With a fellow feeling for the dogs, he encouraged rather
-than drove them. Askim did his best, and the others were usually ready
-to follow him.
-
-What he had seen so far of the Pembina Mountains was a disappointment to
-Walter. He could not understand why anyone should dignify mere low ridges
-and irregular, rolling hills with the name of mountains. Nevertheless,
-after weeks of open prairie, the rolling, partly wooded land looked good
-to him. He felt more at home in broken country.
-
-The wind-driven surface snow obscured the distance, so that landmarks
-were difficult to recognize. In a momentary lull, a line of woods,
-winding out across the plain, was revealed. Louis paused in his trail
-breaking, and turned to call to his comrades.
-
-"There is the river again," he cried. "We came too far to the south, as I
-thought."
-
-"Is the cabin on the river bank?" asked Walter, hoping that the long
-tramp was almost over.
-
-"No, it is in the hills about a mile beyond," was the rather discouraging
-reply.
-
-Walter's heart sank. He had been wondering at every step how long he
-could go on. Could he keep going to that line of trees and then on for
-another mile or more? He must of course, no matter how much it hurt.
-
-Louis, sure of the way now, led to and across the river, then turned to
-the northwest into the broken, hilly country. There they were less
-exposed to the sweep of the wind, but in other ways the going was harder.
-It seemed to Walter that they must have gone at least three miles beyond
-the river, when he heard Louis, who had rounded a clump of leafless
-trees, give a cry of dismay. Following their leader, Walter and Neil
-entered a snug, tree-protected hollow, backed by a steep, sandy slope.
-And all three stood staring at a roofless, blackened ruin.
-
-Louis was the first to recover himself. "This is bad, yes, but the walls
-still stand, and the chimney has not fallen."
-
-"We can rig up some sort of a roof," Neil responded. "It will be better
-than camping in the open."
-
-Walter said nothing. He had expected to find a cabin all ready for
-occupancy, where they could make themselves comfortable at once. Cold and
-suffering sharply with the pain in his feet and legs, his bitter
-disappointment quite overwhelmed his courage.
-
-"Someone has camped here since the blizzard. There are raquette and sled
-and dog tracks, but it is strange,"--Louis, turning towards Walter,
-forgot what he intended to say, seized a handful of snow, made a lunge at
-his friend, and clapped the snow on his face. "Your cheek is frozen. It
-is all white. Rub it,--not so hard, you will take the skin off. Let me do
-it. Neil, cut some wood, dry branches. We will make a fire the first
-thing we do, even if we have no roof over our heads."
-
-Neil took the ax from the sled, and started to obey Louis' order, while
-the latter skilfully rubbed and slapped Walter's stiff, white cheek,
-until it began to tingle.
-
-The log walls of the old cabin were intact. The door, of heavy, ax-hewn
-planks, was only charred. It stood ajar, and Louis pulled it wide open
-and went in, Walter following. There was no snow within, but the hard
-earth floor was strewn with the fallen remains of the roof. Had there
-been a plank floor to catch fire, the inside of the house would certainly
-have been burned out, and the walls would probably have gone too. As it
-was, the logs were merely blackened, the top ones charred a little. Two
-bed frames, a stool made of unbarked sticks, and the stone and clay
-fireplace and chimney were unharmed.
-
-"We will make a fire, warm ourselves and unload the _tabagane_. Then we
-must build a new roof."
-
-Louis was not satisfied with the appearance of Walter's frozen cheek. As
-soon as the fire was kindled, he melted some snow, removed the warm water
-from the blaze and added more snow until it was like ice water. He bade
-Walter bathe his cheek with the cold water and keep on bathing it until
-the frost was drawn out. Noticing the stiffness of his friend's movements
-and the signs of suffering in his face, Louis guessed his other trouble.
-
-"You have a pain in the legs?" he inquired. "It is the _mal de raquette_.
-Everyone not used to snowshoeing has it if he travels long. It is very
-painful. Take off your moccasins. Warm your feet and legs and rub them.
-That will help."
-
-Walter was glad to obey. He expected to do his share in unloading the
-sled and roofing the cabin, but when Louis saw how inflamed and swollen
-the Swiss boy's ankles and insteps were, he refused to let him help.
-Walter must remain quiet. His work would be to sit on a buffalo robe
-before the fire and keep the blaze going.
-
-The roof the others constructed was only a temporary affair. It was
-almost flat, slanting a little towards the rear, as the back wall was
-slightly lower than the front. Poles and bark were the materials,
-weighted with stones to keep them from blowing away. Such a covering
-would not stand a strong wind, but the cabin was well sheltered. In a
-hard rain the roof would probably leak, and heavy snow might sag it or
-break it. But it would serve for a while at least, and it was the best
-the boys could do in haste and with the materials at hand. By nightfall
-they had a cover over their heads, flimsy though it was.
-
-As they were eating their evening meal before a warm blaze, Neil said
-thoughtfully, "I wonder how this cabin caught fire. The fellows who
-camped here can't have been gone long, yet when we came the fire was out
-and everything cold."
-
-"Yes," agreed Louis. "Even the ashes on the hearth were cold."
-
-"Probably it broke out in the night," Neil suggested. "Sparks from the
-chimney started it. But how _could_ they, with the roof covered with
-snow?"
-
-"If there had been snow on it, it would not have burned so easily," Louis
-returned.
-
-"This place is too sheltered for the wind to blow the snow off the roof.
-Someone must have cleaned it off. Perhaps the weight was breaking it
-down."
-
-"Well, it burned anyway," Walter put in. "All we know is that there was a
-fire, and that some other party was here before we came. Do you remember
-those men we saw in the mirage, Louis?"
-
-"Yes, we thought they were coming to the mountain. Whoever it was who
-camped here, we owe him a grudge. He burned our roof and stole our beds.
-Antoine and I made those beds last winter." One of the first things Louis
-had noticed on entering the house was that the stretched hides, which had
-taken the place of springs and mattress, were gone from the rustic cots.
-The hides had been cut off with a knife.
-
-The bed frames being of no use, the boys lay down on the buffalo robe
-before the fire. Louis and Neil slept soundly, but the pain in Walter's
-feet and legs and frosted cheek made him wakeful and restless.
-
-His lameness and his sore face kept him at home the next day when the
-others went out to seek for game and signs of fur animals. That was a
-long day for Walter. Enough wood had been cut to last until evening, and
-he kept the fire going. He cleaned out the remains of the burned roof
-which cluttered the floor, arranged the scanty supplies and equipment
-more neatly, drove some wooden pegs between the logs to hang clothes and
-snowshoes on, mended a break in the dog harness, and did everything he
-could find to do. The cabin had one window covered with oiled deerskin
-that let in a little light, and the open fire helped to illuminate the
-dim interior.
-
-Dusk had come when the hunters returned, bringing two big white hares.
-Rabbit stew would be a welcome change from pemmican. They had set traps
-and snares, had seen elk tracks, and had found, among rocks at the base
-of a tree, a partly snow-blocked hole Louis thought might be a bear's
-winter den.
-
-
-
-
- XXII
- THE PAINTED BUFFALO SKULL
-
-
-The life of the three boys in their lonely cabin in the hills settled
-down to a regular routine. Louis and Neil were out every day hunting and
-visiting their traps, but it was nearly a week before Walter's lameness
-wore off so that he could tramp and climb with his comrades. The skin
-peeled from his frosted cheek, leaving it so tender that he had to keep
-it covered with his capote hood when out in the cold.
-
-The cabin was in need of furniture. Besides the bed frames, Louis and his
-companion of the winter before had made two rough stools, but one had
-been burned. Before he was able to hunt, the Swiss boy, who was handy at
-wood working, fashioned two more stools. His only tools were an ax, a
-small saw, and a knife, but the stools were strong and solid, if not
-ornamental. A table the lads did not miss. At meal times they sat before
-the fire, their plates on their knees, their cups on the earth floor
-beside them, the cooking utensils on the hearth.
-
-The first day that Walter went any distance from camp, he and Louis,
-entering a partly wooded hollow among the hills, came suddenly upon a
-herd of six or eight large, handsome deer. It was the first time Walter
-had ever seen wapiti or elk. He was surprised and excited, the trigger of
-his flintlock trade gun pulled hard, and his shot went wide. Louis,
-cooler and more experienced, fired just as the herd took fright at the
-report of Walter's gun. A yearling buck fell, and he was jubilant at his
-happy shot. The pemmican was almost gone, and the boys had been living on
-hares and squirrels. Frozen and hung in a tree out of reach of the dogs,
-the elk meat would keep until every eatable scrap had been consumed.
-
-It proved lucky for the lads that they had such a good supply of fresh
-meat. That night a storm commenced that lasted more than three days. It
-was worse than the blizzard they had encountered on their way to the
-hills. Even in the sheltered spot where the cabin stood the wind howled
-and shrieked through the trees, bending them low and beating and crashing
-the leafless limbs against one another. It threatened to blow the roof
-off, and whirled the snow in among the trees, to drift it high against
-the windward side of the house.
-
-Any attempt to reach the trap lines would have been the wildest folly.
-Neil tried once to go to the near-by creek for water, but the storm drove
-him back. He decided that snow water was quite good enough for him. When
-the supply of fuel ran low, a tree close to the lee side of the house was
-felled. Cutting it up was a troublesome and strenuous task even in the
-shelter of the cabin.
-
-While the wood pile was being replenished, the elk carcass was blown from
-the tree where it hung. It was brought inside. The corner farthest from
-the fire proved quite cold enough to keep the meat fresh. The dogs whined
-and scratched at the door, but Louis let in Askim only. He knew it would
-be almost impossible to prevent the beasts from getting at the venison,
-if all three were admitted. On the sheltered side of the house, buried
-deep in the snow, the thick-haired dogs would not freeze.
-
-Preparing the pelts occupied part of the boys' time. At this task Louis
-was expert and Neil not unskilled. The work did not appeal to Walter,
-though he was ready to lend a hand when necessary. He had not been
-brought up to the fur trade, and he had already concluded that he had no
-wish to be a trapper. He was willing enough to hunt, especially when food
-was needed, but traps seemed to him mere instruments of torture. He said
-nothing to his comrades of this feeling. Their training and way of
-looking at life were in many ways different from his. But he was resolved
-to find some other way of making a living in this new land. He was
-willing to do farming, tinkering, repair work, even to act as a voyageur
-for the Company.
-
-When time began to hang heavy on the boys' hands, Walter suggested that
-Neil give him some lessons in English. They had no paper, pens, or
-pencils. With a charred stick Neil wrote on the flat hearth stone such
-common English words as he knew, explaining the meaning. His father had
-taught him to read and write a little English,--as much as he knew
-himself,--but Neil's education was very limited, his spelling erratic,
-and his pronunciation that of the Highland Scot. Louis watched and
-listened with keen interest. He had even less education than the Scotch
-boy. Louis could read only enough to make out the markings on bales of
-goods and pelts. His writing consisted in copying those marks and signing
-his name.
-
-When Walter had written his letters to the Periers and had read theirs
-aloud, Louis had admired and envied his knowledge. Noticing the Canadian
-boy's interest in the lessons, Walter offered to teach him to read his
-native tongue, French. Among the Swiss lad's few possessions was a small
-Bible that had belonged to his mother, the only thing he owned that had
-been hers. He had always carried it about with him, and now he used it as
-a text-book. Louis entered into the new task with enthusiasm and
-surprised Walter by learning rapidly. In fact Louis proved quicker than
-Neil, whose restless nature disinclined him to study of any kind. In
-physical activity the Highland boy delighted, but working his mind bored
-and wearied him. Louis, however, grew so interested that even after the
-storm was over, he spent a part of every evening in a reading lesson by
-firelight.
-
-A period of clear, cold weather followed the blizzard. There was little
-wind, but more than once the stillness of the night was shattered by a
-sharp crack, almost like the report of a musket, when, in the intense
-cold, some near-by tree split from freezing. In hunting and visiting the
-traps the boys felt the cold far less than at a higher temperature with
-wind. Fingers and faces became frost-bitten quickly though, and Walter
-had to be careful of his frosted cheek.
-
-Following the trap lines necessitated long tramps, sometimes of twelve or
-fifteen miles, through the hills. Accompanying his comrades, Walter
-learned something of the lay of the land. He found that the cabin was
-located on what Louis called "the first mountain," a rough and partly
-wooded plateau that rises rather abruptly from the prairie of the Red
-River valley; which is really not a valley but a plain. This hilly
-plateau is about eight miles across its widest part, and reaches its
-greatest height a mile south of where the Pembina River cuts a deep
-valley through it. On the west of the plateau is the "second mountain,"
-an irregular ridge. Though the second mountain rises nowhere more than
-five hundred feet above the first, it is wild and rugged. Walter was
-forced to admit that in some places, especially where the streams that
-crossed it had eroded steep-walled ravines, three or four hundred feet
-deep, it was almost mountain-like on a small scale. To a mountain-bred
-boy this was mere hill country, but he felt more at home in it than he
-had felt anywhere since coming to the strange new world. Climbing was a
-real joy to him, and he loved to choose the steepest rather than the
-easiest routes.
-
-As game grew scarce in the vicinity of the cabin, the boys pushed their
-trap lines farther and farther into the hills, until whoever made the
-rounds was forced to be away at least two, and sometimes three, nights.
-They built two overnight shelters, one a lean-to against an abrupt cliff,
-the other a roof of poles over a snug hollow in the rocks. In one of
-these lodges Louis or Neil, sometimes alone, sometimes accompanied by
-Walter, would spend the night; with a blazing fire at the entrance to
-keep away wolves and wildcats.
-
-For several weeks a thievish wolverine annoyed the trappers. The clever,
-bloodthirsty beast followed the trails, broke into deadfalls, and
-skilfully extracted the catch from traps and snares. What it could not
-devour it carried away and hid, after mangling the creature until the
-pelt was ruined. Louis swore vengeance on the thief, and tried in every
-way to trap it. At last, by going out at night to follow the wolverine's
-fresh track against the wind, he came upon the greedy beast in the act of
-breaking into a deadfall from the rear. A quick and lucky shot, and Louis
-triumphantly carried home the robber. Walter had never seen a wolverine,
-and Neil knew it from its tracks and skin only. With its long body,
-short, strong legs, and big feet armed with sharp, curved claws, it
-looked a most formidable creature for its size.
-
-February was a stormy month, until near the close, when there came
-another period of clear, calm cold. In this fine weather Louis laid a new
-trap line extending seven miles or more north to _Tte de Boeuf_, Buffalo
-Head, one of the highest points in the range. After accompanying his
-friend over the new trail, Walter climbed Buffalo Head for the first time
-one bright, windless noonday. He found the view from the top impressive,
-but the name puzzled him.
-
-"Why do you call this hill Tte de Boeuf?" he asked his companion. "I
-can't see that it is shaped like a bull's head, looked at from below or
-from up here."
-
-"No," Louis replied. "I think the name does not come from the shape of
-the hill, but from a curious custom of the Indians. Do you see those red
-things over there?"
-
-He pointed to an irregular line of objects in an exposed, wind-blown spot
-at the very rim of an escarpment.
-
-"Those queer looking stones? They look as if someone had laid them there
-in a row, and then daubed them with red paint. Did the Indians put them
-there? What for?"
-
-"You think they are stones? Go and look at them," returned Louis with a
-smile.
-
-Walter walked to the edge of the bluff, looked down at the objects, and
-exclaimed in astonishment, "They're skulls; skulls of some big animal."
-
-"Buffalo," said Louis. "To the Assiniboins and the Sioux this mountain is
-sacred. They bring buffalo skulls, daub them with red earth, and place
-them as you see, noses pointing to the east. The skulls are offerings to
-some heathen god. There is another spot up here where the Indians burn
-tobacco as a sacrifice." He stooped to examine one of the skulls. "This
-one has not been here long. See how fresh the paint is. It is trader's
-vermilion mixed with grease."
-
-"That skull was put there since the last storm," Walter agreed. "There
-are little drifts of snow against the others, but hardly any around that
-one."
-
-Louis had turned his attention to a shallow, snow-filled hollow in the
-rock. "Here are tracks. Truly someone has been here since the last
-snowfall."
-
-Although the weather had been unusually calm for several days, every
-breath of breeze swept the exposed spot. The prints in the snow were
-partly obliterated. If the boys had not found the freshly painted skull,
-they would scarcely have guessed that the tracks were those of men. With
-some difficulty they traced the footprints to the edge of a steep, bare,
-rock slope. There they lost the trail. They were out after game and did
-not care to waste time tracing a couple of wandering Indians, so they
-gave up the search.
-
-Nevertheless the recent offering of a buffalo skull on _Tte de Boeuf_
-aroused the lads' curiosity, and set them wondering if there might be
-Indians camped somewhere in the neighborhood. In all their wanderings
-heretofore the three had seen no recent sign of human beings.
-
-"We must keep a better watch of our things," Louis decided, as he sat by
-the fire that evening preparing the pelt of a red fox. "The Assiniboins
-are great thieves. Stealing horses is a feat they are proud of. We have
-no horses, but we do not want to lose our dogs."
-
-"Or our sled and blankets and all our furs," Neil added. "One of us must
-stay home after this to look after things."
-
-"Yes." Louis was silent for a moment considering. "I think," he said at
-last, "that you and I, Walter, will try to follow that trail to-morrow.
-It may lead to some camp. Neil will stay here to guard the cabin."
-
-"Why not let Walter stay?" demanded the Scotch boy, who preferred a more
-active part.
-
-"Because he cannot talk to the savages or understand them, if any come
-this way. He knows no Assiniboin."
-
-"I don't know much myself," Neil protested.
-
-"But you know a little, and you have dealt with Indians. He has not. He
-does not even understand their sign language."
-
-Neil could find no answer to that argument. He was forced to consent to
-the arrangement, though he was far from pleased.
-
-
-
-
- XXIII
- UNWELCOME VISITORS
-
-
-The period of bright, calm weather seemed to be over. The next morning
-was dark and cloudy, with a raw wind. In accordance with Louis' plan, he
-and Walter climbed Buffalo Head again. At the foot of the bare rock
-slope, they succeeded in picking up the trail from the painted skull. Two
-men, Louis concluded, had come and gone that way. He traced the trail
-easily enough for a short distance, but in the woods it became confused
-with that of several wolves. Probably the beasts had followed the men at
-a safe distance. Where the snow lay deep the men had taken to snowshoes.
-
-By the time the lads had reached a puzzling spot, where the tracks seemed
-to branch into two trails, the threat of the morning had been fulfilled.
-Snow was falling. Selecting the more distinct trail, Louis led on, but
-the thick-falling flakes were rapidly obliterating the tracks. He grew
-more and more doubtful of them, until at last he was sure that he had
-lost the trail entirely. After circling about, attempting in vain to pick
-it up, he gave up the chase.
-
-"It is of no use to go on," he said to his companion. "If this snow had
-waited a few hours,--but no, it comes at just the wrong time." With a
-resigned shrug of his shoulders, he turned back.
-
-For a time the snow came thick and fast, but before the boys were
-half-way home, it had almost ceased. When they reached the cabin, the
-wind had changed and the sun was shining. The storm had lasted just long
-enough to defeat their purpose. Their hard tramp had been for nothing.
-The stay-at-home, however, had news; news he was impatient to tell.
-
-"I have had a visitor," he burst out the moment Louis opened the door.
-
-"A visitor!"
-
-"A visitor?" echoed Walter, entering close behind his comrade.
-
-"Yes, and I have found out about the new skull on Buffalo Head."
-
-"That is more than we have done," Louis admitted, shaking the snow from
-his capote. "There have been Indians here?"
-
-"No, a white man."
-
-Louis and Walter were too amazed even to exclaim. They stared
-unbelievingly at Neil.
-
-"A white man," the Scotch boy repeated. "He came a little while after you
-left. I didn't know he was anywhere around till he knocked on the door. I
-_was_ surprised, I can tell you, when I heard that knock. An Indian would
-have walked right in, so, even before I opened the door, I knew there
-must be a white man there. And there was,--a broad-shouldered fellow with
-a shaggy beard. He said '_Bo jou_' and I said '_Bo jou_, come in.' Then
-we stood and looked at each other. Just as I opened my mouth to ask him
-where he came from, he began asking me questions."
-
-"What kind of questions?" Louis interrupted.
-
-"Who I was, and what I was doing here, if I was trapping or trading with
-the Indians. He could see the pelts all around the room. He was so sharp
-about it, I thought he might be a Hudson Bay man out on the track of free
-traders. I told him we hadn't seen an Indian since we came and didn't
-expect to see one. Then he wanted to know what we were going to do with
-our furs. Of course I said we were going to take them to the Company at
-Pembina."
-
-"Did that satisfy him?"
-
-"It seemed to. He isn't a Company man, it appears."
-
-"A free trader?" questioned Louis.
-
-"He didn't say. He is on his way from _Portage la Prairie_ to Pembina."
-
-"_Portage la Prairie_ is on the Assiniboine. Why did he come this way?"
-
-"He said it was shorter and he wanted to make speed."
-
-Louis shook his head doubtfully. "Shorter? No, I think not. He must be
-off his course. How many are in his party?"
-
-"No one but himself. He didn't even have a sled, only a pack and his
-snowshoes."
-
-"But that is strange. You are sure he had no comrades?"
-
-"I asked him if he had come all the way alone," Neil explained, "and he
-said that at first he had traveled with two others. Yesterday or last
-night, he left them. He had quarreled with them I think. When he went
-away, he warned me to look out for them and not to trust them. I asked if
-they were coming this way. He didn't know where they were going, he said,
-but they were somewhere around here in the hills."
-
-"What about the painted skull?" inquired Walter.
-
-"I told him about our finding it and the tracks. He said the other
-fellows put the skull there. One of them is an Assiniboin."
-
-Walter was puzzled. "If that is true,--if those men really did that, they
-must have reached the hills two or three days ago. We found the skull
-yesterday."
-
-"That's so." Neil rubbed his red head thoughtfully. "That rather spoils
-his story of making speed straight through from _Portage la Prairie_,
-doesn't it?"
-
-"He lied," concluded Louis emphatically. "Somewhere he lied, either about
-himself or about the placing of the skull on the _Tte de Boeuf_. What
-was he like, that fellow, and who is he? What is his name? Where does he
-belong?"
-
-"He didn't tell me his name, but he is a DeMeuron from St. Boniface. He
-asked so many questions that I didn't think till afterwards that he
-hadn't mentioned his name. He asked mine and yours."
-
-"He knew you were not here alone then?"
-
-"Oh yes, I told him I expected you two back any moment. He kept looking
-at our furs, and I thought he had better know we were three to one."
-
-"Three to three perhaps," said Louis thoughtfully, "if the others are
-still near here. They may not have parted at all."
-
-"I'm sure they have quarreled. He was telling the truth about that. You
-should have seen his face when he spoke of those other fellows, and he
-warned me against them, you know."
-
-"That is true," Louis conceded, "but his stories do not agree and we had
-best not trust them too far."
-
-One of the trap lines had not been visited for two days, so Neil went out
-to examine the nearer traps while daylight lasted. Doubt of the white
-traveler's story made Louis decide to remain at the cabin. The boys had a
-fairly good catch of furs, and Louis knew that wandering trappers and
-free traders were not always above robbing weaker parties. If the
-stranger returned or his former companions happened along, Louis wanted
-to be at home.
-
-The sun was sinking behind the hills as Walter, accompanied by Askim,
-went down to the creek. He found the water hole frozen and was chopping
-it out when the dog began to growl uneasily. The boy paid little
-attention, thinking Askim had scented some wild animal. Suddenly Askim
-threw back his head and howled. His fellows replied from near the cabin.
-Then, as all three were silent for a moment, there came other answers
-from farther away; up the creek somewhere. In doubt whether the answering
-voices were those of dogs or wolves, Walter filled his kettle and
-hastened back to the cabin.
-
-Outside the house, Louis was trying to quiet his beasts. "We shall have
-visitors soon," he announced. "You heard?"
-
-"Yes, but I wasn't sure whether they were dogs or wolves."
-
-"Dogs," Louis asserted confidently. "Those men have heard ours. They will
-come this way."
-
-Louis and Walter tied their dogs at the rear of the cabin, and lingered
-outside, watching for the strangers. It was not long before a howl from
-the opposite direction, together with the voice of a man shouting, as he
-belabored some unfortunate beast, announced the arrival of the visitors.
-
-Through an opening in the woods, into the cleared space before the cabin,
-came a tall fellow in buckskin leggings and blue capote, the hood pulled
-low over his face. He was followed by two lean, shaggy dogs drawing a
-toboggan. It flashed into Walter's mind that these were the very men and
-sled he had seen upside down against the sky during the mirage.
-
-"_Bo jou_," called Louis in a friendly tone, as a second man appeared and
-the sled came to a halt.
-
-"_Bo jou_," returned the tall fellow in a deep voice.
-
-At the sound of that voice Walter started with surprise. The newcomer
-pushed back his hood, and the boy found himself gazing into the face of
-the half-breed voyageur Murray. The sun was down behind the mountain, but
-even in the waning light, there was no mistaking that face; that dark,
-aquiline, beardless, hard, cruel face, that he had seen day after day
-during the long journey from Fort York to Fort Douglas.
-
-If Murray recognized the two lads, and he must recognize them Walter
-knew, he made no sign. He merely stood impassive, looking at them, until
-Louis recovered his wits sufficiently to act the host. Under the
-circumstances he could do no less, even though the guest was an unwelcome
-one. After all there had been no open breach between Murray and the boys,
-and what had happened at Pembina was not their business. It would be
-better to show no knowledge of that affair.
-
-At Louis' invitation, the newcomers entered the cabin and were given the
-stools by the fire. They had unhitched their dogs from the sled and tied
-them to a tree to keep them from Louis' beasts, but Murray was hardly
-seated when the noise of battle sounded from without. Louis ran out and
-Murray followed to find that one of his dogs had broken or gnawed off his
-rawhide rope and was engaged in a fight with Askim who had broken his
-rope also. The beasts were separated, Murray's dog, after being well
-beaten by his far from merciful master, was tied more securely, and
-Askim was taken into the cabin.
-
-Walter was already getting the evening meal, which, as a matter of
-course, the visitors would share. The second man, it was evident, was not
-the one who had been with Murray at Pembina. This fellow was an Indian, a
-young man, slender, well built, but insignificant beside the Black
-Murray. He understood scarcely a word of French or English, and spoke
-only when addressed in his native Assiniboin. It seemed to Walter, as he
-covertly watched the two, that the young Indian was completely under
-Murray's domination, and stood in fear or awe of him.
-
-Before the meal was ready, Neil returned. He had heard unfamiliar dog
-voices, as he approached the cabin, and had seen the loaded sled before
-the door, so he was not surprised to find strangers sitting by the fire.
-He it was who first mentioned the visitor that had come earlier in the
-day.
-
-"I suppose," he said, "you two are the ones that fellow was traveling
-with."
-
-Murray grunted an assent. After a moment he asked, "How long ago he
-here?" He grunted again at Neil's reply.
-
-The warm meal, eaten for the most part in silence, seemed to thaw
-Murray's sullenness somewhat. Suddenly he began to talk; his usual
-mixture of bad English, worse French, Cree, and Dakota. Like the
-DeMeuron, he asked questions about the boys' trapping, and inquired if
-they had seen any Indians and had done any trading. Questioned in return,
-his replies were brief and evasive. He and Kolbach had been to the west.
-They had come back to the hills expecting to meet a band of Assiniboins.
-"We waited," he said, "but the Assiniboins not come."
-
-Walter and Louis were not surprised to learn that Murray's former
-companion was Fritz Kolbach. They had guessed that already.
-
-"It was here at the mountain you expected to meet the Assiniboins?" Louis
-inquired.
-
-Murray shot a keen glance at him, and nodded.
-
-"Then you camped near here for several days?" persisted Louis.
-
-"To the north, other side _Tte de Boeuf_."
-
-"You left the fresh buffalo skull on the mountain?" put in Neil.
-
-Murray silently pointed to his Assiniboin companion, who apparently
-understood nothing of the conversation. Then the half-breed asked
-abruptly, "Who told you that? Kolbach?"
-
-"We found the newly painted skull and your tracks," said Neil. "I spoke
-to him this morning about them and he said you put the skull there."
-
-_Le Murrai Noir's_ face had darkened at every mention of the DeMeuron. He
-demanded savagely, "What else he tell you?" And, before Neil could
-answer, added a string of violent abuse of his former companion.
-
-"Kolbach told me nothing," the boy hastened to reply, "nothing except
-that he had been traveling with you, but had left you and was going on
-alone. He seemed to be in a hurry."
-
-Murray's eyes were fastened on Neil's honest, freckled face. His only
-reply was an abrupt grunt, he turned to Louis. "You stay here long? I
-sell you bag pemmican, good pemmican, for furs."
-
-Louis ignored the question. "We thank you for your offer," he said, "but
-we have no need of pemmican. We have plenty of food." This was not
-strictly true, but he wanted no dealings with Murray.
-
-Murray cast a look about the cabin, dimly lighted by the fire on the
-hearth. "We go now," he said abruptly.
-
-"You're not going on to-night?" Neil asked in surprise.
-
-"You are welcome to spread your blankets here by the fire," Louis added,
-he would not break the rules of hospitality even though he felt the guest
-to be an enemy.
-
-Murray did not even thank him. "The moon is bright. We go on."
-
-The Indian had risen and moved towards the door. Murray pulled on his
-capote and looked up at the bark and pole roof. An evil smile showed his
-strong, yellow-white teeth. "It burn?" he inquired.
-
-"You set it on fire," accused Louis.
-
-Murray grinned mockingly. "Not me,--Kolbach."
-
-"But why did he want to burn the roof off?" cried Walter.
-
-"Why leave a cabin for other traders?" Murray spoke contemptuously.
-Undoubtedly he felt contempt for Walter's innocence. "Only the roof burn
-well," he added. His left hand on the door latch, he turned and held out
-the right to Walter.
-
-The Swiss boy, surprised at this courtesy from the man he had believed an
-enemy, could not refuse his own hand. Murray's sinewy fingers clasped it
-firmly for an instant. A scratch in the palm,--a deep scratch made by a
-rough splinter of wood when Walter was renewing the fire before
-supper,--tingled sharply with the pressure.
-
-"_Bo jou!_" said Murray, and opened the door and went out.
-
-The Assiniboin repeated the words and followed. In a moment both were
-arousing and harnessing their dogs. The men's shouts, the whines and
-howls of the tired beasts, lashed and beaten to force them to speed,
-could be heard long after men and sled had disappeared into the woods and
-the night.
-
-
-
-
- XXIV
- A SORE HAND
-
-
-"Now we know it was Murray and Kolbach who camped here the night before
-we came," said Louis, after the guests were gone. "Then they tried to
-burn this old cabin so no one else could use it. That is a trick of rival
-traders to make each other as much trouble as they can."
-
-"The Northwest Company used to destroy Hudson Bay houses whenever they
-got a chance," put in Neil.
-
-"Yes, and the Hudson Bay men did the same to the Northwesters."
-
-"That was a queer way to try to burn a house though," Neil remarked, "to
-begin at the top. Kolbach must have had to clean off the snow before he
-could set the fire."
-
-"Perhaps it was Kolbach who cleaned away the snow, but I think the plan
-to burn the cabin was as much _le Murrai's_ as Kolbach's," Louis
-asserted. "I believe they tried to start fire in other places as well as
-the roof. At the back there is a place where a fire has burned close to
-the wall. The logs are charred and black. They started several fires, I
-think, but they did not stay to watch them. As _le Murrai_ said, only the
-roof burned well. What do you think, Walter?"
-
-Walter had scarcely been listening. He was examining his right hand,
-which still smarted. Raising his head at the question, he replied
-carelessly, "About the fire? They set it, of course. Lucky for us it
-didn't burn better." He looked again at his stinging palm. "I wonder if
-Murray ever washes his hands. The dirt came off on mine. It makes this
-scratch sting."
-
-"Let me see." Louis seized his friend's hand, turned the palm to the
-firelight and bent over it. "That is no dirt," he exclaimed. "It is
-sticky, a gum of some sort. You say it was not there before Murray shook
-hands with you? And now it hurts?"
-
-"My hands were clean. I washed them before we began to get supper. That
-scratch certainly does hurt; much more than it did at first."
-
-"Put some water on the fire, Neil, just a little, to heat quickly. We
-must do something for this hand." Louis spoke anxiously. "_Le Murrai_ has
-tried to poison you, Walter. Perhaps I can suck it out like snake venom."
-
-Without hesitation he put his lips to the scratch and sucked. He spat in
-the fire, and wiped his mouth with the end of his neck handkerchief. "The
-gum is too sticky, and we have nothing to draw the poison out, no salt
-pork for a poultice."
-
-"Make the scratch bleed," suggested Neil. "Open it with your knife."
-
-"This black stuff must be cleaned off first," objected Walter.
-
-Cold water made no impression on the sticky substance that smeared
-Walter's palm. Louis tried to scrape away the gum, then he sucked the
-scratch again. But he had to wait for hot water to really dissolve the
-gummy stuff and cleanse the hand. When every trace of black had been
-washed off, Louis drew the sharp point of his knife along the scratch,
-making a clean cut, deep enough to bleed freely.
-
-In those days little was known about antiseptics. All three boys,
-however, were familiar enough with the treatment of snake bites to
-understand that poison must be drawn out as speedily as possible, either
-by sucking the wound or letting it bleed freely. They knew also that a
-clean wound was apt to heal more readily than a dirty one. Even the
-Indians recognized that fact, though their ideas of cleanliness were not
-much like ours. Louis would have torn a strip from his handkerchief to
-bandage the injury, but Walter felt that a colored and not too clean
-cloth was not the best dressing. He decided to leave his hand unbandaged,
-letting it bleed as much as it would and the blood clot naturally.
-
-At first Walter could scarcely believe that Murray had deliberately tried
-to poison his hand, but Louis had no doubts. "I have heard of such things
-among the Indians," he said, "and _le Murrai Noir_ is more Indian than
-white. He would not be above revenging himself that way or any other. If
-he is really friendly to us, why did he act as if he had never seen us
-before? He knew us certainly, though our names were not spoken. As he
-went towards the door, he put his fingers in his fire bag. I saw him do
-it, but thought nothing of it. He had seen you get that scratch. You know
-it is not like Murray to shake anyone by the hand."
-
-"That surprised me, I admit," conceded Walter.
-
-"Truly he had a reason. He hated you always after that affair of poor
-M'sieu Matthieu."
-
-"Do you suppose he has learned that we reported the loss of the pemmican
-and told about his bundle of trade goods?" Walter asked thoughtfully.
-
-"That may be. He did not go up the Assiniboin, he was at Pembina too
-soon. At Fort Douglas or at the Forks they may have asked him about that
-pemmican. Even if they did not say we told them, he might lay it to us.
-He never was fond of either of us. The Black Murray is an evil man. He
-likes to do evil I think. He takes pleasure in it."
-
-In spite of the prompt treatment, Walter's hand pained him all night and
-kept him restless. He was not the only one of the three that was wakeful.
-Louis and Neil, too, were uneasy. They were uncertain of Murray's
-intentions. He and his companion had gone away, with sled and dogs, but
-how far had they gone? Had they really set out for Pembina, or had they
-made camp as soon as they were out of sight and hearing? The Black
-Murray's keen eyes had not failed to take note of every pelt in the
-cabin. He had even offered to trade pemmican for the furs. Louis had
-declined, but did that settle the matter? Would Murray try in some other
-way to get possession of the catch? That he was not scrupulous in his
-methods was proved by his assault and robbery of the Ojibwa at the Red
-River.
-
-The boys were sure that Murray would not have hesitated to take
-everything, if they had been away from the cabin when he arrived. They
-did not doubt that he would have been ready to use violence against any
-one of them. But he had found Louis and Walter quite prepared for him.
-Numbers had been equal and the boys' guns within reach. Before Murray
-could discover an opening for strategy, Neil had arrived. With three
-alert lads watching him, the free trader had no chance. They were not at
-all sure, however, that he might not return and attempt a surprise. So
-Neil and Walter slept little, and Louis scarcely at all. Many times
-during the night, the Canadian boy slipped out to look and listen. Though
-he had turned the dogs loose, he did not dare to trust entirely to them.
-
-The night passed without an alarm, but the boys were far from sure that
-they had seen the last of the Black Murray. Before they dared go about
-their ordinary work, they had to be certain that he was not anywhere in
-the vicinity. Louis decided to follow his trail, while the others
-remained at the cabin, alert and prepared for a second visit.
-
-Walter's hand worried both himself and his comrades. It was inflamed,
-swollen, and very sore. No one knew what to do for it, except to open up
-the cut and make it bleed again, a painful operation which Walter bore
-without flinching.
-
-Louis was away early. He returned late in the day with the encouraging
-news that Murray had left the hills. His track, distinct and easy to
-follow, ran straight across the prairie in the direction of the Red
-River. "I followed several miles over the plain," said Louis, "and could
-see the trail going on in the distance. Yet I feared he might have turned
-farther on somewhere, so I went north a long way, looking for a return
-trail. Then I came back, crossed his track, and went on to the south. I
-found nothing. Certainly _le Murrai_ has gone, unless he made a very wide
-circle to return. I think he would not give himself the trouble to do
-that. He had no reason to think we would doubt his story. Yes, I am as
-sure he is gone as I can be without following him clear to the Red
-River."
-
-Reassured, the boys took up their daily tasks of visiting the traps and
-deadfalls, fishing through the ice, and hunting. One of them, however,
-always remained at home, his gun loaded and within reach.
-
-For several days Walter's hand was very sore and painful. He was more
-than a little anxious about it. He feared serious blood poisoning that
-might mean the loss of hand, arm, and even life. But the inflammation did
-not spread. The prompt sucking of the scratch, the cleansing and free
-bleeding, and the healthy condition of Walter's blood saved him. Within a
-week the soreness was almost gone and the cut healing properly.
-
-In the meantime another misfortune had befallen the boys. The dogs were
-taken sick. Askim was the first one to show the disease. One morning
-Louis found the husky with a badly swollen neck. He took the dog into the
-cabin and tended him anxiously, but the swelling increased until Askim
-could no longer eat. He was scarcely able to swallow a little water.
-Walter proposed piercing the lumps, and performed the operation with an
-awl used in sewing skins. The swellings discharged freely, and Askim,
-able to swallow, began to improve.
-
-The other dogs had already shown signs of the same trouble. Gray Wolf had
-only a slight attack, but the brown animal was very sick. Lancing the
-lumps on his neck did no lasting good, and in spite of the boys' efforts
-to save him, the poor beast died. Luckily Askim and Gray Wolf recovered
-completely. How the dogs got the disease was a mystery. Murray had had no
-opportunity to poison them. Possibly the wolf-like animal that had broken
-loose and attacked Askim had given the infection to him, or the husky
-and his fellows might have caught it from some wild beast they had killed
-and eaten.
-
-
-
-
- XXV
- THE TRAVELERS WITHOUT SNOWSHOES
-
-
-After the wolverine was killed trapping had improved for a time. Then the
-catches began to dwindle, growing smaller and smaller. Louis and Neil
-agreed that they must either change their hunting grounds or go back to
-Pembina. They had promised to return early in March. Now March had come,
-with a thaw that suggested an early spring. The ducks and geese would
-soon be flying north, spring fishing would begin, and food be plentiful
-again in the settlement. And perhaps both boys were a bit homesick.
-
-"We go back with less food than we came away with," said Louis, "but we
-have not been forced to eat wolf yet. Not once have we been near
-starving, and we have a good catch of pelts. We will make the rounds of
-our traps once more, spend the night in the hut near _Tte de Boeuf_, and
-start from there."
-
-The morning was fine and the sun already high, when the boys left the
-overnight shelter in the rolling hills below Buffalo Head. Neil went
-ahead to break trail. The two dogs, fresh and eager, pulled willingly.
-The sled was well loaded with a good store of skins: rabbit, squirrel,
-raccoon, red fox, and mink, a few otter and beaver, two wildcats, three
-wolves, a couple of marten, the elk hide, and a fine and valuable silver
-fox pelt.
-
-The weather was springlike, too springlike for good traveling. The soft,
-sticky snow clung in sodden masses to the snowshoes, making them heavy
-and unwieldy. It formed wet balls on the dogs' feet. Moccasins, warm and
-comfortable in colder weather, became soaked. The sun glare, reflected
-from the white expanse, was almost unbearable. Before noon, Walter's
-eyes, squinted and screwed nearly shut to keep out the excess of light,
-were smarting painfully. Neil's were even worse. He was so snow blind
-that he dropped behind, following his comrades by hearing instead of by
-sight. Louis, less troubled by the glare, had to do all the trail
-breaking.
-
-They had hoped to reach the Red River by night, but the usual four miles
-an hour were impossible in the sodden, soft snow. Having made a later
-start than they intended, they permitted themselves no stop at noon. At
-sundown they made a perilous crossing of a prairie stream on
-water-covered, spongy ice, that threatened at every step to go down under
-them, and reached a clump of willows.
-
-"We stop here and have a cup of tea and dry our moccasins," Louis
-announced.
-
-The others, tired, hungry, with chilled feet, aching legs, and smarting,
-swollen eyes, were only too glad of a halt. A fire was soon burning and
-the kettle steaming over it. The boys, seated on bales of furs, took off
-their moccasins and held their feet to the blaze. The tired dogs lay in
-the snow near by, tongues hanging out and eager eyes watching the supper
-preparations.
-
-The meal was a scanty one. For the boys there was tea and a very small
-chunk of pemmican, saved for the return trip. One little fish each
-remained for the dogs. Yet everyone felt better for the food, so much
-better that Louis proposed going on.
-
-"It will be easier by night," he asserted. "The snow will freeze over the
-top."
-
-"I'm for keeping on," Neil agreed, "if I can see to find the way." His
-reddened eyelids were swollen almost shut. "How about you, Walter?"
-
-When Walter had sunk down on the furs before the fire, he had not dreamed
-of traveling farther that day. If the question had been put to him then
-he would have answered no. But now that his feet were warm and he was
-fortified with food and hot tea, going on did not seem so impossible. He
-felt strangely anxious to reach Pembina. His thoughts, ever since
-morning, had been turning to the Periers. It was more than two months
-since he had heard from them. How had things been going with them? Surely
-there were letters awaiting him at the settlement. "Let's go on by all
-means," he replied to Neil's question, "as far as we can. It won't be so
-bad when the snow hardens and there isn't any sun glare."
-
-Louis nodded. "We will rest till darkness comes. The wind has changed. It
-will soon be much colder, I think."
-
-There was no doubt that the weather was turning colder. Thawing had
-ceased with the setting of the sun, and the wind came from the northwest.
-By the time the journey was resumed, a crust had formed on the snow. The
-going was much easier, but the dogs were tired and footsore. Gray Wolf
-showed strong disinclination to pull. Askim, however, did his best, and
-dragged his reluctant comrade along. The average half-breed driver would
-have lashed and beaten the weary beasts, but Louis used the whip
-sparingly. He pulled with them or encouraged them by running ahead.
-
-In spite of weariness the travelers made good progress. After midnight
-they paused in a willow clump for another cup of hot tea, and then went
-on again. The night had turned bitterly cold, and there was no sheltered
-spot nearer than the banks of the Red River. The river was now only a few
-miles away, so they forced themselves and the reluctant dogs forward.
-There was no lack of light, for the moon was at the full in a clear sky.
-The surface of the snow was frozen so hard that no obscuring drift was
-carried before the wind. The waves of the prairie were motionless. The
-three boys and two dogs might have been at the north pole so alone were
-they. Except for their own voices and the slight noises of sled and
-snowshoes, as they sped forward over the crust, there was not a sound of
-living creature in a world of star-strewn sky and endless snow.
-
-A brisk pace was necessary for warmth, and, in spite of their weariness,
-they kept it up. Reaching the woods bordering the river, they made their
-way among scattering, bare-limbed trees, creaking and clashing in the
-wind. In search of a sheltered camping ground, they descended a stretch
-of open slope to an almost level terrace about a third of the way down to
-the stream. And there they came upon the trail of human beings.
-
-Stooping to examine the tracks, Louis gave a low whistle of amazement.
-"_Ma foi_, but this is strange! Those men had no snowshoes. Why should
-anyone travel without them at this time of year?"
-
-"Do you see any sled marks?" queried Neil. His own eyes were hardly in
-condition to distinguish faint traces by moonlight.
-
-"I find none. Even on the crust a _tabagane_ would leave some marks.
-Those men without snowshoes broke through the crust."
-
-"Perhaps it is nothing but an animal trail," Walter suggested.
-
-"No, no. Men without snowshoes came this way." Louis followed the tracks
-a little distance, then returned to his companions and the dogs, who had
-stopped for a rest. "There were three people," he said positively, "two
-men; or a man and a boy,--and a woman."
-
-"How can you tell it was a woman?" demanded Neil sceptically.
-
-"Where she broke through into soft snow there are the marks of her
-skirt."
-
-"Maybe it was a man wrapped in a blanket. They were probably Indians,"
-the Scotch boy suggested.
-
-Louis shook his head. "Why should Indians travel without snowshoes?"
-
-"Well, it's no affair of ours how they traveled or why. What we want is a
-camping place. The wind strikes us here."
-
-"Yes," Louis agreed, "we will go on and look for a better place."
-
-Along the terrace the dogs needed no guidance. Nose lowered, Askim
-followed the human tracks. Where the terrace dipped down a little, the
-husky paused, raised his head, and howled. Louis ran forward and almost
-stumbled over something lying in the snow in the shadow of the slope. He
-uttered a sharp exclamation.
-
-"What's the matter?" called Neil.
-
-"Have you found a good place?" asked Walter.
-
-"I have found a man," came the surprising reply.
-
-"A man? Frozen?"
-
-Neil hurried to join Louis, who was on his knees trying to unroll the
-blanket that wrapped the motionless form lying in the snow. Neil stooped
-to help.
-
-"His heart beats. He still breathes," Louis exclaimed. "But he is cold,
-cold as ice. Make a fire, you and Walter. I will rub him and try to keep
-the life in."
-
-Neil snatched the ax from the sled. Walter kicked off his snowshoes and
-set to work digging and scraping away the snow. As soon as he had kindled
-some fine shavings and added larger wood to make a good blaze, he helped
-Louis to carry the unconscious man nearer the fire. As they laid him down
-where the firelight shone on his face, Walter gave a cry of surprise and
-horror.
-
-"Monsieur Perier! It is Monsieur Perier, Louis!"
-
-He recalled Louis' certainty that the tracks were those of a man, a boy,
-and a woman. "Where are the others?" he cried. "Where are Elise and Max?"
-
-Without waiting for an answer, he sprang up and began to search. In a
-hollow in the snow in the lee of a leafless bush, completely hidden in
-deep shadow, he found another huddled heap wrapped in blankets; Elise and
-Max clasped in each other's arms. Between them and the place where their
-father had lain were the ashes of a dead fire.
-
-
-
-
- XXVI
- ELISE'S STORY
-
-
-Both children were alive. When Walter and Neil tried to separate them,
-they aroused Max. The little fellow was stupid with cold and heavy sleep,
-but seemed otherwise to be all right. Walter carried Elise nearer, but
-not too near, to the fire. Kneeling beside her, he rubbed her ice-cold
-feet, legs, and arms to restore circulation. The rubbing brought her back
-to consciousness, dazed and wondering, to find her big brother--as she
-called Walter--bending over her. As soon as the daze of her first
-awakening passed, she asked for her father. Assuring her that Louis was
-looking after him, Walter made her stay near the fire and drink some of
-the strong, scalding tea.
-
-Restoring Mr. Perier to consciousness was more difficult. Louis'
-unceasing efforts aroused him at last, but his mind seemed confused and
-bewildered. He struggled with Louis as if he thought the boy was trying
-to do him some injury. He stared blankly at Walter and did not appear to
-recognize him.
-
-Throwing off the blanket Walter had wrapped around her, Elise went to her
-father and put her arms about his neck. "Father, Father, it is all
-right," she cried. "Walter found us, and we are all safe."
-
-The wild look left Mr. Perier's eyes and he ceased struggling. When
-Walter brought him a cup of strong tea, he drank it obediently. The hot
-drink seemed to clear his brain. After more rubbing, he was able to sit
-up, nearer the fire. Elise and Max wrapped him in most of the blankets.
-Attracted by the heat, the tired dogs snuggled close to the children and
-added their animal warmth.
-
-Louis was anxious to find a less exposed spot in which to spend the
-night. "Stay here and keep the fire going," he ordered his comrades. "I
-will find a better camping place."
-
-In a few minutes he was back with word that he had found a much better
-camping ground, a dry gully protected from the bitter wind. "You and I,
-Neil," he said, "will go over there and prepare a place, while Walter
-keeps the fire burning here. Then we will come back and move our camp."
-
-Elise and Max were now wide awake and ready to talk, but Mr. Perier
-seemed inert and drowsy. After Walter had cut more wood and fed the fire,
-he crouched at Elise's side and began to question her.
-
-"How did you come to be here all alone?" he asked. "Why did you leave
-Fort Douglas?"
-
-"We were on the way to Pembina," she replied. "A man with a sled was
-taking us. It was warm when we started. Max and I rode on the sled, but
-we didn't like riding because the man abused the dogs and we were sorry
-for them. Father tried to make him stop being so cruel, but he just
-laughed. When Father tried to reason with him, the man grew so angry and
-ugly that Father didn't dare say anything more. We stopped once and had
-pemmican and tea, then we came on again. It was hard for Father to keep
-up, he had no snowshoes. He dropped behind. At sunset we stopped again,
-and the man made a fire. Father caught up with us, and we had some more
-tea.
-
-"After that it turned cold. Max and I were very cold riding on the sled.
-We wanted to walk a while to warm up, but the man wouldn't let us. He
-said we were too slow. We got so cold we were afraid we should freeze,
-and Father told our guide we must stop and get warm. Father had promised
-him his watch----"
-
-"His watch?" interrupted Walter.
-
-"Yes. We have very little money left, and the man didn't want money
-anyway. He said he would take us to Pembina for the watch."
-
-Walter grunted wrathfully, and Elise went on. "When Father said we must
-stop and make a fire, we weren't far from the woods. Our guide said we
-could go down to the river bank and camp, but that would delay us. It
-would take longer to reach Pembina, and he would have to have more pay.
-He wanted the chain as well as the watch. Father agreed and we came into
-the woods and stopped. Max and I ran around and tried to get warm. Our
-eyes hurt and Father was almost blind. The man made Father give him the
-watch and chain at once. He put them in the pouch where he carried his
-tobacco and flint and steel. Then he whipped the dogs and jumped on the
-sled, and they ran away and left us."
-
-"The miserable brute!" cried Walter.
-
-"He ran away and left us," Elise repeated, "without any food or
-snowshoes. Everything we owned, except the blankets Max and I had been
-wrapped in when we were riding, was on the sled. It was a cruel way to
-treat us."
-
-"Cruel? Why even the meanest Indian----" Walter's wrath choked him.
-
-"He is an Indian. They call him a _bois brul_, but he looks just like an
-Indian. No one but a savage could be so cruel."
-
-"He's worse than a savage. He must be a fiend. Why did Kolbach let you
-come with such a fellow?"
-
-"Monsieur Kolbach didn't know we were coming," Elise explained. "The
-Indian said he was a friend of Monsieur Kolbach's brother."
-
-"Fritz? That's not much of a recommendation."
-
-"Do you know Monsieur Fritz? Has he been at Pembina? I have never seen
-him."
-
-"I think I have seen him, and I have heard about him. He and his brother
-aren't very friendly, are they?" Walter questioned. "I have been told
-that they weren't."
-
-Elise shook her head. "I know nothing about that. Monsieur Kolbach has
-never said. He is not a man who talks much anyway. Monsieur Fritz has
-been away from Fort Douglas most of the winter. He has been trading with
-the Indians."
-
-A sudden thought struck Walter, an unpleasant thought that made him
-shudder. "What was that fellow's name, the one who deserted you?" he
-demanded.
-
-"He has an English name," Elise replied. "I'm not sure I understood it
-right. Mauray or something like that."
-
-"Murray? Elise, he is the very man I wrote you about, the one who was
-steersman of our boat when we came from Fort York. It was the Black
-Murray himself, the fiend! If ever I----"
-
-The voice of little Max interrupted. "I'm cold," he complained.
-
-Walter had forgotten the fire. He sprang up to replenish it. He found Mr.
-Perier dozing, roused him, and warned him against dropping off to sleep.
-Then he heaped on fuel until the blaze was so hot the others were forced
-to move back from it. As for Walter himself, he was so boiling with anger
-against the inhuman Murray that he gave no heed to cold. He wielded the
-ax savagely, and sent the chips flying far and wide.
-
-In a surprisingly short time Louis returned to guide the rest of the
-party to the camping place. Mr. Perier was unable to walk, so he was
-placed on the sled, warmly wrapped. The dogs protested piteously at being
-aroused and harnessed. Even Askim refused to pull until Louis took hold
-also. Elise and Max bravely asserted that they were able to walk, and
-Walter knew it would be better for them to do so if they could. He gave
-his snowshoes to Elise,--she had learned during the winter to use
-snowshoes,--and helped Max when the little fellow broke through the
-crust.
-
-The gully was only a short distance away. They soon reached the camping
-place, to find Neil tending a blazing fire. Between the fire and a steep,
-bare, clay slope that reflected the heat, beds were made with bales of
-pelts, blankets, and robes. The toboggan, turned on its side, furnished
-additional shelter. There the Periers could sleep safely and comfortably.
-The boys had no intention of sleeping at all. Their task was to keep the
-fire going until daylight, which was not far away.
-
-There was a little tea left, but no food. At dawn Neil went down to the
-river, chopped a hole in the ice, and with a hook baited with a bit of
-rawhide, caught two small fish. The little fish made a scanty breakfast
-for Elise and Max. Mr. Perier and the boys refused to touch them. Their
-meal consisted of tea alone, and they used the last of that.
-
-Both of Mr. Perier's feet had been badly frozen and were swollen and very
-painful. He was placed on the sled again, and Elise and Max took turns
-riding with him. To make room for the passengers, part of the furs were
-taken off and made into packs, which the boys carried on their backs.
-Even then, the load on the sled was a heavy one for two tired, hungry
-dogs. One, and sometimes two, of the boys had to help pull.
-
-By way of the gully they left the river bank and went up to the prairie.
-There they found and followed a well defined trail, the usual route
-between Pembina and Fort Douglas. More than one dog train had traveled
-that way since the last fall of snow. The morning was cold and the crust
-firm, but the party had to make the best possible speed before the sun
-softened the surface. With one or the other of the children walking, it
-was not possible to go very fast. Cold though the wind was, even the
-beaten track grew soft under the direct rays of the sun, as the day
-advanced.
-
-With soaked moccasins, and red, swollen eyes, the tired, half-starved
-travelers reached Pembina some time after noon. Mr. Perier was the only
-one with dry feet. He was not suffering so much from snow blindness
-either as the others, for he had been able to keep his eyes covered. But
-his feet and right hand and arm were paining him severely.
-
-The arrival caused much excitement in the little settlement, but the boys
-did not linger to explain how it happened that they returned from their
-hunting trip bringing three strangers. They went at once to Louis' home.
-His mother received the Periers with almost as warm a welcome as she gave
-her own son. The little cabin would be crowded indeed, but that did not
-disturb her in the least. There was always room for travelers in
-distress, and Elise and Max, cold, weary, hungry, and motherless,
-appealed to her motherly heart.
-
-Mrs. Brabant and her younger children were thin, much thinner than when
-Walter had seen them last. Food had been scarce in Pembina for weeks, but
-they did not hesitate to share what little they had with the newcomers.
-Kinder, more generous people never lived, thought the Swiss boy, as he
-remembered all they had done for him and saw how eager they were to share
-their last bite with his friends. He could never do enough to repay their
-kindness. That they neither expected nor wanted repayment, he knew well.
-Their hospitality was a matter of course with them.
-
-
-
-
- XXVII
- WHY THE PERIERS CAME TO PEMBINA
-
-
-Before starting for the hills, Walter had written Elise that he expected
-to be back by the first of March. So when Mr. Perier decided to leave
-Fort Douglas, he felt very sure that he would find his apprentice at
-Pembina. "I was anxious to get away," he said when he told his story.
-"The weather was mild and favorable for the journey, and--well, I had
-other reasons. At St. Boniface I learned of a man with a dog team who was
-coming this way."
-
-Walter interrupted to ask if the man was really Murray.
-
-"Yes, that is his name," Mr. Perier replied. "He said he knew you and
-your friend Louis Brabant. Murray had not intended to leave for another
-day or two. He was waiting to see Sergeant Kolbach's brother, who had
-gone to Norway House."
-
-At first the half-breed had refused to take the Periers to Pembina. While
-he was arguing his case, Mr. Perier had taken out his watch and glanced
-at it; a nervous habit of his when worried or distressed. Murray pointed
-to the watch. He would go for that he said. As nothing else would satisfy
-him, Mr. Perier agreed. Murray furnished toboggan and dogs, and they
-started early the next morning.
-
-Before they had been out an hour, the Swiss began to regret his bargain.
-Murray's brutality and his insolent, overbearing manner filled the quiet,
-gentle-natured apothecary with apprehension. The trip proved far from
-pleasant, but, knowing that the wild _bois bruls_ were apt to appear
-more savage than they really were, he did not think his children and
-himself in any real danger. What really happened Elise had already told.
-Before the journey was over, Murray demanded his pay. Mr. Perier had been
-forced to hand over his watch and chain. As soon as the coveted articles
-were in the half-breed's possession, he had whipped up his dogs, jumped
-on the sled, and left the Periers to freeze or starve.
-
-Mr. Perier knew that if they followed the river it would lead them to
-Pembina. They tried to keep going but they had no snowshoes and were
-continually breaking through the crust. All three were very cold and
-tired. When they came to a spot a little sheltered from the wind, they
-camped, intending to go on in the morning. With his pocket knife, the
-father hacked off a few dead branches. He kindled a fire, and Elise and
-Max lay down beside it, wrapped in one of the blankets. They insisted
-that their father should use the other.
-
-"I didn't intend to go to sleep," he confessed. "I was utterly exhausted
-and had to rest a little. I lay down, meaning to get up in a few minutes
-and cut more wood. What happened was all my fault. I should have kept
-awake and moving.
-
-"Even now I am at a loss to understand," he concluded, "how Murray dared
-to desert us. To have taken us on, as he promised, would have delayed him
-but little. He must have known that, whether we ever reached here alive
-or not, he was responsible for us. He would be charged with the crime of
-deserting us and stealing our belongings. Surely the Company cannot
-overlook such a crime. He must suffer for it."
-
-Louis shrugged. "It is not at all certain that he will suffer for it,
-though Walter and I will do our best to see that he does. This is not _le
-Murrai Noir's_ first crime, and always, so far, he seems to have escaped
-punishment. He thinks he will always escape. He stole the Company's
-property, he and Fritz Kolbach attacked and robbed one of the Company's
-hunters, yet he has not been punished, it seems, for either of those
-crimes. He was bold to go to St. Boniface and stay there, after that last
-affair."
-
-"Perhaps he lay low and did not let the Company at Fort Douglas know he
-was there," suggested Walter.
-
-"Or he lied himself free of the charge," Louis added, "with witnesses
-bribed to say he spoke the truth. But this last crime is more serious."
-The boy rose from the hearth, where he had been sitting cross legged.
-There were not stools enough to go around. "I go now," he announced, "to
-learn whether _le Murrai_ really came to Pembina, and if he is still
-here."
-
-"I'll go with you," cried Walter springing up, tired though he was. "The
-sooner we lay charges against Murray the better. Already he has had time
-to take warning from our coming, and be gone."
-
-A little questioning of the people of Pembina brought the information
-that Murray had arrived at the settlement before daybreak, had rested a
-few hours, and had gone on, with a fresh team for which he had exchanged
-his exhausted dogs. His only answer to the question whither he was bound
-had been "Up river."
-
-At Fort Daer and Pembina House the boys learned that Murray had avoided
-the posts. The clerks in charge did not even know that the half-breed had
-been in the neighborhood until the lads brought the news. The man at the
-Company post listened gravely to the story, but was inclined to blame Mr.
-Perier for leaving Fort Douglas.
-
-"Why didn't the Swiss stay where he was?" he asked impatiently. "He was
-better off there than he will be here. What did he want to come to
-Pembina now for? He will only have to go back again with the rest of the
-colonists in a few weeks. It will soon be time to break ground and sow
-crops."
-
-To this Walter had no good answer, for he himself did not understand just
-why Mr. Perier had decided so suddenly to make the change. Not until
-night, after Madame Brabant and the girls were in bed in the main room
-and Walter lay beside his master on a skin cot in the lean-to, did the
-boy learn the real reason for the journey to Pembina.
-
-"Sergeant Kolbach turned us out," said Mr. Perier.
-
-"What?" exclaimed Walter. "I thought he had been so kind to you."
-
-"He was until recently, but he and I had a disagreement. He asked me for
-Elise's hand in marriage."
-
-"Why she is a mere child!" Walter was both surprised and distressed.
-
-"So I told him. I said she was far too young to marry. He replied that
-she was old enough to cook his meals and keep his house, and that was
-what he wanted a wife for."
-
-Walter grunted angrily.
-
-"It is true," Mr. Perier went on, "that some of our girls not much older
-have married since coming to the Colony. You know the Company encouraged
-young women to come over because wives were needed in the settlement,
-especially by the DeMeurons. But Elise came to be with me, and I have
-other plans for her. She shall not marry Kolbach or any other, now or ten
-years from now, unless he is the right kind of a man and she wants him."
-
-"I hope she'll never want a DeMeuron." The thought of his little sister
-married to one of that wild crew horrified Walter.
-
-"I hope not indeed," agreed the father. "I would prefer one of our own
-people for her; when she is several years older of course." He paused a
-moment then went on. "Elise never liked Kolbach. Even though he was kind
-to us and she felt she ought to be grateful, she disliked him and was a
-little afraid of him. I could see it. If I had dreamed that he had any
-such idea in his head, I would not have stayed in his house a day."
-
-"Does she know he wants to marry her?" Walter inquired.
-
-"I think not. I told him I would not consent to his speaking to her. He
-declared he would do as he thought best about that, but he has had no
-chance. We left his house that very day."
-
-"Did he really turn you out?"
-
-"It amounted to that. He was angry at my refusal to consider his suit. He
-said he was willing to wait a year, if, at Easter, Elise was formally
-betrothed to him. When I would consent to no betrothal, he said that we
-could not stay in his house longer unless she was promised to him. I have
-been working at the buffalo cloth mill, and have been paying him what I
-could for our lodging, and Elise has done all the housework. Yet he spoke
-as if we were beggars. I answered that we had no wish to remain in his
-house. We went to a neighbor,--Marianne Scheidecker she was before she
-married. I told her, as I told Elise, that Kolbach and I had quarreled.
-The next day I found Murray and hired him to bring us here."
-
-"Do you suppose Kolbach could have put him up to deserting you?" Walter
-questioned suspiciously.
-
-"Oh no. I doubt if Kolbach knew we were going. The Sergeant would not do
-such a thing, however angry he might be. He is a rough, domineering man,
-but not bad at heart. No, no, he wouldn't be capable of anything like
-that. In his way he is really fond of Elise. I think he would be as kind
-to her as he knows how to be, but he is not good enough for her, and she
-is far too young."
-
-"She certainly is," Walter agreed emphatically.
-
-It would be years yet before little Elise need think of such things, the
-boy decided. Then perhaps he would have something to say about the
-matter. The idea had never occurred to him before, but why should he not
-marry Elise himself some day? What other girl was there in the new land
-or the old to equal her? Of course it would be years from now, but in the
-meantime he must keep guard over her and see that no DeMeuron, or
-Scotchman, or French _bois brul_ tried to take her away. None of them
-should bother Elise if he could help it, and he thought he could. It was
-with a new and not unpleasing sense of responsibility that, the boy fell
-asleep that night.
-
-
-
-
- XXVIII
- THE LAND TO THE SOUTH
-
-
-Pembina seethed with indignation when the Periers' story was told. The
-Swiss, who were all undergoing their share of suffering, sympathized
-warmly with their country folk. Though still prejudiced against the new
-colonists, the Scotch and Irish settlers had nothing but condemnation for
-the rascally half-breed Murray. Many of the _bois bruls_ of Pembina had
-bitterly opposed the Selkirk settlement, and some had joined with the
-Northwesters in driving out the colonists. Since the union of the two
-companies, however, most of the enmity had evaporated. Walter had
-received only the kindest treatment from the French mixed bloods. Now
-there was not one to defend Murray in his heartless desertion of helpless
-travelers. So strong was the feeling against the treacherous voyageur
-that if he had been in Pembina when the Periers arrived, he would
-scarcely have escaped with his life. Though he had been gone several
-hours, a party of armed men went out to search for him. Uncertain whether
-he had told the truth when he had said he was going up river, they
-scoured the country for miles to the east and west as well as to the
-south. They did not overtake him. He had too long a start.
-
-Murray was not well known in Pembina. He had never lived there nor at St.
-Boniface. No one in either settlement knew much about him. The spring
-after the killing of Governor Semple, the tall voyageur had come down the
-Assiniboine from the west with a brigade transporting furs to York
-Factory, and had remained in Hudson Bay service. It was said at that time
-that he was the son of a free trader of mixed Scotch and Cree blood. The
-elder Murray had wandered far,--so it was said,--and had taken a wife
-from among the western Sioux. If this story was true, Murray could not be
-more than one quarter white and was at least half Sioux. The Indian blood
-in the Pembina half-breeds was chiefly Ojibwa and Cree. The Sioux were
-the traditional enemies of the Ojibwas and the Crees. To the people of
-Pembina Murray's Sioux blood did not endear him. There was not a man to
-find excuse for behavior of which few full-blooded Sioux would have been
-guilty.
-
-It was some time before the Perier family recovered from their terrible
-experience. The frost bites Elise and Max had suffered were so severe
-that the outer skin of their cheeks, noses, hands, and feet peeled off in
-patches, leaving sore, tender spots. Their father was in a far worse
-condition. His feet and ankles, his right hand and arm, were badly
-swollen and inflamed and very painful. It was weeks before he was able to
-walk or to use his right hand. Had the boys failed to give him prompt
-treatment when they first found him he would have frozen to death.
-Realizing what might have happened if they had camped on the prairie that
-night, instead of pushing on to the river, Walter felt that he and his
-companions had indeed been guided to the rescue.
-
-The little settlement had passed through hard days while the three boys
-were in the hills. Food had been very scanty. The buffalo had been far
-away, and following them in the deep snow next to impossible. Other game
-had been exceedingly scarce. Even the nets set under the ice of the two
-rivers had yielded little. The _bois bruls_ and the older settlers had
-fared better than the Swiss. Though the rations had been slender, neither
-the Brabants nor the MacKays had been entirely without food. The Swiss
-had suffered severely. Johan Scheidecker told Walter that at one time his
-family had not had a morsel to eat for three days. At Fort Douglas
-conditions had been even worse than at Pembina. By February most of the
-settlers were on an allowance of a pint of wheat or barley a day, which
-they ground in hand mills or mortars. Soup made from the grain and an
-occasional fish were all they had for weeks at a time. Though their fare
-had been meager enough, the Periers, in Sergeant Kolbach's care, had
-fared better than many of their country folk. They had never been quite
-without food.
-
-With the coming of spring matters improved at Pembina. When the ice in
-the rivers began to break up, wild fowl arrived in great flocks. Almost
-every night they could be heard passing over. By day they alighted to
-feed along the rivers and in the marshes. Every man able to walk, every
-boy large enough to carry a gun, shoot an arrow, or set a snare, and many
-of the women and girls, hunted from daylight till dark for ducks, geese,
-swans, pelicans, cranes, pigeons, any and every bird, large or small,
-that could be eaten. The buffalo also were drawing nearer the settlement.
-Following the herds over the wet, sodden prairie was difficult, even on
-horseback, but a skilful hunter brought down a cow or calf now and then.
-The lucky men shared generously with their neighbors.
-
-Louis and Walter had no time for long hunting trips. Both had obtained
-temporary employment at the Company post. Indian and half-breed hunters
-were bringing in the winter's catch, and the two boys were engaged to
-help with the cleaning, sorting, and packing of the pelts.
-
-The post was a busy and a merry place those spring days. The men worked
-rapidly and well, but found plenty of time for joking, laughing, singing,
-and challenging one another to feats of strength and agility. After the
-cold and hardships of the winter, the spring fur-packing was a season of
-jollity for the voyageurs. Walter and Louis enjoyed the bustle and
-merriment, while they worked with a will.
-
-The skins were thoroughly shaken and beaten to free them from dust and
-dried mud. Then they were sorted, folded to convenient size, and pressed
-into packs by means of a wooden lever press that stood in the post
-courtyard. Each bundle,--about ninety pounds weight,--of assorted furs
-was wrapped in a strong hide. In every package was a slip of paper with a
-list of the contents. To the outside was attached a wooden stave, with
-the number and weight of the pack, and the name of the post. The numbers
-and lettering were burned into the wood. Because he wrote a good hand,
-Walter was able to help the overworked clerk with these invoices and
-labels. He did a share of the harder physical work as well.
-
-The Swiss boy was heartily glad of employment. His wages, in Hudson Bay
-Company paper money, were exchanged for food and ammunition, and clothes
-for Elise, Max and himself. The Periers needed his help sorely. They had
-reached Pembina destitute. When they had left Switzerland, they had been
-well supplied with clothing. They had also brought with them the
-apothecary's herbs and powders and such household goods as they were
-permitted to take aboard ship. In the crowded open boat in which they had
-come from Fort York, there had not been room for all their belongings, so
-some had been left behind. Nearly everything else had been lost in the
-wreck on Lake Winnipeg. The little that remained had been on the toboggan
-that Murray had run away with. Every cent of Mr. Perier's money, as well
-as the Hudson Bay paper he had received for his work at the buffalo wool
-factory, had gone for food and other expenses during the winter. Even his
-silver watch and chain he had turned over to Murray. Father and children
-had nothing left but the worn clothes they were wearing, two blankets,
-and the few packets of medicinal plant seeds the apothecary carried in
-his pockets. He must begin all over again, and on credit at that.
-
-Mrs. Brabant's sympathy for the unfortunate family was genuine and warm.
-They crowded her house to overflowing, but she would not hear of their
-going elsewhere. Indeed there was no other place for them to go but Fort
-Daer, and the fort was too well filled for comfort. It was hardly worth
-while to attempt building a new cabin, if they were to return to the
-Selkirk settlement in a few weeks.
-
-Were they going to return to the settlement? That was the question that
-troubled Mr. Perier and Walter. It led to many debates, as the two
-families sat around the fire after the evening meal. There was that
-hundred acres of land to be considered. A vast estate it seemed to the
-Swiss apothecary. The promise of that great tract of land had dazzled him
-when he first talked with Captain Mai in Geneva. Since his coming to the
-new country, however, the hundred acres of unbroken prairie had grown
-less alluring. He had learned that not one of the older colonists had
-been able to cultivate more than a few acres. He had no farming tools and
-he could obtain nothing but hoe and spade at the Colony store. There was
-not a plough to be bought for credit or cash. Breaking tough prairie sod
-with hoe and spade would be slow and painful toil for Walter and himself.
-
-Because of the depredations of the locusts, seed grain was very scarce.
-The little Mr. Perier might buy would be high in price. From his first
-crop he would have to pay for seed as well as rent for the land. If he
-did not succeed in raising a crop, if the grasshoppers came again and
-destroyed it, he would be far in debt to the Colony, with no immediate
-hope of getting out. Already he had learned to his cost that prices were
-high at the Colony store, and that bills were sometimes rendered for
-things that had not been bought. In the end he might easily lose his land
-and have nothing to show for his labor. The prospect was not bright.
-Hopeful though he was by nature, he doubted his ability to make a success
-of farming under such discouraging conditions.
-
-Walter was strongly against returning to Fort Douglas. It would be better
-to remain where they were, he argued, and trust to making a living, as
-the _bois bruls_ did, by hunting, fishing, and planting a small garden.
-Perhaps the Company would let Mr. Perier have his hundred acres in the
-neighborhood of Pembina. Both Louis and Jean Lajimonire,--who was
-consulted,--shook their heads at the latter suggestion. Pembina was
-included in Lord Selkirk's grant, but the real Colony was established at
-and near Fort Douglas. It was there that the land was allotted. They
-thought it unlikely that Mr. Perier could obtain his anywhere else. In
-any case there would be the same difficulty about tools, seed, supplies,
-and rent. And so the argument went on.
-
-In the meantime spring had come in earnest. The ice was gone from the
-rivers. Birds were nesting in the woods, in the marshes, and on the
-prairie, according to their habit. As the rivers subsided from flood
-stage, fishing was resumed and yielded good results. The snow had melted
-from the prairie, though it still lingered in shaded places in the woods
-and along the river banks. The burned stretches showed new green. The sun
-was drying up the excess of moisture that had turned the prairie into
-ponds and spongy expanses and had converted the rambling paths and cart
-tracks of Pembina into sticky mud.
-
-In May the old colonists and most of the new began to prepare for the
-return to Fort Douglas. Still Mr. Perier and Walter were undecided. At
-last they came to a decision suddenly and almost by accident. Through
-Lajimonire, Mr. Perier met a man named St. Antoine who had traveled more
-widely than most of the Pembina mixed bloods. Two years before, he had
-been far to the south and east with Laidlaw, the Colony superintendent of
-farming, when the latter had gone to Prairie du Chien on the Mississippi
-River for seed grain. St. Antoine had many tales to tell of the country
-along the Mississippi and the St. Peter rivers.
-
-"That is a fine land," he told Mr. Perier, "a land with hills and
-forests,--not flat and bare like this, though there is open country there
-too, good land for farming. At Prairie du Chien now, there the soil is
-rich and the crops grow well and ripen. It is not so cold as here. The
-spring comes earlier and the frost later."
-
-"Are there grasshoppers there?" Mr. Perier inquired.
-
-"The kind that eat up everything? No, no. Those grasshoppers have never
-been seen in that country, the people say. And where the two rivers come
-together, where the Americans are building a fort, it is beautiful there,
-with high hills and bluffs like mountains, and woods and waterfalls."
-
-Mr. Perier's brown eyes were wistful. St. Antoine's description sounded
-good to a Swiss homesick for his mountains. "How does one go to that
-country?" he asked. "Can land be bought or rented?"
-
-"Oh," replied St. Antoine confidently, "you do not have to buy or rent
-it, that land. There is no Hudson Bay Company to say where you shall live
-and where you shall not, and to charge you so many bushels of wheat a
-year. You find a place that you like and you build a house and plant your
-crops and it is yours. That is the way folk do on the east side of the
-Rivire Mississippi. On the west side the American government does not
-want people to settle. That is Indian country. You may live there if you
-are a trader. But there is plenty of land on the east side, fine land
-too. Some time I am going back there to stay,--when I get old and want to
-settle down."
-
-St. Antoine's tales took hold of Mr. Perier's imagination. The more he
-thought of that country to the south and east, the more he wanted to go
-there, and the less he wanted to return to Fort Douglas. He told Walter
-and Louis, and they too talked to St. Antoine, who fired their
-imaginations as he had fired the older man's. It did not take Walter long
-to decide what he wanted to do. The question was how were they to get to
-the Mississippi. It would be a long journey, hundreds of miles, by cart
-and horseback through the country of the Sioux. But it could be done of
-course. It had been done a number of times. The previous summer's threats
-of trouble with the Sioux had come to nothing. Yet the trip might be a
-dangerous one for a small party. At this point Louis had a suggestion to
-offer.
-
-"The summer buffalo hunt will start in June," he said. "It will go far to
-the south, perhaps near to the Lake Traverse. We can travel with the
-hunters at first. When we are near Lake Traverse,--or if the hunters go
-too far to the west,--we can leave them and make haste to the lake. There
-is a trading post there, so St. Antoine says, and another at the Lake Big
-Stone. Traders go back and forth along the Rivire St. Pierre to the
-Mississippi. There will surely be some party we can travel with."
-
-"You will go too, Louis?" Walter asked eagerly.
-
-"But _certainment_. Do you think I would let you and M'sieu Perier and
-Ma'amselle Elise and the little Max go alone? No, no, I want to see that
-country too. And I think Neil MacKay will go also."
-
-"His people would never let him."
-
-"I am not so sure of that. M'sieu MacKay is not well pleased with the
-Selkirk Colony. He says if the grasshoppers come again, he will go
-somewhere else. I think he would not object to Neil's going to see that
-country to the south."
-
-So, gradually, the plan took shape. It was Mrs. Brabant who made the
-strongest objections at first. But when Mr. Perier and Walter finally
-decided to go, and Louis insisted on going with them, she suddenly made
-up her mind, much to Raoul's delight, that she and the children would go
-along. "And if we like that country, Louis," she said, "we will stay. It
-may be there will be a better chance for you there. If we do not like it,
-we can come back when some party comes this way."
-
-Neil proved eager to go. After some argument, he got his father's
-consent, with the provision that he was to return to the Red River colony
-at the first opportunity, before winter if possible. He must learn all he
-could about that Mississippi country, his father said. If the crops
-should fail again, it might be that the MacKay family would have to leave
-the Red River for good. The Northwesters could not drive the stubborn
-Scot to give up his land, but against the locusts he could not contend
-forever.
-
-
-
-
- XXIX
- THE COMING OF THE SIOUX
-
-
-Early in May the Perier family said good-bye to their countryfolk who
-were returning to Fort Douglas. Some of the Swiss tried to dissuade Mr.
-Perier from going farther into the interior. Others talked of following
-later if things did not turn out well in the Colony.
-
-A short time after the Swiss left, something happened that threatened to
-upset all Mr. Perier's plans. A party of men returning from a buffalo
-hunt brought disquieting news. They had met an Ojibwa scout who had told
-them that a large body of Sioux were on the march towards the settlement.
-Remembering the unfortunate affair at Fort Douglas the summer before, the
-people of Pembina feared the worst. Scouts were sent out to watch for the
-Sioux, guns were overhauled, and bullets moulded.
-
-In the midst of the preparations for defence, two boats arrived from down
-river, bringing reenforcements. Rumors of the approach of the Sioux had
-reached the Governor, and he had sent a detachment of DeMeurons and
-voyageurs to meet the Indians and prevent them from going on to Fort
-Douglas. The Sioux were to be stopped by diplomatic methods if possible.
-Force was to be used only in case of necessity. With the party were
-Sergeant Kolbach and the Rev. Mr. West, the man who had befriended the
-Periers when their boat was wrecked on Lake Winnipeg. The clergyman
-greeted Mr. Perier cordially, but Kolbach favored his former guest with
-the stiffest and slightest of nods. Walter looked in vain for the
-red-faced DeMeuron with the sandy beard. Inquiry brought the information
-that Fritz Kolbach was not among the soldiers. Fritz was not in favor
-with the Company just then, having been accused of free trading with the
-Assiniboins, one DeMeuron told Walter.
-
-The relief force arrived on Friday, and Saturday passed without alarm.
-Sunday morning Mr. West held service at Fort Daer, and the Periers and
-Walter attended. Just at the close of the service scouts came hurrying in
-with word that the Sioux were approaching. Armed men began to gather at
-the fort, the plan being to make so strong a showing that the Indians
-would not dare attack. The women and children were to stay north of the
-Pembina, where carts and boats were in readiness to carry them to Fort
-Douglas if there should be trouble.
-
-Walter took Elise and Max across the river to join Mrs. Brabant. Then he
-returned to Fort Daer where he found Louis just arrived. The MacKays had
-gone to Kildonan with other colonists who had wintered at Pembina. In
-June Neil was to return to go south with his friends.
-
-"They are in sight," shouted a man who was watching from the roof of one
-of the buildings.
-
-The fort gates stood open, for the Company officers intended to maintain
-a friendly attitude as long as possible. With others, Louis and Walter
-ran out to watch the coming of the Indians. There they were, a band of
-mounted men approaching across the prairie from the south. Walter's heart
-beat fast, but he was surprised to find that he was excited and eager
-rather than frightened.
-
-"There are no _travois_, only mounted men, no women," St. Antoine
-remarked. "That looks bad. Yet they come openly, in the daytime. They
-raise no war cry. But we cannot tell. The Dakota are treacherous." He
-used the name by which the Indians of the prairies called
-themselves--Dakota. It was their enemies, the Ojibwa, who named them
-Sioux.
-
-The Indians came on at an easy pace until they were a few hundred yards
-from the fort. There they halted, as if waiting to see how they were to
-be received. A small group of white men, among them Mr. West, went out on
-foot to meet the strangers. Suddenly, out from the fort gate darted a
-slender, bronze figure, a young Indian stripped naked and without
-weapons. Straight towards the Sioux he ran full speed.
-
-"He has gone crazy," gasped Walter. "They will kill him." He knew the
-fellow, an Ojibwa hunter who had recently brought his furs to the post.
-
-"He does it to prove his courage, to show that he is not afraid of the
-Sioux," explained Louis. "But what use is it to a man to be called brave,
-after he is dead?"
-
-As the young Indian drew near the enemies of his people, Walter held his
-breath, expecting every moment that a shower of musket balls or a cloud
-of arrows would put an end to the rash Ojibwa. But nothing happened.
-Whether from admiration for his reckless bravery or because they scorned
-to kill an enemy so easily, the Sioux let him come on uninjured. When he
-was almost up to them he paused, stood still for a moment, then turned
-and walked back towards the white men.
-
-How would the party from Fort Daer be received? Was it to be peace or
-war? In silence, every nerve tense, the watchers waited to learn. The
-white men drew closer and closer, without pause or hesitation. The
-Indians were dismounting. The two parties were mingling. They were coming
-towards the fort, together. Only a few of the Sioux remained behind to
-watch the horses. Walter drew a long breath.
-
-The Sioux were conducted straight to the open gates. They were to be
-treated as guests. This was Walter's first glimpse of Sioux. He looked on
-with keen interest as they were ushered into the fort. They were manly
-looking fellows, these Dakotas. Most of them were rather tall, taller
-than the majority of the _bois bruls_. They were straight and slender,
-lithe and wiry rather than muscular in appearance. Their faces were
-intelligent for the most part, strong featured, and with a look of pride
-and fierceness very different from the stupid expression of the Crees he
-had seen at Fort York. All wore fringed leggings and moccasins. The
-bodies of some were bare to the waist, while others were clothed in
-shirts of deerskin or calico, or wrapped in blankets or buffalo robes.
-Their black hair, adorned with feathers, hung in braids over their
-shoulders. Every face and bare body was hideous with paint, in streaks,
-patches, spots, circles, and zigzags, the favorite colors being red,
-yellow, and black. They were all tricked out in their best finery,
-beadwork, quill embroidery, necklaces of animals' teeth or birds' claws,
-and trinkets bought from the traders.
-
-The Sioux proved restless and uncomfortable visitors. They pried into
-every corner of the fort. They appeared to be suspicious and acted as if
-they were looking for trouble. The Company officers fed them and treated
-them to tea, tobacco, and some liquor. That was a dangerous thing to do,
-Walter thought, to give them liquor, for all were armed with guns, bows,
-knives, or tomahawks. But the refusal to give them drink might have been
-taken as an insult. The Chief insisted on crossing the river to the
-Company fort, and the trader in charge thought it best to let him go. But
-he managed things so that only a few of Chief Waneta's followers
-accompanied him. As soon as possible they were conducted back to Fort
-Daer.
-
-All the rest of that day the Sioux lingered at Fort Daer. When night came
-they showed no intention of leaving. They had brought nothing to trade,
-but they expected all sorts of gifts. Most of the _bois bruls_ had gone
-back to their families, but Mr. Perier and Walter were allowed to remain
-at the fort with Mr. West. It was a night of anxiety and alarms. Drink
-had made the savage guests touchy and quarrelsome. Several times shots
-were fired in threat or sport, but luckily no one was hurt. The arrival
-of three Assiniboins, who said they had come to smoke the peace pipe with
-their ancient enemies, did not help matters any.
-
-About eleven o'clock shouts and war whoops from outside the walls roused
-everyone. Thinking that the attack had begun, Mr. Perier and Walter
-rushed out of the house where they had withdrawn to keep out of the way
-of quarrelsome Indians. They found that the Sioux, instead of attacking,
-were leaving the fort in haste. There had been a fight between a Dakota
-and an Assiniboin. The Dakota had shot the Assiniboin and scalped him,
-the fallen man's two companions had fled, and some of the Sioux had
-started in pursuit.
-
-Chief Waneta had been overbearing and truculent enough himself, but he
-apparently did not want a general fight. Waneta was no fool. He probably
-realized that the white men and _bois bruls_ of Pembina were too strong
-for him in numbers and too well prepared for trouble. With unexpected
-promptness he gathered his followers together, and started for home.
-Before midnight the whole band had disappeared in the darkness, riding
-south.
-
-
-
-
- XXX
- WITH THE BUFFALO HUNTERS
-
-
-If the visit of the Sioux had resulted in hostilities, Mr. Perier would
-have been forced to give up the trip to the Mississippi. As it was, the
-fact that the only hostile act committed had been against the
-Assiniboins, and that Waneta and his braves had departed at peace with
-the white men, went far to convince the Swiss that his little party would
-have no trouble with the Indians unless they sought it. Louis did not
-wholly agree with that idea, but he was young, eager for travel and
-adventure, and willing to take what seemed a rather remote risk. His
-mother was more doubtful, but if the others were going, she did not
-intend to stay behind. At first Elise had dreaded a new journey into
-strange country, but when Mrs. Brabant decided to go, she no longer felt
-afraid. She did not want to return to Fort Douglas, and she had grown
-very fond of Mrs. Brabant.
-
-Already the _bois bruls_ of Pembina were growing restless. The coming of
-spring had stirred the wild blood in them. They were eager to be up and
-away. Those who had not taken service with the Company to go as voyageurs
-to Fort York, neglected their primitive gardening to prepare for the
-great buffalo hunt. They mended harness, repaired old carts by binding
-the broken parts with rawhide, patched hide and canvas tents, cleaned
-guns, moulded bullets, made stout new moccasins, packed their wooden
-chests, and overhauled gear of all kinds. The ground around every cabin
-was strewn with odds and ends.
-
-On the first day of June Neil arrived full of enthusiasm, and the little
-party was complete. A spot on the open prairie to the southwest of the
-junction of the two rivers had been chosen as a gathering place for the
-hunters. Early in the morning of the appointed day, the people began to
-leave the settlement. Most of the hunters were taking their entire
-families along. The clumsy, squeaking, two-wheeled carts, drawn by wiry
-ponies, were crowded with black-haired, dark-skinned women and children
-or piled high with household gear and equipment. Louis' one horse and
-cart were not enough for the Brabant-Perier party, so he and Walter had
-built another vehicle. Neil furnished two ponies, and Louis had traded
-his toboggan and Gray Wolf for a fourth. Askim was to go with him. He
-would not part with the husky dog.
-
-At the women's suggestion, the Brabant, Perier, and Lajimonire families
-selected a spot a little distance from the main camp. There they
-unhitched their ponies, and stretched their tent covers from cart to
-cart.
-
-"There will be much drinking in the camp to-night," Louis explained to
-Mr. Perier, "to celebrate the beginning of the hunt, and much noise and
-gaming, and probably fighting. Since we do not wish to take part in all
-that, we will camp by ourselves. This is a better place for the women and
-children."
-
-The wisdom of this plan soon became evident. Long before midnight the big
-camp had grown uproarious. When an unusually loud outburst of noise was
-followed by the sound of shots and frantic yelling, Mr. Perier raised
-himself on his elbow to listen. He was sleeping on the ground underneath
-one of the carts.
-
-"I'm afraid we have made a mistake," he said anxiously to Walter lying
-next him. "We cannot travel with that wild crew. It will not be safe for
-the children."
-
-Louis, on the other side, overheard the words, and hastened to reassure
-the Swiss. "You need not fear, M'sieu Perier. They will be all right
-after the liquor is gone. I think they will finish it to-night. They
-cannot get more till they return. Our people are seldom quarrelsome
-except when they have liquor. Once the hunt makes a start, the leaders
-will keep good order. The rules are very strict. They are rough and wild,
-my people, but they are not unkind. Ma'amselle Elise and my little
-sisters will be quite safe."
-
-The hilarity continued through most of the night, but before sunrise
-quiet had descended on the circle of carts and tents. Flasks and kegs
-were empty, and most of the roisterers were sleeping. They remained in
-camp all that day. By the time the caravan was in motion the following
-morning, all were sober and more than ordinarily quiet. Some had good
-reason to be morose, having gambled away their guns, horses, and carts
-while under the influence of liquor. Several had received knife or
-gunshot wounds in the quarrels that resulted.
-
-"It is always so that the hunt begins," said the Canadian Lajimonire,
-with a shake of his head. "Liquor and gambling, they are the twin curses
-of the _bois brul_. Those two things are the cause of most of his
-troubles."
-
-It was surprising how quickly camp was broken and the long train got
-under way at the cries of "_Marche donc!_" The guide rode ahead. His
-household cart, following close behind, bore a flag made of a red
-handkerchief attached to a pole. The lowering of that flag was the signal
-to stop and make camp.
-
-In single file the long line of creaking, jouncing carts stretched far
-across the prairie. Where a man had to drive two or more vehicles, he
-tied one horse to the tail of the cart ahead. Loose ponies for buffalo
-hunting or to replace those in the shafts, ran alongside. Most of the men
-and some of the women rode horseback or went afoot, while the children
-were now in, now out of the carts, according to their inclination. The
-bright colors of the _bois bruls'_ dress, and the red and yellow ochre
-with which many of the carts were painted, gave a gay appearance to the
-cavalcade, but the screeching and groaning of the ungreased axles was
-anything but a merry sound. The discordant rasping and squawking tortured
-Elise's ears and set her teeth on edge.
-
-Because they had camped separately, the Brabant-Perier party was at the
-very end of the train. Mr. Perier was mounted on one of the four horses,
-while Walter, Neil, and the two Brabant boys took turns riding another.
-Most of the time Louis walked beside the front cart or sat on the shafts,
-one of the other boys accompanying the second. Mrs. Brabant, her two
-daughters, Elise, and Max rode in the carts, getting down now and then to
-walk for a while. The rate of travel was slow, less than twelve miles
-being made the first day. Thereafter the day's march averaged nearly
-twenty.
-
-It was with some apprehension that Mr. Perier watched Louis and Neil
-wheel the two carts into the place assigned them in the circle that
-night. Walter, who had lived longer among the _bois bruls_, was less
-troubled. Louis had assured him that everything would be all right, and
-Walter did not doubt his friend's judgment. Everything, but the
-mosquitoes, was all right, that night and every night that the Brabants
-and Periers camped with the hunt. Rough and noisy the hunters and their
-families were, but good natured and kindly enough. They shouted, laughed,
-and sang, fiddled and danced, told stories, played cards and other games
-by the light of their fires, but there was little quarreling and no
-fighting. Within two hours after sunset, all had settled down for the
-night, and the camp lay quiet and sleeping.
-
-The sun rose early those June mornings, but before it appeared above the
-horizon, the camp was astir. In an astonishingly short time the train was
-in motion again. The route was to the west of the Red River in what is
-now North Dakota. There were swampy stretches to cross, still wet enough
-to make traveling difficult, then drier ground and better going. On every
-side lay flat, open country, broken here and there by small groves or
-thin lines of trees along the streams. The prairie was green with new
-grass, and dotted everywhere with the pink and white and yellow and blue
-of wild flowers growing singly or in masses. Elise and the Brabant and
-Lajimonire girls delighted in picking the sweet, pale pink wild roses
-and decorating themselves and the carts. Mrs. Brabant warned them to look
-out for snakes and Louis armed each with a stout stick. At the warning
-rattle, Marie Brabant and Reine Lajimonire would search for the snake
-and kill it. But little Jeanne and Elise, who had not grown used to
-prairie rattlesnakes, ran back to the carts in fright.
-
-Snakes were not plentiful, however. Far more troublesome were the
-mosquitoes that rose in clouds after the sun went down. On still nights
-the buzzing, stinging insects were a continual torment. Smudges were
-kindled everywhere within the circle of carts, but Elise and Max could
-find little choice between the stinging pests and the choking smoke.
-
-Mr. Perier and Walter marveled at the control the leaders of the hunt
-exercised over the wild crew. The hunters had chosen a chief and several
-captains, who formed a governing council, and each captain had a number
-of men under him to act as guards and police. When the guide lowered his
-flag, every cart took the place assigned it in the circle, shafts
-outward. The captain and men on duty were responsible for the order and
-good behavior, as well as the safety, of the camp.
-
-The rules adopted by the council were much the same on all the hunts.
-Scouts were sent out each day to look for buffalo, but must not frighten
-them. No one was allowed to separate from, or lag behind the main party
-without permission, or to hunt buffalo independently. The most serious
-offences were thievery and fighting with guns or knives. Punishments
-ranged from cutting up a man's bridle or saddle, if he had one, to
-driving the guilty person from camp. Knowing that the penalty would be
-swift and severe, even the boldest seldom ventured to break the laws.
-
-For several days no buffalo but a few scattered individuals were seen.
-When the beasts caught scent or sound of the caravan, they were off at an
-awkward gallop. They seemed to move slowly, but really made good speed.
-It was Elise's first sight of live buffalo, and she thought them very
-ugly creatures, with their great shaggy heads and clumsy movements.
-
-Late one afternoon the line of carts wound down the bank of the Turtle
-River to a ford. Long before the rear of the caravan reached the stream,
-exciting news had been carried back from mouth to mouth.
-
-"There are buffalo ahead," one of the Lajimonire boys called to Neil,
-who was driving the first of the Brabant-Perier carts. "A great band has
-been across the ford, and not long ago, they say."
-
-A great band it must have been. The hunting party had left a plain and
-well-trodden trail down the bank, and roiled, muddy water at the
-crossing. But no cart-train running wild could have so ravaged the
-country. Far on either side of the ford, the willows and bushes were torn
-and trampled. From many of the trees the bark was rubbed off or hanging
-in shreds. The grass was worn away. The mud along the margin was trodden
-hard by thousands of hoofs. The devastation was fresh.
-
-Would the hunters chase the buffalo that night? Walter hoped so, though
-the sun was setting when the last cart crossed the ford. The chief of the
-hunt said no, however. Any attempt to pursue buffalo in the darkness
-would probably result merely in frightening them away. Moreover the
-horses, even those that had been running loose, were weary from a
-twenty-mile march. Real buffalo country had been reached. If the hunters
-missed this particular band, there would be others.
-
-So camp was made as usual, but the horses were picketed within the
-circle, instead of being hobbled and turned loose to feed. Time would be
-saved by having the mounts handy in the morning. There was another reason
-for keeping close watch of the ponies that night. Where there were
-buffalo there were likely to be Indians. South of the Turtle River was
-debatable ground between Sioux and Ojibwa, and the Sioux were notorious
-horse thieves.
-
-It was plain that the buffalo were not many miles away. All that night
-their lowing and bellowing could be heard almost continuously.
-
-"The country must be full of them," Walter whispered to Neil, as they lay
-side by side.
-
-"Aye, it's a big band. There'll be grand sport in the morning," was the
-sleepy reply.
-
-
-
-
- XXXI
- THE CHARGING BUFFALO
-
-
-Scouts went out at dawn, and were back again before the camp had finished
-breakfasting. Their report made the hunters hasten preparations. Already
-the question as to which ones of the Brabant-Perier party should take
-part in the hunt had been settled. Only two horses were available. Louis'
-new one had gone lame, and one of Neil's was not a good buffalo pony,
-being gun shy and easily frightened. Neither Mr. Perier nor Walter had
-ever hunted buffalo, while Louis and Neil were skilled in the sport. So
-it was right that the latter two should go. Walter was disappointed of
-course. He would have liked to take part in the hunt. But he comforted
-himself with the thought that there would be other opportunities.
-
-The caravan was just south of the Turtle River, a tributary of the Red,
-and a number of miles west of the latter stream, in slightly rolling,
-though open country. A low, irregular ridge shut off the view to the
-south and hid the buffalo. After the hunters got away, the women,
-children, and few men who had remained behind, started on, with the
-carts. They wanted to be in readiness to collect the meat before the hot
-sun spoiled it, and they were eager to watch the sport. This time the
-carts did not move single file, but jounced over the prairie in any order
-their drivers saw fit.
-
-Walter and Raoul were as anxious as anyone for a view of the hunt. They
-hitched up Neil's pony and got away as quickly as possible, leaving Mr.
-Perier and Mrs. Brabant to follow slowly with the other cart and lame
-horse. Elise, Marie, and Max went with the two boys, while Jeanne
-remained with her mother.
-
-The boys' cart was among the first to top the rise. The sight revealed
-almost took Walter's breath away. The prairie beyond the ridge was
-covered with buffalo in a dense, dark mass. They were feeding peacefully,
-moving slowly along towards the southeast.
-
-"Where are the hunters?" asked Walter.
-
-Raoul pointed to the southwest. "Behind those little hills," he said
-confidently. "The wind is east. They have gone around to approach from
-that way, so the beasts will not get their scent. There they come!"
-
-Figures of horsemen were appearing over the top of one of the low hills.
-On they came, a long, irregular line, riding easily down hill at a lope.
-As they reached level ground they broke into a gallop. The buffalo
-nearest the hunters were taking alarm. They were crowding forward, the
-bulls on the outskirts of the herd pawing the ground and tossing their
-great heads. The horsemen broke into a run. They charged recklessly
-across the prairie, regardless of gopher holes. Those _bois bruls_ could
-certainly ride, thought Walter in admiration. He wondered whether Louis
-and Neil were among the foremost. At that distance he could not tell.
-
-Suddenly the buffalo everywhere took fright. At a clumsy, galloping gait
-they were away. They crowded, wheeled, milled, stampeded, hoofs flying,
-shaggy heads tossing. In a few moments the foremost of the hunters were
-among them, shouting, yelling, firing, horses plunging and shying. The
-whole mass was in wild commotion, sweeping on towards the low ridge where
-the carts waited and the excited spectators looked on. With the
-thundering of hoofs, the bellowing of the beasts, the shouts and yells of
-the hunters, the continuous popping of guns, the clouds of smoke and dust
-lit up by the flashes of firing, the prairie had become pandemonium.
-
-Never had Walter dreamed of such a sight. His blood was tingling. He
-breathed fast and excitedly. Elise stood beside him, her hands clasped
-tightly together, frightened yet fascinated. Marie and Raoul danced up
-and down, and little Max sat on the edge of the cart and shrieked at the
-top of his voice in his excitement.
-
-The great band was breaking up into smaller droves and groups. In every
-direction they wheeled and fled. The hunters, riding recklessly, swaying
-in their saddles, loading and firing at full speed, pursued them.
-
-One group of six or eight frightened beasts was close by, just at the
-foot of the low ridge. A horseman dashed towards them. Walter had just
-time to recognize that blue-bonneted red head, and then, as Neil fired,
-the little band broke and scattered. One big bull was pounding up the
-slope, straight towards the cart.
-
-Walter was standing on one side, Raoul on the other of the nervous,
-excited pony, which was pawing, snorting, twisting about in the shafts,
-alarmed and uneasy at the sight below. It had not occurred to either boy
-that he would have a chance to do any shooting. Both of the guns were in
-the cart.
-
-When the buffalo charged up the slope, Walter sprang back. As he seized
-his gun, the panic-stricken pony jumped to one side, sending Raoul
-sprawling, wheeled, overturned the cart, and was off. Walter saw Max
-hurtle through the air, and land right in the path of the oncoming
-buffalo. As the child struck the ground, Elise darted towards him.
-
-With shaking fingers Walter slipped a charge of powder and ball into the
-muzzle of his gun and primed it. His whole body was trembling. He must
-not miss. A story Lajimonire had told of a fight with an infuriated
-buffalo flashed through his mind. "I aimed behind the ear," the Canadian
-had said. Where was the ear in that shaggy mass of hair?
-
-The bull, at the crest of the ridge, paused for an instant to paw the
-ground, shake its huge, ugly head, and bellow defiance at the little
-group in its pathway. Forcing himself to be steady, deliberate, Walter
-pulled the trigger. It pulled hard. The flint struck the steel. Sparks
-flew in every direction. There was a flash, a roar, a bellow. The buffalo
-plunged forward, and went down.
-
-When Walter recovered from the shock of firing--his primitive, flintlock
-musket kicked like a mule--the great, dark, hairy bulk lay almost at his
-feet. Had he hit behind the ear? He would take no chances. The muscles of
-the big body were twitching. Hurriedly reloading, he fired again, the gun
-muzzle almost against the buffalo's head. An instant later there came
-another report. Raoul had picked himself up, seized his gun, that had
-been thrown out of the cart, and fired at the fallen beast. He missed it
-in his excitement, by a wider margin than he missed Walter.
-
-Walter took no heed of the wild shot. His only thought was of Elise and
-Max. He turned to find Elise stooped over her little brother, her arms
-around him. When she realized that the danger was over, she sank down in
-a heap in the grass. Max wriggled from her arms and sat up.
-
-"Elise," cried Walter, "what were you trying to do?"
-
-"Drag Max out of the way," she answered simply. "Didn't you see? That
-terrible beast was coming straight towards him!"
-
-"And straight towards you, too. Didn't you think of that?"
-
-"She is the bravest girl I ever saw," exclaimed Marie Brabant. Marie, who
-had been on the other side of Raoul, had fled to safety, and had not
-returned until the danger was over.
-
-"No, no," Elise protested. "I was terribly frightened when I saw that
-huge, ugly beast coming up the hill. But when Max fell out of the cart, I
-thought he was going to be killed. I have looked after him ever since
-Mother died you know, Walter," she added, as if in excuse for her own
-bravery.
-
-"You are the bravest girl I ever knew," Marie repeated emphatically,
-"even if you are afraid of snakes."
-
-But Elise had turned to her little brother. "You aren't hurt, are you,
-Max?" she asked anxiously.
-
-"Just my shoulder where I fell on it," the lad replied bravely. "I
-think----"
-
-He was interrupted by Neil's shout. Unnoticed by the others, the Scotch
-boy had ridden up the hill. He dismounted beside the dead buffalo.
-
-"It was all my fault," he said contritely. "I ought not to have driven
-the beasts this way. I saw you, but I was after a cow and didn't notice
-that bull turning towards you. I never thought of his charging up hill. I
-didn't know you were in any danger, till I heard the shot and looked up
-here. You've made a good kill, Walter. He's a big fellow. And you
-certainly kept your head. I'm not sure I wouldn't have lost mine, if I
-had been in your place." This was a generous admission from anyone as
-proud of his courage and prowess as Neil MacKay was. At that moment,
-however, Neil was not in the least proud of himself. His carelessness had
-brought peril to his friends.
-
-
-
-
- XXXII
- TO THE SHEYENNE RIVER
-
-
-When Neil went in pursuit of the frightened pony, he found it feeding on
-the prairie grass on the other side of the ridge. Hindered by the cart,
-it had not run far. He had righted the badly wrecked vehicle, and was
-examining the breaks, when the rest of his party, with the other cart and
-the lame pony, came up. Mr. Perier was appalled when he heard of his
-children's peril, and Mrs. Brabant was warm in her praise of the courage
-and coolness of Elise and Walter.
-
-The hunt had swept away towards the Red River, leaving the trampled
-prairie dotted with the dark bodies of the fallen buffalo. Here and there
-a wounded beast struggled to its feet and made off painfully. The sight
-of the injured and slain was not a pleasant one for the tender-hearted
-Elise, and she turned her back upon it.
-
-"I wish," she confided to Mrs. Brabant, "people didn't have to kill
-things for food. I hate buffalo. They are ugly beasts. But I don't like
-to see them killed, except the one that would have killed Max. Of course
-Walter had to shoot that one."
-
-The Canadian woman put an arm around her and comforted her. "It is
-necessary, my dear, for people to have meat to live, especially in this
-wild country where we raise so little from the ground. I have always told
-my boys not to be wasteful in their hunting, not to kill for the sake of
-killing. If no one killed more than could be eaten or kept for food,
-there would always be plenty of animals in the world."
-
-As the carts descended the slope to the hunting ground, the hunters began
-to straggle back from the chase. By the place where the animal lay, the
-spot where the bullet had entered, and sometimes by the bullet itself,
-they identified the game they had slain. Many of the hunters had marked
-their bullets so they would know them.
-
-Neil had killed two buffalo and Louis four. Their party was well supplied
-with meat. The bull Walter had shot was too old and tough for food. At
-that season of the year the skin was not fit for a robe. The summer coat
-of hair was short, and in many places ragged and rubbed off. But Louis
-said that the tough hide was just the thing for new harness. With
-Walter's permission the Canadian boy set to work. With sure and skilful
-strokes of his sharp knife, he marked out the harness on the body of the
-buffalo, and stripped off the pieces. When dry,--with a thong or two in
-place of buckles,--the harness would be ready for use.
-
-One by one the carts returned to camp loaded with meat and hides. Though
-of no use for robes, the short haired summer skins were in the very best
-condition for tanning. Buffalo leather was used by the _bois bruls_ for
-tents, cart covers, and other purposes.
-
-The choicest cuts were soon broiling over the coals. At the same time the
-rest of the meat was being prepared for pemmican making. It was cut into
-large lumps, then into thin slices, which were hung on lines in the hot
-sun or placed on scaffolds over slow fires. For the meat drying and
-pemmican making, the hunters prepared to remain in camp three days. It
-was a very busy time, yet a rest from traveling.
-
-The Brabant family and Neil knew just how to go about the work, but the
-Periers and Walter, though willing and ready to help, had to be taught.
-After the buffalo strips were well dried, they were placed on hides and
-pounded with wooden flails or stones until the meat was a thick, flaky
-pulp. In the meantime the fat and suet were melting to liquid in huge
-kettles. Hide bags were half filled with the flaked meat, the melted fat
-poured in, the whole stirred with a long stick until thoroughly mixed,
-and the bags sewed up tight while still hot. So prepared, the pemmican
-would keep for months, even years, if not subjected to dampness or too
-high a temperature.
-
-The skins selected for tanning were stretched and staked down, and the
-flesh scraped off with an iron scraper or a piece of sharp-edged bone.
-When the hides had been well cleaned and partially cured by the sun, they
-were folded and packed away in the carts to receive a final dressing
-later.
-
-On the second day in camp a small body of Indians passed about a mile
-away in pursuit of a herd of buffalo. A half dozen of the hunters, who
-were out scouting, encountered some of the band. They reported that the
-Indians were Sioux, Yankton Dakota from farther west. They appeared
-friendly enough. The hunting party felt no concern about them, except as
-possible horse thieves. The men were especially careful that night to see
-that every pony was safe within the circle of carts. The camp guards were
-even more alert than usual.
-
-There was feasting and jollity, as well as busy work, in the hunting
-camp. The _bois bruls_ always had time to fiddle and dance, to play
-games and race their ponies over the prairie. Their capacity for fresh
-meat was enormous. Walter marveled at the quantity of buffalo tongues,
-humps, and ribs consumed. From dawn to dark, it seemed to him, there was
-never a moment when cooking and eating were not going on somewhere in the
-camp. Even the lean dogs grew fat on what was thrown away and what they
-managed to steal. The wild creatures profited, too. The scene of the hunt
-beyond the low ridge was frequented, night and day, by birds of prey and
-wolves.
-
-With high expectations of further sport, the hunters resumed their march
-to the south. They were not disappointed, for they were in true buffalo
-country. The first time Walter joined in the chase, he was so excited and
-confused by the wild ride across the prairie and the charge into the band
-of stampeding beasts, that he could do nothing but cling to his horse and
-try to avoid being thrown or trampled. It was not until the herd had
-scattered and the worst of the wild confusion was over, that he managed
-to get a shot at one of the animals, and missed it. Mortified by his
-failure, he tried a different plan next time. He kept to the outskirts of
-the herd, singled out a young bull, pursued it, and brought it down.
-
-Though some of the hunters, like Louis, killed only what they could use
-and saved as much of the meat as possible, the majority of the _bois
-bruls_ were wasteful and improvident. They ran buffalo for the mere
-excitement of the chase, killed for sport, and frequently took nothing
-but the tongue, leaving the rest for the wolves and crows. Like white
-hunters of a later period, they believed the herds of buffalo
-inexhaustible. Yet it did not take many years of unwise slaughter almost
-to exterminate the animals that, during the first half of the nineteenth
-century, roamed the prairies in hundreds of thousands.
-
-Sometimes the hunters had accidents. Men thrown from their horses
-suffered severe sprains and broken bones. Occasionally too heavy a charge
-of powder burst a gun. Raoul's old musket was ruined in this manner. He
-carried his left hand bandaged for weeks, and was lucky to lose no more
-than the tip of his forefinger. There were many maimed hands among the
-hunters. Fortunately none of the injuries was fatal, though one man was
-so badly hurt when he was thrown and trampled that he would never hunt
-again. The _bois bruls_ were skilled in the rough and ready treatment of
-wounds, sprains, and broken bones, but not over particular about
-cleanliness. Their open air life, however, helped most of the hurts to
-heal rapidly.
-
-Day after day the caravan made its slow and creaking way to the south.
-Now and then bands of Sioux, out on the summer hunt, were seen. Sometimes
-Indians visited the camp, with no apparent unfriendly intentions. The
-savage blood in the Pembina half-breeds was mostly Cree and Ojibwa. But
-the hunting party was too large and well armed to fear hostility from
-small, wandering bands of Sioux.
-
-Nevertheless the Pembina men had no intention of penetrating too far into
-Sioux country. They did not wish to provoke the tribes to unite against
-them. When camp was made one night on the bank of the Sheyenne River, the
-chief of the hunt announced that they would go south no farther. July had
-come. They had been out nearly four weeks. The carts were well loaded
-with fresh and dried meat, fat, pemmican, and hides. On the morrow they
-would turn, circling to the west a little, and, hunting as they went,
-make their way back to Pembina. They should reach the settlement early in
-August.
-
-This decision meant that if the Brabants and Periers were to go on to the
-St. Peter and Mississippi rivers, they must part company with the
-hunters. That night Mr. Perier and the boys consulted with Lajimonire,
-St. Antoine, and others who knew something of the country to the south
-and east. Lake Traverse, they were told, was only three or four days'
-march away. At the lake were traders who would doubtless help them on
-their journey.
-
-Some of the hunters shook their heads at the idea of such a small party
-traveling alone sixty or seventy miles across Dakota country. There would
-be grave danger in the attempt, they said, and advised against it. But
-Mr. Perier, Walter, and Louis had not come so far merely to turn back to
-Pembina. They were bound for the Mississippi and intended to reach it
-somehow. They might have hesitated to travel alone farther to the
-southwest, but everyone said that the route to the southeast was less
-dangerous. The Indians who visited Lake Traverse were in the habit of
-dealing with traders.
-
-In truth the hunters had neither seen nor heard sign of trouble anywhere.
-The Indians they had encountered had seemed inoffensive enough. The boys
-had rather lost their awe of the dread Sioux. They were beginning to
-believe that the tales of the fierceness and cruelty of those savages
-were greatly exaggerated. As Neil expressed it, "Most of that sort of
-talk is just an excuse for Saulteur and half-breed cowardice. They have
-made bogies of the Sioux. I can't see that they are different from any
-other Indians. I don't believe they dare molest white men."
-
-The always hopeful Mr. Perier was quite sure there would be no difficulty
-in reaching Traverse. "We are not enemy Indians raiding the Sioux
-country," he argued. "We are peaceable white settlers going about our own
-affairs. Probably we shall meet no Indians at all. If we do, we will
-treat them in a polite and friendly manner. They are reasonable human
-beings just like ourselves. They have no reason to harm us and I don't
-believe they will try to."
-
-"We will take care to avoid them anyway," added Louis, not quite so sure
-of Sioux reasonableness, but eager to go on.
-
-Louis had hoped to persuade some of the hunters to go to Lake Traverse
-with the little party. In fact St. Antoine and another man had half
-promised. But both suddenly changed their minds. The boys could find no
-one else willing to leave the hunt for the trip to the trading post.
-There was nothing to do but go on alone. Before they rolled themselves in
-their blankets, they had decided to part with the hunters on the
-following day.
-
-
-
-
- XXXIII
- A LONELY CAMP
-
-
-The Sheyenne River, where the night's camp was pitched, should not be
-confused with the Cheyenne, which is a tributary of the Missouri. Both
-were named after the same tribe of Indians, who once lived along their
-banks. To distinguish the two, different spellings of the name have been
-adopted. The Sheyenne is a much smaller stream than the Cheyenne, and one
-of the principal rivers that go to form the Red. After a general course
-to the east, the Sheyenne turns north, and runs almost parallel with the
-Red, to fall into it at last. The spot where the hunters were camped was
-only about ten miles from the Red, but another stream, the Wild Rice, lay
-between.
-
-St. Antoine advised against going directly east. "If you go east," he
-said, "you will reach the Rivire Rouge many miles below the Lac
-Traverse. It is more difficult to cross there. I cannot tell you whether
-there is a ford or not. But if you keep to the southeast, reaching the
-river where it is narrow and shallow, you can cross easily. There it is
-not called Rivire Rouge, but Bois des Sioux. A few miles above where the
-Bois des Sioux joins the Ottertail, which comes from the east to form the
-real Rivire Rouge, there is a good crossing place. When you are across,
-turn south and follow the river to the Lac Traverse."
-
-The caravan was slow in getting away that morning. The good-natured _bois
-bruls_ lingered to help the Brabant-Perier party across the Sheyenne. At
-some time hunters or traders had built a rude log bridge over the deep,
-muddy stream. Part of the old bridge had been carried away by flood
-waters, but skilled axmen soon repaired it, so that the two carts could
-be taken across.
-
-By the time good-byes were said, last words of advice and warning spoken,
-the river crossed, and the steep bank climbed, the sun had passed its
-highest point. St. Antoine, Lajimonire, and several others rode with the
-little party through the thick woods that fringed the stream bank. The
-woods passed, St. Antoine carefully pointed out the route. The day was
-clear, and the travelers could see far across the flat, open country.
-
-"You see that _le des bois_?" questioned St. Antoine, pointing to a tiny
-dark dot far away on the prairie. "That is the only _le des bois_ for
-many miles around. Make straight for it. You can camp there to-night.
-There is a spring, and wood to boil your kettle. To-morrow go on in the
-same direction, and you will come to the river the Sioux call _Pse_, the
-white men _Folle Avoine_, from the wild rice that grows in its marshes.
-If you keep a straight course you will reach that river near a fording
-place. From there the Bois des Sioux is less than a day's journey. But do
-not try to take your carts across either river until you are sure that
-the water is not too deep or the current too strong. The Bois des Sioux
-is a small stream and has many shallow places. Go then, and the good God
-go with you."
-
-The hunters turned back, waved a last farewell, and disappeared among the
-trees. Louis set his face towards the dark dot far across the prairie.
-"_Marche donc!_" he cried, and slapped his pony's flank, he was riding
-ahead as guide, while Neil and Walter walked beside the carts.
-
-The stretch of flat prairie between the Sheyenne and the Wild Rice looked
-easy to cross. The party expected to make good time, but the very
-flatness of the land proved a hindrance. The poorly drained plain was
-marshy. The grass grew tall and coarse, the soil it sprang from was
-spongy and frequently soft and wet. Stretches of standing water or very
-soft ground, grown thick with marsh grass and cattails, had to be
-skirted. In spite of the travelers' care in picking their way, the cart
-wheels often sank far into the mud and water, and the faithful ponies had
-to pull hard to haul them through. In such places Mrs. Brabant and the
-children got out and walked or rode the two saddle ponies. Most of the
-time Louis or Neil rode ahead to select the route.
-
-The difficult going lengthened the ten or twelve miles to that dark spot
-of woods. Sunset found the party still a mile or more from the _le des
-bois_. It would be better to go on, they decided, than to camp on the
-wet, open ground, with no wood for a fire, and only stagnant marsh water
-to drink.
-
-Louis and Mr. Perier, with Max in front of him on the saddle, were riding
-in advance. Then came the carts with Mrs. Brabant and the girls, Neil
-beside the first cart, Raoul accompanying the second. Walter plodded
-along in the rear. Turning to look back at the sunset sky, where the reds
-and golds were already fading away, he noticed several dark forms loping
-along the trail through the tall grass. They were prairie wolves.
-
-Walter had often seen wolves following the cart train, cleverly keeping
-just out of musket range, but ready to close in on the remains of any
-game that might be killed. He did not fear the cowardly scavengers. Yet
-now they gave him a strange feeling he had never had when with the long
-caravan. The sight of those wild creatures, shadowy in the twilight,
-following so boldly in the wake of the tiny party, brought to him a
-sudden sense of loneliness and peril such as he had not known before. He
-shivered, though the evening was warm. Then he raised his gun, intending
-to frighten the beasts, even if he could not hit them.
-
-Before he had time to fire, an exclamation from Mrs. Brabant caused him
-to lower his gun and turn towards the cart. Both carts had stopped. A
-hundred feet ahead Louis and Mr. Perier had reined in. Louis jumped from
-his horse and stooped to examine the ground.
-
-"What is it? Why are we stopping?" Walter asked Raoul.
-
-"Louis signaled for a halt. I don't know why."
-
-Moved by curiosity, Walter followed Neil and Raoul to the spot where the
-horsemen had reined in. It did not need the Scotch boy's exclamation or
-Louis' sober face to make Walter understand the seriousness of what they
-had found. They had come upon a trail, a clear, distinct trail. It was
-not the wide, trampled track of a buffalo herd, but the clearly defined,
-narrow trail of horses single file.
-
-"Indians?" asked Walter, though he knew well enough that the question was
-unnecessary.
-
-Neil answered with a grunt of assent. Louis, leading his horse, had gone
-on a little farther. In a moment he turned and summoned the others. He
-had come upon a parallel trail, somewhat wider and more irregular than
-the first and marked with lines resembling wheel tracks, but not so wide
-as those made by the broad-rimmed cart wheels.
-
-"_Travois_," he said briefly. "Heavily loaded."
-
-Walter had heard the word _travois_ before in the sense in which Louis
-used it. It was the name the French Canadians had given to a primitive
-Indian conveyance, two poles lashed to the sides of a horse or dog, the
-front ends resting on the animal's shoulders, the rear ends trailing on
-the ground. Cross pieces were tied on, and a hide or blanket stretched
-between the poles. Travois were loaded with household goods, or carried
-women too old and children too young to walk or ride horseback. The crude
-vehicles were used everywhere by the prairie Indians.
-
-A little farther on was another similar trail, and beyond it a fourth, a
-narrow horse track like the first.
-
-"A whole band," Louis concluded, "women and children and all. When I saw
-that first trail I feared it was a war party of mounted men only."
-
-"They are traveling as if in enemy country," Neil commented, "in four
-lines, instead of single file."
-
-"With the travois and women in the middle, and the braves on the
-outside," added Louis. "Yes, they must be uneasy about something."
-
-"How long ago do you think they passed?" asked Mr. Perier.
-
-"Not many hours. Since last night. It must have been before noon though.
-We could have seen them a long way across the prairie."
-
-"They are far away by now."
-
-"Yes. It is good that we did not make an earlier start."
-
-"And that our trail crosses theirs instead of going the same way," said
-Neil. "We'd better go on as fast as we can to that clump of trees. Our
-camp will be hidden there." Somehow he did not feel quite so sure now
-that Dakotas would not dare to attack white men, especially when the
-white men had horses to be stolen.
-
-Louis climbed on his pony again, and the other boys turned back to bring
-up the carts. They made the best speed they could through the tall grass
-and over the marshy ground, but darkness had settled down before they
-reached the _le des bois_.
-
-Finding a camping place among the trees, Louis and Walter unhitched and
-unsaddled the horses. Instead of hobbling them and turning them loose to
-feed, they tied the four ponies to trees close to the camp fire, where
-they could browse on tufts of grass, leaves, and twigs. Louis was taking
-no risk of losing them. In the meantime Neil was cutting wood, Raoul had
-kindled a fire, Mr. Perier had brought water from a rather brackish pool,
-and Mrs. Brabant and the girls were preparing supper.
-
-To Walter the seclusion and shelter of the grove came as a relief from
-the open prairie. The cheerful flames of the camp fire lighting up the
-surrounding tree trunks and the cottonwood leaves overhead, the
-appetizing smell of pemmican heating in an iron pan, raised his spirits.
-He forgot the following wolves and the Indian trail. The rest of the
-party also seemed to have forgotten the unpleasant things of the day's
-journey. Elise hummed to herself as she helped Mrs. Brabant with the
-simple meal. Max ran about to find sticks for the fire. Raoul teased
-Marie, as he often did, and she retorted in her usual lively manner.
-Little Jeanne, with the dog Askim beside her, had fallen sound asleep on
-a blanket bed between the carts. She had to be waked when supper was
-ready.
-
-The meal was as cheerful as if the little group had still been part of
-the big hunting party. Yet the loneliness of their situation had its
-effect upon them. Unconsciously they lowered their voices. At the
-slightest sound from beyond the circle of firelight, the stirring of a
-horse, the breaking of a twig, the rustling of a bush, the cry of a night
-bird, everyone glanced quickly around. When a screech owl in a near-by
-tree wailed, they were all startled, then, shamefaced, laughed at
-themselves.
-
-After supper Mr. Perier drew Louis aside. "Do you think we ought to stand
-guard to-night?" he asked in a low voice.
-
-"I think it most wise," Louis replied promptly. "We do not wish our
-horses stolen, if any Indians have seen the smoke of our fire."
-
-Including Raoul, who was quite old enough to do guard duty and would have
-been insulted if anyone had suggested that he was not, there were five
-men in the party. To make up an even number, Mrs. Brabant insisted on
-taking her turn. It was arranged that Walter and Raoul should keep first
-watch, Mr. Perier and Neil second, and Louis and his mother the hours
-just before dawn. Both the latter knew, though they said nothing about
-it, that before dawn was the time danger was most likely to come, if it
-came at all. Mrs. Brabant confessed to Louis that she would not be
-sleeping then anyway, and might just as well be standing guard.
-
-Though they had seen no sign of Indians except the track across the
-prairie, and seemed to be in no real danger, everyone but the two younger
-children slept lightly and uneasily. The beasts seemed to catch their
-masters' uneasiness. Askim, as if personally responsible for the safety
-of the camp, padded back and forth and round about through the grove,
-growling low in his throat sometimes, but never making a loud sound. The
-night was windy, and the mosquitoes were not troublesome, but the ponies
-were restless. They crowded as close to the carts as their lariats would
-permit. Now and then one or another would jump and snort as if in terror.
-Yet the guards could find nothing wrong, no cause of disturbance except
-the howling of a wolf on the prairie or the hooting of a hunting owl.
-
-
-
-
- XXIV
- DANGER
-
-
-The camp was stirring early, and the sheltering grove was soon left
-behind. On every side the prairie, empty and peaceful, stretched away
-into misty distance. The fears and alarms of the night had been
-imaginary.
-
-As on the day before, the route lay over flat, poorly drained, often
-marshy country, where the grass grew tall and rank. By going directly
-east, the travelers might have reached the Wild Rice River in a few
-hours, but far from the place where St. Antoine had advised them to
-cross. Even if they succeeded in crossing, they knew they would lose
-rather than gain time by going that way. If they went straight east they
-would come to the Red River a number of miles below the Ottertail, where
-the Red was much larger and more difficult to ford. St. Antoine had
-explained all that, showing them how, by going southeast, instead of east
-and then south, they would find better fording places as well as save
-actual distance. So they continued to the southeast.
-
-By the position of the sun and the little grove behind him, Louis strove
-to keep a straight course, a difficult feat for anyone less experienced
-in prairie travel. Louis himself found it far from easy, especially when
-he had to make detours around impassable ground. Many times that day he
-wished for St. Antoine or some other older and more prairie-wise man.
-
-As the sun rose higher, the day grew very hot. Even the ponies felt the
-effect of the heat, as they plodded steadily on. At noon the party halted
-for an hour on the open prairie, to let the horses rest and feed. There
-was not a stick of fuel anywhere, so the pemmican was eaten cold, and
-washed down with a sip of the warm, brackish water they had brought from
-the _le des bois_.
-
-In mid afternoon, hot and tired, the little caravan reached the bank of a
-stream Louis knew must be the Wild Rice. A narrow, crooked, muddy stream
-it proved to be, like a deep ditch between high and scantily wooded
-banks. At the top of the bank the carts halted, while Louis and Neil
-scrambled down, leading their horses, to look for a ford. After a half
-hour's search for a place that appeared safe, the two boys came upon a
-trail. The slope was a little less steep in this spot, and, winding down
-to the water's edge, was the well-worn track of men and animals. There
-was no mistaking it.
-
-"Here is a ford," Louis announced confidently. "It is here that the
-Indians cross."
-
-"It looks like it," Neil agreed. "We might as well go back for the carts.
-This is the easiest place we've seen to bring them down."
-
-Louis shook his head. "Wait a bit," he commanded. "I must see if the
-crossing is safe. The trail is old. There are no signs that anyone has
-crossed recently, and the river is yet far from its lowest point. You
-stay here, and I will try to trace the ford and make sure it is not too
-deep."
-
-"All right," consented Neil. "I'll keep an eye on you. If you get into
-trouble, I'll go to your help."
-
-The water was so thick and muddy, Louis could scarcely see whether it was
-deep or shallow. His pony was sure footed, and picked its way carefully.
-So he left the finding of the ford to the animal's instinct and
-intelligence. Slowly they made their way across. The water rose to the
-horse's sides, but did not carry it off its feet, as the current was
-sluggish. There was one deep place, however, where the pony was forced to
-swim a few yards.
-
-Neil, mounted and ready to go to the rescue, watched anxiously. His help
-was not needed. The pony found foothold, and was soon scrambling up the
-farther bank to dry land. Dismounting, Louis patted the animal and rubbed
-its nose. Unlike the _bois bruls_, he treated his beasts kindly. He had
-brought this horse up from colthood, and it had no fear of him. After
-resting a few minutes, boy and pony made their way back again.
-
-"Can we get the carts across?" asked Neil, as Louis, wet to the waist,
-reached shore.
-
-"Yes, if we pull them over with ropes. We can take my mother and the
-children on the horses. There is only the one deep place, and the current
-is not strong. Csar knew the way. He took me out where the trail goes up
-from the water. This is an old fording place."
-
-"St. Antoine said nothing about a trail."
-
-"No, I think this is not the place where he crossed. We may be miles from
-that spot."
-
-"If we can get across here, that is all we care about," returned Neil.
-
-The old trail was steep but not impossible for vehicles. With the boys
-acting as brakes by hanging on to the rear, the carts made their
-screeching, groaning way down. The horses were unhitched, and rawhide
-ropes attached to one of the carts. Then Louis and Walter rode over the
-ford, wound the ropes around a willow tree for greater security, and
-began to pull. The others steadied the cart into the water. Neil,
-mounting hastily, rode behind it to prevent disaster.
-
-Part way across, the wheels stuck in the muddy bottom and would not turn.
-Neil jumped off his horse, and Raoul waded out to help him. They pushed
-and heaved vigorously, while Louis and Walter pulled, and got the cart
-moving again. In the deep place the box body floated, and the boys
-succeeded in pulling it to shore before it took in much water. Knowing
-that the dry box would leak more or less, they had lined it with hides.
-The load came through uninjured.
-
-The same process was repeated with the second cart, which was not so
-lucky and took in more water. Then Mrs. Brabant and the girls, their
-skirts gathered up under them on the horses' backs, were brought across,
-wetting no more than their feet and ankles. Max, sitting cross legged in
-front of his father, did not even get his feet wet. The older boys and
-Mr. Perier were well soaked. The day was so warm they did not mind a
-wetting.
-
-The search for the ford and the crossing had taken a long time. The sun
-was low when the weary little party started up the old trail to seek a
-camping place. It happened that Walter, leading one of the horses along
-the steep track, was ahead. As he reached the top, picking his way, he
-turned to look back at the pony. After the horse was up, he continued to
-stand looking down, watching the carts making their slow way up, the
-ponies pulling steadily, the boys pushing. He ought to be down there
-helping, he thought.
-
-The neighing of a horse startled him. He swung around, gave one gasp, and
-fairly tumbled down the bank, dragging the surprised pony after him.
-
-"Indians!" he gasped.
-
-"Where?" Louis let go his hold on the first cart, and scrambled up to
-join Walter.
-
-"Coming across the prairie. A whole band of them."
-
-"How far away? Did they see you?"
-
-"They must have seen me. There are no trees. I stood right in the open."
-
-Louis dropped flat and wormed his way up the slope. He raised his head
-cautiously, lowered it quickly, and slid back.
-
-"They certainly saw you. They are too close to have missed you. We can't
-avoid them. They come straight to the ford. We have no time to get out of
-the way. There is not enough cover to hide in. And they must have seen
-you and the horse. We must put on a bold front and not act afraid. That
-is the only thing we can do."
-
-The rest of the party, alarmed by the two boys' actions, had stopped in
-their tracks. Not many seconds were spent in telling them what was
-happening. All realized that Louis was right when he said there was
-nothing to do but put on a bold front. In a few moments the tiny caravan
-was moving again. Raoul held Askim by the collar to keep him from
-running ahead.
-
-Louis and Walter went first, side by side, leading their horses. When he
-came in view of the prairie, Walter's heart beat fast. He struggled to
-control his trembling knees, and to appear cool and unconcerned.
-
-A very short distance away, coming straight towards the two lads, was a
-little group of mounted men, with bare, black heads and feathers in their
-hair. Some wore loose buckskin shirts. The bronze bodies of others were
-bare. Beyond them more mounted men, men, women, and children on foot,
-pack animals, and travois covered the prairie in a wide, irregular,
-disorderly procession.
-
-"A whole band out on the hunt," said Louis. "Well, that is less to be
-feared than a war party of braves only."
-
-The advance group let out a yell, a wild, menacing sound it seemed to the
-Swiss boy, hammered their horses' sides with their heels, and came on at
-a gallop. Louis swung himself into the saddle, and advanced to meet them,
-one arm raised in the friendship sign. Walter mounted and followed,
-imitating the gesture.
-
-The leading Indian responded with upraised arm, and the group came on.
-Surrounding the lads, they reined in their ponies. Walter's heart was
-thumping against his ribs, but the trembling had passed. He sat straight
-and steady in the saddle, and kept a calm exterior.
-
-"_Bo jou_," said Louis pleasantly.
-
-"How," stolidly returned the leader of the advance party. He was a
-well-built, broad-shouldered fellow in the prime of life. A piece of
-buffalo robe was his only saddle. He guided his horse with a cord of
-twisted hair around the jaw, and rode with free and easy grace.
-
-As Louis knew only four or five words of Dakota, communication had to be
-carried on principally in sign language. Recognizing the word for trader
-when the Indian spoke again, Louis replied with a shake of his head, then
-pointed to the carts just appearing over the top of the bank. He
-interpreted the Indian's next gesture as a question about the size of the
-party, and held up ten fingers in answer. Wishing to convey the idea that
-the ten were only part of a much larger party, he pointed across the
-river, and spread out his fingers, closing and opening them several
-times.
-
-The Indian nodded, stared fixedly at the carts, and inquired,
-"_Minnewakan?_"
-
-That was one of the few words Louis knew. "No _minnewakan_, no liquor,"
-he replied. His questioner looked disappointed, so Louis hastened to add,
-"We can give you a little tobacco. _Tabac_," he repeated with emphasis.
-
-Evidently the Indian had heard the word _tabac_ in intercourse with the
-traders. He repeated it with a nod and held out his hand.
-
-Louis pointed towards the carts, and said quickly to Walter, "Go get some
-tobacco. It will be all right. We're safe enough for the present."
-
-The Indians made no move to hinder Walter's return to the carts. He was
-back in a few moments with the tobacco, which Louis divided among the
-group of braves, taking care to give the largest portion to the leader.
-
-The first of the main body of Indians had come on almost to the river
-bank, a little way beyond where the carts were standing, and had halted
-there. The boys' new acquaintance pointed to the spot, then brought the
-tips of his forefingers together to indicate the pointed shape of a tipi.
-Walter guessed the man's meaning to be that the band would camp there for
-the night. His heart sank. He had been hoping that the Indians would go
-on across the river.
-
-If Louis was troubled, he did not show it. He pointed the other way,--up
-river,--and made the same sign. Then he said "_Bo jou_" again and turned
-his horse in that direction.
-
-The Indian gave a little grunt which might have meant either assent or
-protest. Neither he nor his companions showed any wish to hinder the
-boys' freedom of movement. They remained motionless for a few moments,
-then turned towards the camping place of their own band.
-
-"What are we going to do?" asked Walter, when he and Louis had put a few
-yards between themselves and the Indians.
-
-"We will have to make camp," Louis replied slowly. "We will not be any
-safer if we go on. If they wish to steal our horses or interfere with us
-in any way, they will only follow. They can overtake us easily. Those
-fellows' horses are fresher than ours. I saw that at once. We will camp
-farther up the river, as far as we can without seeming to run away. I
-tried to make them believe that we are an advance party. If we camp here
-it will look as if we waited for the others to join us. It is a bad
-situation, but I do not see what else we can do."
-
-"If they want to take our horses, though, and everything else we have, we
-are helpless. We are too few to fight a whole band. I suppose you are
-right about going on now. If they wished to harm us, some of them would
-follow. But when they think we are all settled for the night, can't we
-steal away in the darkness?"
-
-"I have thought of that," Louis returned quietly. "That is one reason I
-want to camp as far away as we can, without making them suspicious. If
-they seem perfectly friendly, it may be best to remain in camp till
-morning. We can decide that later. The important thing now is to keep our
-heads and act as if we had no fear."
-
-
-
-
- XXXV
- IN THE CHIEF'S TIPI
-
-
-The others of the party realized that Louis knew more than they about
-Indians, so his view of what was best to do prevailed. He chose a spot
-back from the river bank on the brink of a narrow, steep sided ravine. A
-_coulee_ such a rift in the prairie was commonly called. There, in the
-open, nearly a half mile up river from the Indian encampment, camp was
-pitched.
-
-The dangers of the situation were carefully concealed from the younger
-children. Elise and Marie were old enough to realize the peril, but they
-understood as well as their elders that they must not appear afraid. Both
-girls were frightened, but they tried pluckily not to give way to their
-fears. Mrs. Brabant set them a good example, going about the camp work in
-a cheerful, matter-of-fact way. Not even Louis guessed how she was
-suffering with anxiety and dread. While her lips smiled bravely, she was
-repeating over and over in her mind passionate prayers for her children's
-safety. Though he understood less of the danger, and was by nature always
-hopeful that things would turn out all right, Mr. Perier too was far from
-easy in his mind. He regretted sincerely that he had brought Elise and
-Max on this dangerous journey. Still, as always, he hoped for the best.
-Of the four older boys, Raoul, the youngest and most reckless, was the
-least frightened and the most thrilled by the adventure. The feelings of
-the others were of mingled fear, excitement, and manly pride in the
-responsibility laid upon them. The red-headed Highland lad, cleaning his
-gun carefully, was almost hoping for a fight. Louis and Walter, though
-determined to protect their camp at any cost to themselves if that should
-be necessary, were racking their brains for ways to avoid conflict of any
-kind. They must avoid it or their little party would be wiped out.
-
-At first the Indians left the white men to themselves. Before the evening
-meal was over, however, visitors arrived, announced by a warning growl
-from Askim. Into the firelight stalked the sturdy, strong-faced brave
-who had led the advance party. He was followed by two younger men. Both
-were slender, wiry fellows, and one was distinctly handsome in a
-Roman-nosed, high-cheeked, hawk-eyed style. The other was disfigured by a
-broken and crooked nose.
-
-The young men stood impassive, while the elder made a sign of greeting
-and said "How" in his deep voice.
-
-Louis, who had risen, returned the "How" and motioned the visitors to
-seats by the fire, the others moving closer together to make room.
-Foreseeing that there might be guests, Mrs. Brabant had made more tea and
-heated more pemmican than usual. She helped the guests liberally, and
-they ate in silence. When each was satisfied, he carefully placed his cup
-and plate upside down on the ground.
-
-"_Minnewakan?_" the elder warrior inquired, as if he had not asked the
-question before.
-
-Louis shook his head and passed out some tobacco. There was silence,
-while each Indian gravely smelled of his portion, and stowed it away in
-his beaded buckskin fire bag.
-
-Then the man with the crooked nose pointed to Askim, who lay at Louis'
-feet, keeping a watchful eye on the strangers. "_Nitshunka?_" he asked,
-looking at Louis.
-
-The boy had never heard the word before. He did not know whether the
-fellow was inquiring if the dog was his, or offering to buy it. In answer
-he laid one hand on Askim's head, and touched his own breast with the
-other. The young Indian promptly took off the necklace of beasts' and
-birds' claws he wore, and held it out. But Louis shook his head
-emphatically, saying "_Non, non_."
-
-The broken-nosed man nodded gravely, and replaced the necklace, but he
-continued to gaze at the dog. It was plain that he was anxious to get
-Askim by some means or other.
-
-The elder brave soon brought the call to a close. Rising to his feet, he
-pointed first in the direction of the Indian camp, and then to Louis and
-Walter in turn. He said something in his own language, drew his
-forefinger across his forehead, and pointed again towards the camp. The
-drawing of the forefinger across the forehead was the common sign for a
-hat-wearer or white man.
-
-Louis' curiosity was aroused. He drew his finger across his own head,
-then pointed to his breast.
-
-The Indian shook his head. It was some other white man he meant. Again he
-made the sign, with his left hand, while he pointed towards the camp with
-his right. At the same time he spoke the word for trader.
-
-Louis nodded to show that he understood.
-
-The Indian gave a little grunt, and once more pointed to the boys in
-turn, then to the camp. He repeated the hat-wearer sign and the word
-trader.
-
-Louis turned to Walter. "There is a white man with that band, a trader. I
-am sure that is what this fellow means. And he wishes us to go to the
-camp and see the man. Perhaps the white man has sent for us."
-
-"Shall we go?" asked Walter. "Do you think it is safe?"
-
-"I do not know if it is safe," was the thoughtful reply, "but _I_ must go
-I think. If I do not he will think I am afraid. And I want to discover if
-there really is a white trader there, and talk with him. He may be our
-one chance of safety. Sometimes the traders have great influence. Yes, I
-must go."
-
-Louis indicated his willingness to accompany the Indians, but the elder
-man was still unsatisfied. He kept pointing at Walter.
-
-"I am going too, Louis," the latter decided. He glanced around the little
-circle. "Do you suppose the others will be all right while we are away?"
-
-"There is risk to all of us, all the time, whatever we do," Louis
-returned gravely. "It is not good for our party to be separated. Yet I do
-not think they try to separate us. Why should they, when we are so few,
-and they are so many? No, I think that white trader has sent for us, and
-we had best go." He turned to Neil and Raoul. "Keep close watch," he
-warned, "and you, Raoul, make a big pile of dry grass and wood. If
-anything happens to alarm you, light it, and we shall see the flames, and
-come at once."
-
-"If we can," Walter added to himself. He did not voice his doubt. He knew
-they must take the risk; he saw that quite clearly.
-
-There was a frightened look in Elise's eyes. She laid her hand on
-Walter's arm. "Don't go," she whispered.
-
-"I must, little sister. I can't let Louis go alone. We will be back
-soon."
-
-Mrs. Brabant's face had turned pale, but she made no protest. As for Mr.
-Perier, the news that there was a white man with the Indians had gone far
-to reassure him of their friendliness and good intentions.
-
-The three braves had come unarmed, so courtesy required that Louis and
-Walter should not take their guns, reluctant though they were to leave
-them behind. The Indians were on foot, and all went back in the same
-manner. The long twilight was deepening, as the five took their silent
-way towards the firelit group of tipis that had sprung up from the
-prairie like some strange mushroom growth. The air was hot, still, and
-oppressive. Dark clouds lay low on the western and southern horizon.
-
-The Indian camp was a noisy place. As the party approached, their ears
-were assailed by a variety of sounds; the neighing and squealing of
-ponies, the howling and yelping of dogs, the shouting of children, the
-voices of the women, the tones of the old squaws cracked and shrill,
-calling, laughing, and scolding, the toneless thumping of a drum and the
-clacking of rattles accompanying the harsh monotone of some medicine
-man's chant, and a hundred other noises. Hobbled horses fed on the
-prairie grass around the circle of lodges. A whole pack of snarling,
-wolfish dogs rushed out as if to devour the newcomers, but did not dare
-to approach very close for fear of a beating. The buffalo skin tipis were
-lit up with cooking fires without and within. The mingled odors of wood
-smoke, boiling and roasting meat, tobacco and _kinnikinnick_,--osier
-dogwood or red willow bark shredded and added to tobacco to form the
-Indian smoking mixture,--filled the air.
-
-The little party were close to the tipis, when a man came out to meet
-them. He spoke to the older brave, and an argument followed. Unable to
-understand the conversation, the boys stood waiting, and wondering what
-was going on. Evidently the two Indians were disagreeing, but the only
-words Louis recognized were _minnewakan_ and the term for trader.
-
-It was the lads' conductor who yielded at last. He gave a grunt of sullen
-assent, gestured to the boys to follow the other, turned on his heel, and
-stalked off. The stranger led the way among the lodges.
-
-Walter had never visited an Indian camp, and curiosity was getting the
-better of his fears. The squaws and children were quite as curious about
-the white men. The women left their various occupations, and ceased their
-gossiping and scolding, the children stopped their play and quarreling,
-to stare at the strangers. Their inquisitiveness was open and frank, but
-did not seem unfriendly. The men, lounging about at their ease, eating,
-smoking, polishing their weapons, or doing nothing whatever, disdained to
-show interest in the newcomers. Their casual glances were indifferent
-rather than hostile. Walter noted that these people were in the habit of
-dealing with traders. Many of the loose, shapeless garments the women
-wore were of bright colored cotton, instead of deerskin. Some of the men
-had shirts or leggings of scarlet cloth. The boy's courage rose. So far
-there was nothing to fear.
-
-The lodges were arranged in two irregular circles, one within the other.
-In the center of the inner open space, stood a solitary tipi of unusual
-size. From it, apparently, came the sounds of drum, rattles, and chant.
-Walter wondered if it was there that he and Louis were being led. Surely
-a white man would not---- But the guide had turned to the right, and was
-pulling aside the skin curtain that covered the entrance to one of the
-lodges in the circle. He motioned to the boys to enter.
-
-Walter followed Louis in, and looked about him. The fire on the ground in
-the center of the tipi was smouldering smokily, and the forms of the men
-beyond were but dimly visible. Louis went forward unhesitatingly. At the
-right of the fire, he paused, and Walter stepped to his side.
-
-Someone threw a piece of buffalo fat on the fire. The flames leaped up,
-casting a strong light on the bronze bodies of six or seven seated men.
-All were nearly naked, except the slender young man in the center. He
-wore scarlet leggings and a blue coat with scarlet facings; an old
-uniform coat that must once have belonged to some white officer. The
-young Indian's chest was bare and adorned with paint. A necklace of elk
-teeth, with a silver coin as a pendant, was his principal ornament. There
-were eagle feathers in his scarlet head band, and his coarse, black hair,
-which hung in two braids over his shoulders, glistened with grease. The
-swarthy face of the young chief, as the firelight revealed it, struck
-Walter with instant distrust and dislike. The wide mouth was loose
-lipped. The dark eyes--large for an Indian--that he fastened on the boys
-were bloodshot and fierce.
-
-Louis stood straight and motionless, steadily returning the young chief's
-gaze. Drawing himself up to his full height, Walter tried to imitate his
-comrade's bold bearing. After a few minutes of this silent duel of
-glances, during which the fire died down again, the chief deigned to
-speak.
-
-His first words were apparently an inquiry as to whether the white men
-were traders. Louis shook his head. Then came a request,--it sounded more
-like a demand,--for _minnewakan_.
-
-Again Louis shook his head. Stepping forward, he offered the chief the
-gifts he had brought him, a twist of tobacco, a paper of coarse pins, and
-a piece of scarlet cloth. Though the boys had expected to be led directly
-to the white trader, Louis had thought it best to go provided with a few
-courtesy presents for the head man of the band. The chief accepted the
-things in silence.
-
-On the chance that the fellow or someone of his companions might know a
-little French, Louis proceeded to explain that he and his party were
-peaceful travelers from the Selkirk Colony on their way to the trading
-post at Lake Traverse. Whether anyone understood what he said the boy
-could not tell.
-
-When Louis had finished, the chief made a speech, a long speech,
-delivered in an impressive, even pompous manner, with frequent pauses for
-effect. At each pause, his companions in chorus uttered an approving
-"Uho, uho!" That was the way the exclamation sounded to Walter. He could
-understand nothing of the chief's oration, of course, but he got the idea
-that the young man liked to listen to his own voice.
-
-Among the voices that cried out "Uho," there was one deep pitched one
-that affected the Swiss boy in a peculiar manner. It sent a sudden chill
-of fear over him. And there was something familiar about it. He glanced
-around the group to see to which man that voice belonged. The fire had
-nearly burned out, and the lodge was so dark he could distinguish the
-figures but dimly. At the third exclamation of approval, he made up his
-mind that the voice that affected him so strangely came from the man on
-the chief's right. During the few moments when the firelight had been
-bright enough to reveal the Indians, Walter had noticed nothing about
-that man except his size. He was a big fellow, broad shouldered and tall,
-overtopping the chief by several inches, though the latter was not short.
-The big man's features the boy had not seen, for they were in the shadow
-of the scarlet blanket the fellow held up, apparently to shield his face
-from the heat.
-
-The speaker brought his oration to a sonorous close. There was a chorus
-of loud "uhos." As if for dramatic effect, another chunk of fat was
-thrown upon the fire. The flames shot up again, and cast their light upon
-the chief and his courtiers.
-
-Walter gasped. He felt Louis' fingers close upon his arm and grip it
-tight in warning. The blanket no longer concealed the face of the big
-brave on the chief's right. The amazed boys were staring straight at the
-glittering, bright eyes and thin-lipped, cruel mouth of the Black Murray.
-It seemed incredible, impossible, but it was so.
-
-The big warrior, a Sioux Indian in every detail; braided hair and
-feathers, big-muscled, bronze body naked except for the breech cloth and
-the handsome scarlet blanket about his shoulders, chest and arms adorned
-with streaks and circles of red and black paint, was the former Hudson
-Bay voyageur, Murray. If it had been possible to mistake that regular
-featured, sinister face, with its glittering eyes and scornful smile, the
-silver chain around his neck, with Mr. Perier's watch hanging upon his
-chest, must have removed all doubts. He was the Black Murray beyond
-question.
-
-
-
-
- XXXVI
- THE WHITE TRADER
-
-
-While Louis and Walter stared, amazed and apprehensive, the Black Murray
-rose to his feet and turned to the chief. He said a few words in Dakota;
-his all too familiar voice sending another chill up Walter's spine,
-gathered his blanket about him, gave the boys one scornful glance, and
-strode around the fire and out of the tipi.
-
-Louis drew a long breath to steady himself, and spoke to the chief again.
-Still uncertain whether the Indians understood any French, the boy
-thanked the young chief for receiving his comrade and himself. They had
-enjoyed the visit to the village, he said, but must return to their own
-camp now, as the hour was growing late. They hoped to see more of the
-chief and his people in the morning. At the close of this speech, Louis
-bowed slightly, and began to step backward around the fire.
-
-Walter imitated his friend, carefully keeping his face turned towards the
-chief. That young man waved his hand in a gesture of dismissal. Not one
-of the Indians made a move to hinder the two from leaving.
-
-It was an enormous relief to be out of that tipi, yet both boys knew they
-were far from being out of danger. From the illuminated lodge in the
-center of the camp, the thumping of the drum and the clacking of rattles
-went on tirelessly. Fires had been kindled in a circle around the big
-tipi, and about them men and women were gathering.
-
-"There is to be some kind of a dance," Louis whispered. "Look!" he
-exclaimed suddenly. He gripped Walter's arm and drew him back into the
-shadow of an unlighted lodge.
-
-Crossing the open space, in the full light of the blazing fires, was the
-tall, stately form of Murray. A great, hairy buffalo robe fell loosely
-from his broad shoulders. His head was adorned with the strangest of
-headdresses, the shaggy head of a buffalo bull, horns and nose painted
-red. That stuffed buffalo head must have been exceedingly heavy, but
-under its weight Murray held his own head and neck proudly erect. Looking
-neither to right nor left, he strode between the fires, men and women
-making way for him. He stooped only to enter the big tipi.
-
-The two boys, in the protecting shadow of the dark lodge, had stood
-apparently unnoticed through this show. After Murray disappeared Louis
-led Walter around to the side of the unlighted dwelling farthest from the
-fire.
-
-"We must be away," he whispered. "This is no place for us."
-
-Silently, cautiously, they made their way among the tipis. The whole band
-seemed to have gathered in the central space, yet the boys were not to
-escape notice. They were passing through the outer circle of dwellings,
-when a man suddenly appeared in front of them. It was the
-broad-shouldered warrior who had brought them to the camp. He spoke
-urgently, pointing again and again towards the inner circle of lodges,
-and making the hat-wearer sign.
-
-Louis shook his head. "_Non, non_," he replied emphatically. "We have
-seen enough of your white trader. A fine white man he is. Go on, Walter,"
-he ordered, and Walter obeyed.
-
-If the Dakota did not understand the words, he could not mistake the
-boys' actions. He tried to seize Louis by the arm. Louis dodged, jumping
-to one side nimbly, eluded the Indian, and ran after Walter, who also
-broke into a run. To their surprise, the man did not attempt to follow
-them. Perhaps the middle-aged, rather heavily built brave despaired of
-catching the light-footed lads. At any rate he let them go. There was no
-one else near by to stop them.
-
-As soon as the boys were sure they were not being followed, they slowed
-to a walk.
-
-"We are well out of that," said Louis, drawing a long breath of relief.
-
-"Yes. I can't understand why Murray let us go so easily."
-
-"I fear we have not seen the last of _le Murrai Noir_ yet," was the sober
-reply. "If he had abused us, cursed us, threatened us, I should have less
-fear. I do not like his silence, the way he allowed us to go without
-raising a hand against us."
-
-"The Indians seem friendly. Perhaps they won't let him touch us."
-
-"That may be. They may be afraid that any trouble with white men will
-bring vengeance upon them. Yet I do not like the looks of that young
-chief. And he did not offer us food. That is a bad sign, Walter. If he
-had invited us to eat, to smoke the calumet, but he did not." Louis shook
-his head doubtfully.
-
-"I can't imagine," Walter pondered, "why Murray went out and left us, and
-then sent that man after us again."
-
-Louis was equally puzzled. "It is all very strange. _Le Murrai_ sent him
-for us. Surely that was what he meant. Then, when we reached the camp,
-another man came and took us away from him. And when we were leaving, the
-first fellow came again and wished us to go back."
-
-"Perhaps Murray wanted to see us alone, and the chief interfered," Walter
-suggested.
-
-"So he sent for us again? But we saw _le Murrai_ going to join in the
-dance. The dance will take a long time, all night perhaps, and he is the
-chief figure in it I think."
-
-"He certainly looked as if he was. Louis, is there really any white blood
-in Murray at all?"
-
-"That is another strange thing," returned the troubled Louis. "It is
-strange that those Indians should speak of him as a hat-wearer, a white
-man. Rather he seems one of themselves."
-
-Discussing and pondering the bewildering events of the past few hours,
-the boys made their way across the prairie towards their own camp. The
-moon had risen and lighted their way. The camp fire, a flickering point
-of light, guided them and assured them that all was well with their
-companions. Had there been no spark of fire at all, or had a great column
-of flame sprung up, the two would have been running at full speed. Their
-puzzlings led to no solution of their strange treatment at the hands of
-Murray and the chief.
-
-"I am certain of but one thing," Louis asserted finally. He spoke
-emphatically and in a louder tone than he had been using. "There is
-mischief brewing in that camp to-night, and _le Murrai Noir_ is the
-center of it."
-
-"Aye, you are right there."
-
-The words, in a strange voice, came from behind them. With one impulse
-the boys sprang apart, and turned. Louis' hand was on the hilt of his
-hunting knife.
-
-Close to them, leading a horse, was a tall form, a very tall form. Taller
-he seemed than Murray himself, though perhaps that was because he was so
-gaunt and thin. In the moonlight the boys could see that his buckskin
-clothes hung loosely upon his long frame. He wore a cap, and had a bushy
-beard.
-
-"You were too busy with your talk," the strange man went on rebukingly.
-"The whole band might have stolen up on you." He spoke easy, fluent
-Canadian French, but with a peculiar accent that reminded Walter of
-Neil's manner of speech.
-
-"Who are you?" demanded Louis, his hand still on his knife.
-
-"I'm the hat-wearer that sent for you."
-
-"You are the white trader? Then it wasn't _le Murrai_?"
-
-"It was not. But you're right in thinking he's the center of the mischief
-over there. I sent Shahaka to your camp. He was to bring you straight to
-my lodge, but someone, Murray or Tatanka Wechacheta, interfered. Then I
-told Shahaka to wait for you at the edge of the village, but you wouldn't
-go back with him. I wanted to warn you of what was going on. I thought it
-wiser not to go to your camp myself. My influence with that young fool of
-a chief is not so strong as it was before the big medicine man Murray
-came along."
-
-"He claims to be a medicine man?" asked Louis.
-
-"Aye, a mighty one, with all sorts of _wakan_. He is teaching a picked
-few rascals of them a new medicine dance. They will dance and powwow till
-near the dawn, then Murray will feast them and fill them full of rum."
-
-"But why?"
-
-"Why? He's a free trader, that Murray, a clever one and not particular
-about his methods, his boasts that he got his start by stealing pemmican
-from the Hudson Bay Company and then selling it back to them, through a
-friend, for trade goods. If he can make those foolish savages look up to
-him and fear him as a great _witan wishasha_, he can do anything he likes
-with them in the way of trade. He has sold them a lot of medicines
-already, charms against evil spirits and injury in battle, charms to give
-them power over their enemies and the beasts they hunt." The tall man
-changed the subject abruptly. "You have horses and carts and goods with
-you?" he demanded.
-
-"No trade goods, except a few little things for presents. But we have two
-carts loaded with our personal things, and four good horses, and an
-Eskimo dog."
-
-"You will have none of them by sunrise," was the grim response, "if you
-stay here. Murray is not the man to let all that slip through his
-fingers."
-
-"Then why did he let us leave the camp?"
-
-"And why not? He can put his hand on you whenever he likes. In a few
-hours he will have plenty of drunken savages to do his will."
-
-Walter shivered. He was thinking, not of himself, but of Elise and Mrs.
-Brabant and the children.
-
-As they drew near the camp, Neil, gun in hand, sprang up from the ground,
-where he had been lying, watching their approach. He had been worried
-because, instead of two only, he could make out three men and a horse.
-
-Entering the circle around the fire, Louis introduced the stranger. "This
-is the man who sent for us, the trader."
-
-The tall man pulled off his fur cap and ducked his head to Mrs. Brabant.
-"I'm Duncan McNab, at your service, Madame," he said. He caught sight of
-Neil's freckled face and blue bonnet. "Ye're a Scot," he said accusingly
-in English.
-
-"I am that, and sa are you," Neil retorted promptly.
-
-"Aye. Ye'll be fra Kildonan na doot, but there's na time ta be talkin'
-aboot that." He turned to Louis and spoke in French again. "You are
-camped on the edge of a coulee. Did you pick this spot on purpose?"
-
-The boy nodded.
-
-"Then you know what to do. The coulee leads towards the Bois des Sioux.
-Leave your fire burning. The savages will think you're still here."
-
-"Our carts make so much noise," interposed Walter. "If any of their
-scouts or camp guards should hear that squeaking----"
-
-"Leave the carts behind," McNab interrupted. "I doubt if you could take
-them up the coulee."
-
-"We can go faster without them anyway," Louis agreed, "and get more out
-of our horses."
-
-"Travel light, a little pemmican, your weapons and ammunition, nothing
-else. It is hard to lose all your things, Madame," the trader said
-bluntly to Mrs. Brabant, "but better than to run the risk of your
-children falling into the hands of Tatanka Wechacheta and the Black
-Murray."
-
-"Murray?" cried Mr. Perier.
-
-"You know him?"
-
-"We all know him. We have good cause to," said Walter.
-
-"That makes it all the worse, if he has anything against you. No, don't
-tell me the story now. We have no time to exchange tales."
-
-"If we must leave the carts behind," Neil suggested, "why not hide them
-in the coulee? Then the Indians may think we have taken them along. Later
-we can come back from Lake Traverse and get them."
-
-"It micht work oot that wa'," returned McNab, falling into Scots' English
-again, "but I'm thinkin' they'll find the cairts easy eneuch."
-
-"We'll tak them _doon_ the coulee a bit," Neil insisted, in the same
-tongue. "If Murray finds the tracks he'll maybe think we've gane doon ta
-the Wild Rice and back across."
-
-The trader shook his head. "He'll be findin' your trail all richt, but ye
-can maybe delay him for a bit. Weel, do what you're goin' ta do quick,
-an' be awa' wi' ye. I maun be gettin' back or they'll miss me."
-
-"You're na comin' wi' us?" cried Neil.
-
-"Na, na, I'm not rinnin' awa' yet." He switched to French and took his
-leave of the others. "Cross the Bois des Sioux and make speed for Lake
-Traverse," he advised. "Tell Renville I'll be back there in a few days.
-It was Renville sent me to find out what that rascal Murray was up to.
-Good speed and God go with you."
-
-
-
-
- XXXVII
- FLIGHT
-
-
-Louis and Walter decided that Neil's plan was worth trying. They muffled
-the axles of the two carts with strips torn from a ragged blanket, and
-carefully cased the vehicles over the edge of the coulee. The moon,
-shining into the rift, lighted them down the steep slope. Along the bed
-of the shallow brook that ran through the coulee to join the Wild Rice
-River, they pushed and pulled the carts, and left them well hidden among
-willows and cottonwoods where the ravine widened.
-
-"There," said Neil when the job was done, "if those Indians follow
-straight up the coulee after us, they won't find the carts at all. If
-they come down here and find them, they may think we have gone back
-across the river."
-
-"Probably," Louis returned, "they will divide into two parties, one to go
-up, the other down the coulee. But if they get all our things they may be
-content to let us go."
-
-Hiding the carts had taken less than a half hour. In the meantime Mrs.
-Brabant and the children had gone down into the coulee, Jeanne and Max
-stumbling along, scarcely awake enough to realize what was happening.
-While the horses were being led down, Walter remained behind as rear
-guard. As he threw a last armful of fuel on the fire, a burst of hideous
-noise came across the prairie from the Indian camp. Howls and yells, to
-the thumping of many drums, proved that Murray's medicine dance was in
-full swing. A picture flashed through the boy's mind; a picture of that
-central space within the circle of tipis as it must look now, with scores
-of naked, painted, befeathered savages, stamping, leaping, yelling around
-the blazing fires. There was no time to lose.
-
-Mrs. Brabant was impatient and anxious to be away. She had made no
-protest at leaving the carts behind. All her household belongings were in
-them, but what were blankets and copper kettles, and the precious wooden
-chest of clothing and little things, compared with the safety of her
-children? She and little Jeanne had been placed on one of the ponies.
-There were only four horses for ten people. Mr. Perier took Max with him
-on another, and the remaining two were given to Elise and Marie. Marie
-could ride almost as well as her brothers, and Elise had learned since
-leaving Pembina.
-
-It was very dark at the bottom of the coulee among the willows that
-fringed the stream. Speed was not possible, and the foot travelers could
-easily keep up with the ponies. Yet there was no doubt in anyone's mind
-that this was the only route to take. On the open prairie, in the
-moonlight, they would be plainly visible from every direction. Here they
-were completely hidden. They hoped to be miles away before the Indians
-discovered that they had gone.
-
-Progress seemed heart-breakingly slow, however, as the little party
-picked their way up the bed of the brook in the darkness. Louis, on foot,
-went ahead as guide. Walter, Neil and Raoul brought up the rear. The
-stream was not much over a foot deep at its deepest, with a sticky mud
-bottom. Luckily the ponies were sure-footed and almost cat-eyed. One or
-another slipped or stumbled now and then, but recovered quickly without
-unseating the rider. The night remained oppressively warm. Not a breath
-of breeze stirred the willows down below the level of the prairie. Pale
-flashes lit up the narrow strip of sky overhead, and distant thunder
-rumbled.
-
-The coulee grew narrower and shallower. The brook dwindled to a rivulet,
-the fringing willows were smaller and met above the stream. It was
-difficult to push a way through. At last Louis called a halt.
-
-"Wait a little," he said. "I will go on and find a way."
-
-Strung out along the narrow streamlet, which scarcely covered the hoofs
-of the horses, the rest waited for his return. The mosquitoes were bad,
-and the tormented horses twisted, turned, pawed the mud, and slapped
-their tails about. Walter made his way among the willows to Elise's side
-to be at hand if her mount should become unmanageable. But they exchanged
-only a word or two. The oppression of the night and the danger lay too
-heavy upon them both.
-
-After what seemed a long time, Louis returned. "The coulee ends a little
-way ahead," he reported. "The stream comes from a wet marsh that we must
-go around. I have found a place where we can climb the right bank."
-
-Without further words, he took hold of the bridle of his mother's horse
-and led it through the willows and up a dry gully. The gully was one of
-the channels by which the marsh waters, during spring floods and rainy
-periods, found their way into the coulee. The prairie at the head of the
-gully was dry in July, the marsh being shrunken to dry weather
-proportions.
-
-There was a certain relief in being up on the open plain again. For one
-thing there was more light. The western sky was banked with clouds. Over
-there lightning flashed and thunder rumbled, but the moon remained
-uncovered. Looking back to the northwest across the flat prairie, Walter
-could see, against the dark clouds, the glow of the fires in the Indian
-camp. A flash of lightning showed the pointed tips of the tipis black
-against the white light.
-
-It seemed a long time since the fugitives had gone down into the coulee.
-The boy was disappointed and alarmed to find that they had not come
-farther. Had the Indians discovered their absence yet? He scanned the
-prairie for moving figures. To his great relief he could see not one. Not
-even a buffalo or a wolf appeared to be abroad on that wide, moonlit
-expanse. Only an occasional puff of breeze stirred the tall grass.
-
-The party were gathered together at the head of the gully. Louis was
-speaking, and Walter turned to listen.
-
-"We can go faster now, but one must go ahead to keep the course and----"
-
-"You must do that, Louis," Neil interrupted. "You are guide. It is your
-place. The two girls will have to ride one horse."
-
-Louis hesitated. "It is not right for me to ride away and leave you three
-to follow on foot."
-
-"It is the only way," put in Walter. "The ponies can't carry us all. The
-others can't go on without a guide. You will have to do it, Louis. We
-won't be far behind."
-
-"Neil can guide as well as I can," Louis began.
-
-"I can't and I won't," retorted the Scotch boy stubbornly. "You have your
-mother and sisters to take care of, and you are going on ahead."
-
-"One of you boys can take my horse," Mr. Perier proposed. "I am the least
-experienced and the least useful of all." He started to dismount.
-
-"No, no," cried Louis. "You will be too slow with your crippled foot. You
-will hold the others back. You must ride."
-
-"There are the children to think of," Walter added earnestly. "You must
-go with them. Neil and Raoul and I can go much faster on foot than you
-could."
-
-"Stop talking and get away," exclaimed Raoul impatiently. "Marie, come
-off that horse."
-
-For once in her life Marie obeyed her next older brother. She took his
-hand and slipped quickly to the ground. Raoul helped her up in front of
-Elise. Louis, without further argument, mounted and took the lead. He
-knew as well as anyone that they had already wasted too much time in
-argument.
-
-As Raoul drew back from helping Marie up, his mother bent down from her
-horse to throw her left arm about his neck. "God guard you, my son," she
-said softly.
-
-"And you," muttered Raoul huskily.
-
-At first the lads on foot kept almost at the heels of the ponies. The
-prairie grass grew high and rank, and there was no beaten path. The
-animals could not go fast, and all three boys were good runners. But
-running through tall grass is not like running on an open road or even on
-a well-trodden cart track. They soon tired, and had to slow their pace
-and fall behind. The ponies were double burdened and far from fresh, but
-they were tough, wiry beasts, capable of extraordinary endurance. When
-they struck firmer ground beyond the marsh, they made better speed. The
-rear guard fell still farther behind. They tried to keep in the track
-made by the horses, but it was not always easy to do so, especially when
-flying clouds covered the moon and left them in darkness.
-
-No rain fell, however. The storm that had been threatening for so long
-was working around to the north. The rumblings of thunder grew fainter,
-the lightning flashes less bright. Before dawn they had ceased
-altogether. A fresh, cool breeze sprang up, billowing the grass and
-putting new life into the tired boys, as they plodded on, carrying their
-heavy muskets. They no longer tried to run, but they kept up a steady
-walking pace.
-
-Dawn showed a line of trees ahead that did not appear to be much over a
-half mile away. Those trees, the boys felt sure, must mark the course of
-the Bois des Sioux. It was from one of the groves on its bank that the
-stream took its name. The foot travelers had lost the horse track some
-time before, but Neil and Raoul had managed, with the aid of the stars,
-to keep a general course towards the east. The rest of the party were
-nowhere in sight. Probably they had crossed the river long ago.
-
-Though the trees seemed such a short distance away, the sun was rising
-above them before the lads reached the river. Wet, marshy ground had
-forced a detour. The stream, where they came out upon it, proved larger
-and wider than they had expected.
-
-"If we cross here we will have to swim," said Neil, as he looked down at
-the muddy water. "I think we are too far down. See there." He pointed to
-the opposite shore up stream. "Either the river makes a sharp bend there,
-or another one comes in."
-
-"It is the Ottertail," suggested Raoul. "That must be where the two come
-together to make the Red."
-
-"It looks like it," Walter agreed. "Anyway this doesn't seem to be a good
-place to cross. We know nothing about the current. We had better go on up
-and look for a ford."
-
-The boys did not have to go far along the west bank of the united rivers
-to convince themselves that the stream coming in from the east was indeed
-the Ottertail. They could see plainly enough that it was larger than the
-branch from the south. Single file, with Walter in the lead, they were
-making their way along the bank opposite the mouth of the Ottertail, when
-from the willows directly in front of them an Indian appeared.
-
-"_Bo jou_," he said, and added a few words in his own language.
-
-Walter, startled, had half raised his musket, but Raoul, who was close
-behind him, seized his arm.
-
-"That's a Saulteur, not a Sioux," the younger boy whispered, then
-answered the man in his own tongue.
-
-Neil pushed forward to join in the conversation. He also knew a little of
-the Saulteur or Ojibwa language, though he did not speak it so readily as
-Raoul, who had played with Indian and half-breed lads since babyhood.
-Walter, unable to understand more than an occasional word or two--picked
-up at Pembina and among the hunters--stood back and looked on.
-
-The sudden appearance of this lone Saulteur near the southern limits of
-the debatable ground surprised him greatly. What puzzled him most,
-however, was the man's familiar face. Surely he had seen that scarred
-cheek, where the skin drew tight over the bone, before, but where? On the
-way from York Factory, at Fort Douglas, at Pembina, at the Company post
-when the hunters were bringing in their winter's catch? Then he
-remembered. It was at the post he had seen the Ojibwa; not in the spring,
-but in the autumn. This was the hunter who had been beaten and robbed, as
-he was loading his canoe to return to his hunting grounds at Red Lake.
-What was he doing here?
-
-The Indian was speaking rapidly, in a low voice. Walter caught two words
-he knew, "_Murrai Noir_." Neil swung around, excitement in his eyes.
-
-"Walter," he exclaimed, "this fellow says Murray is his enemy. He is
-after Murray to get revenge. Is he----"
-
-"Yes." Walter did not wait for Neil to finish the question. "He is the
-man Murray and Fritz Kolbach attacked. I know that scar on his cheek. At
-the post they said a grizzly bear once clawed him in the face. How did he
-learn that Murray was in this part of the country? Ask him."
-
-Raoul put the question and translated the answer. "He was at Pembina just
-after the hunt left. Fritz Kolbach and two other DeMeurons were there at
-the same time. Scar Face attacked Kolbach, but the other fellows
-separated them. Then Kolbach declared it was Murray who hit Scar Face
-over the head, and offered to put him on Murray's trail. He told Scar
-Face that Murray was near Lake Traverse trading with the Dakotas and
-pretending to be a medicine man. Some men going from Traverse to Pembina
-with carts had seen him. So Scar Face is trailing him."
-
-"Alone?" queried Walter.
-
-"No, he has some young braves with him who want to get a reputation by
-raiding enemy country. They came down the Ottertail River."
-
-"Where are they?"
-
-"Near here somewhere. I don't know how he learned that Murray was with
-Tatanka Wechacheta's band, but he knew it before I told him."
-
-"Did you tell him that we are running away from them?"
-
-"Yes. Wait a minute."
-
-The Indian was speaking. He pointed up the river and his manner was
-earnest and emphatic. When Scar Face paused, Raoul turned to the others
-again.
-
-"He says he has heard that there is a good ford a little way up the
-river. That is probably where our people crossed. He thinks that Murray
-and the Sioux will follow the horse tracks to the ford. If Scar Face and
-his braves lie in wait there, they can get a shot at Murray when he tries
-to cross. They will take us to the ford in their canoes."
-
-Before Raoul had finished this explanation, the Indian was showing signs
-of impatience. He turned now and led the way in among the willows. There,
-where the river current had taken a crescent-shaped bite out of the mud
-bank, two birch canoes were pulled up. Five young braves, arrayed in
-feathers and war paint, came out from hiding places among the bushes,
-where they had been waiting for their leader, who had been for a look
-across the prairie west of the river.
-
-They were a wild and fearsome looking little band. Had the boys not known
-that they were, for the time being at least, on the Saulteur side of the
-quarrel, they might have hesitated to trust themselves with the war
-party. But they had given Scar Face and his comrades information of
-value, and had nothing to fear from them.
-
-
-
-
- XXXVIII
- THE FIGHT AT THE BOIS DES SIOUX
-
-
-The Indians wasted few words and little time. Walter and Raoul were
-assigned to one canoe, Neil to the other. Riding as passengers, they took
-the opportunity to munch the chunks of pemmican they had brought with
-them, but had not paused to eat.
-
-The Bois des Sioux, above the Ottertail, proved to be an insignificant
-stream. It had no valley, but meandered crookedly through a mere trench
-in the flat prairie. Willows and other bushes fringed its muddy waters.
-Its banks were sometimes open, sometimes wooded with groves or thin lines
-of cottonwood, poplar, wild cherry, and other trees. It would be possible
-to ford the stream almost anywhere, Walter thought, if one did not stick
-fast in the mud. He watched the shores anxiously for signs that horses
-had recently been across.
-
-The Indians had been paddling for not more than a half hour, when Scar
-Face, who was in the bow of the canoe that carried Walter and Raoul, gave
-a little grunt, and pointed with his paddle blade to the low west bank.
-Undoubtedly animals had gone up or down there. The willows were broken,
-the mud trampled. The Indians swerved the canoe close in. The broken
-bushes were still fresh.
-
-"_Mistatim_," said Scar Face, his keen eyes on the tracks.
-
-"That's the Cree word for horse," Raoul explained to Walter, "but we
-can't be sure. They may have been buffalo."
-
-"If they were, there were only a few of them," Walter returned. "A big
-band would have done more damage."
-
-"Yes. I believe myself our own people crossed here."
-
-The canoe was brought to the bank, and Scar Face stepped lightly out.
-Walter and Raoul followed. The Saulteur examined the trampled ground
-carefully. He gave a low grunt of satisfaction. He had found the print of
-a moccasined foot, where a rider had dismounted. But he was not satisfied
-yet. He followed the trail through the willows, examining it intently.
-Presently he straightened up and spoke to Raoul who was close behind.
-
-"They came to the river," he said.
-
-"You mean," the boy questioned, "that they came from there,"--he nodded
-towards the west,--"and went"--he pointed east across the stream.
-
-Scar Face grunted assent.
-
-"It must have been our people," Raoul said to Walter. "They are safe
-across the river."
-
-"That is where we had better be, as soon as we can get there," was
-Walter's reply.
-
-But the Saulteur was not quite ready to cross. He went on through the
-belt of small trees beyond the willows. Walter and Raoul hesitated an
-instant, then followed. They too wanted a view of the open ground.
-
-Their first glance across the prairie was reassuring. Except for a few
-birds on the wing, the only living creature in sight was one lone animal;
-a buffalo from its size and humped shape.
-
-"No Sioux yet," exclaimed Raoul. "I don't believe they are coming after
-us at all. Nothing to be seen, except that one old buffalo."
-
-Scar Face knew the French word _boeuf_, commonly used by the Canadians
-for buffalo. "Not buffalo," he said, pointing to the creature moving
-through the tall grass. "Man on horse."
-
-"What?" cried Raoul.
-
-"Man on horse, buffalo skin over him," the Indian insisted. "See," he
-added, pointing to the northwest. "More come."
-
-Walter had understood the dialogue and gestures well enough to guess that
-Scar Face found something wrong with the distant buffalo and that he saw
-or thought he saw something else beyond. Following the Indian's pointing
-finger, the boy strained his eyes. He believed he could make out
-something,--moving objects.
-
-"More buffalo," said Raoul.
-
-Scar Face shook his head doubtfully. The three stood gazing across the
-prairie. The lone buffalo was drawing nearer. There was something queer
-about it, Walter concluded. Its head was too small. Its shape was wrong.
-
-"He is right," exclaimed Raoul. "That is a man on horseback, stooped
-over, a buffalo hide thrown over him."
-
-Walter recalled Murray's queer costume of the night before. What about
-those far-away figures? Were _they_ buffalo?
-
-The day was bright and clear. There was not a trace of haze in the air,
-now that the sun was climbing higher. And the land was so flat one could
-see for miles. There was no longer any doubt in Walter's mind that there
-was something else coming from the northwest, far away still, far beyond
-the lone buffalo or horseman, but drawing nearer. Whether that something
-was a band of buffalo or of mounted men he could not tell, though he
-strained his eyes to make out.
-
-Scar Face had made up his mind that this was no place for him to stay
-longer. Abruptly he turned back among the trees. Neil and Raoul asked no
-questions. With Walter they heeded the silent warning and followed the
-Indian back to the river.
-
-With scarcely a word spoken, the Ojibwas paddled across the stream to the
-spot where the party that had taken the ford had left the water. Scar
-Face motioned to the boys to get out. He spoke earnestly to Raoul and
-Neil, and the latter translated to Walter.
-
-"He wants us to go on, out of the way. He and his braves are going back
-to that little island." Neil pointed to a low, willow-covered islet that
-parted the current just above where they had crossed and nearer to the
-west bank. "If it is Murray coming they will have a good chance at him
-from there."
-
-Taking for granted that there could be no objection to this manoeuvre,
-Neil started along the trail, his comrades after him. The Indians stepped
-back into their canoes. Walter felt surprised that the hot-headed Neil
-should be so willing to run away from a fight. In a moment, however, he
-found that Neil had no intention of running away. Instead of seeking the
-open, the Scotch boy turned aside among the bushes. After searching a
-little, he found a spot that suited him.
-
-"This will do," he said, crouching down behind a spreading osier dogwood.
-
-Joining Neil and looking between the red stems of the bush, Walter had an
-almost clear view of the river. He could see the lower end of the tiny
-islet and the spot on the opposite shore where the trail came to the
-water.
-
-"You're going to stay and see what happens?" he asked.
-
-"Of course. We may have to take a hand in the fight. Murray and his
-Dakotas must not cross the river, Walter. We must see to that."
-
-Walter nodded. Even if the Periers and Brabants had passed the Bois des
-Sioux before daybreak, they could not have reached Lake Traverse yet.
-They had a long way to go with tired horses. It was not impossible for
-the Indians, riding hard on fresh ponies, to overtake them. Murray and
-his savages must not cross.
-
-The Ojibwas were concealed among the willows of the low island. The lads
-could get no glimpse of them. The canoes were visible in part from where
-the boys were, but must be completely hidden from the opposite shore.
-Crouched among the bushes, the three waited, silent and almost
-motionless. Walter had about made up his mind that the horseman with the
-buffalo robe,--if it actually was a horseman,--was not coming to the
-ford, when Neil laid a hand on his arm and pointed across the river.
-
-The willows were stirring,--not with wind. An animal of some kind was
-coming through. It was a horse. Walter could see its head, as it pushed
-through the growth. Then the rider came into view; a tall man with a
-buffalo hide wrapped about him. He was no longer trying to conceal
-himself under the robe. He had let it slip down as he straightened up in
-the saddle.
-
-Neil uttered a low exclamation, and Walter started up from his hiding
-place. The whole width of the Bois des Sioux at this place was not fifty
-yards. The man on the opposite shore was in full sunlight at the edge of
-the water. He was tall, like Murray, but he was fully clothed and he wore
-a beard.
-
-Raoul pulled Walter down again. "Don't yell," he warned in a whisper.
-"There may be others behind him. Scar Face can see it is not Murray. I
-told him how a white man warned us. He'll let him cross. He knows he will
-lose his chance if he fires before he sees Murray himself."
-
-There was reason in what the younger boy said. Walter and Neil kept
-silence, but they held their breaths for fear the Ojibwas might make a
-mistake.
-
-McNab's horse took to the stream, picking its way carefully. The water
-was shallow, the current sluggish, and the rider was not obliged to
-dismount or the horse to swim. Not a leaf moved on the willow-covered
-islet. Not a sound, except the peaceful twittering of a bird, came from
-it, as Duncan McNab, unconscious of any peril from that direction, rode
-past the tip, and on across the stream. Intent upon finding the ford, he
-did not even glance back, so caught no glimpse of the birch canoes.
-
-Before McNab reached shore, Neil had left his post and slipped through
-the bushes to meet him. In a few moments he was back again, the trader,
-without his buffalo robe and horse, following. He squatted down beside
-Walter and looked at the island and the bark canoes. Neil had told him of
-Scar Face and his companions.
-
-"Are the Sioux after _you_?" Walter whispered.
-
-"That I don't know," was the response in French. "I suspect Murray would
-set them on me if he could. When he and some of the young fools started
-for your camp this morning, I thought it was time for me to be away. So I
-took short leave of Chief Tatanka Wechacheta. I struck your trail at the
-head of the coulee."
-
-"But they are coming, aren't they? We thought that----"
-
-"Aye, they're coming, on your trail. It was no band of buffalo you saw. I
-had a buffalo hide over me and the hind quarters of my horse, but I don't
-know whether I fooled them or no." His keen eyes were fastened on the
-break in the bushes, watching.
-
-Walter asked no more questions. Silence was best. But while he waited he
-stole more than one glance at the trader, whose strange appearance had
-aroused his curiosity the night before. A queer figure indeed was this
-tall, lank, big-boned man of almost skeleton thinness; seeming to consist
-entirely of bone and gristle. His name was Scotch and so was his tongue,
-but Walter suspected that he was far from being wholly white. The coarse,
-straight black hair that hung below his fur cap, the dark bronze of his
-long face, the high-bridged nose, and prominent cheek bones, betrayed the
-Indian. Yet his beard was uneven in color, rusty in places, and the eyes
-he turned on the Swiss boy were steel gray, startlingly light in his dark
-face. A singular man surely, with a grim, shrewd face, no longer young,
-as its many lines and wrinkles betrayed. In spite of the suspense of
-waiting, Walter found himself wondering about Duncan McNab and his
-history.
-
-The wait was not a long one. McNab suddenly raised his head, like a hound
-listening. Then the ears of the others caught the sounds too,--the
-crackling of twigs, the clatter of accouterments, as mounted men came
-through the strip of poplars and willows on the low opposite bank of the
-stream. Duncan looked to the priming of his musket and dropped a ball
-into the muzzle. Walter felt for his own weapon. Even in the midst of his
-excitement, the thought of shooting unwarned men from ambush sickened
-him. But if Murray and his Sioux were really on the trail, they must not
-cross. Fear for Elise and for Louis' mother and sisters steeled the boy's
-nerves.
-
-The willows were moving. A horse's head appeared, then the rider, a
-slender, bronze figure, brave in red paint and feathered head-dress. It
-was not Murray. He halted at the edge of the water and turned his head to
-look back. Another horse was coming, a white one.
-
-"Himsel," muttered McNab under his breath.
-
-The rider came in view, tall, stately, his painted body naked to the
-waist, his black head bare. There was nothing about him except his size
-to distinguish him from any other Indian. The two talked together for a
-moment. The slender warrior seemed, from his gestures, to object or
-protest.
-
-The waving and rustling of the willows, the sounds that came across the
-water, proved that other men were following. But the track was narrow,
-and they were obliged to check their horses until the leaders should take
-to the water.
-
-"How many?" Neil whispered to McNab.
-
-"Eight or ten," was the equally low reply.
-
-The discussion ended in Murray's going first. When the white horse
-stepped into the water, a cold shudder passed over Walter. He had every
-cause to hate and fear the Black Murray. He hoped Scar Face would not
-miss. Yet, quite unreasonably, he wished the rascally mixed blood might
-have a chance to fight for his life. He looked a fine figure of a man on
-his big, white horse.
-
-He came deliberately enough, letting his horse pick its way, as McNab had
-done. From the willows on the islet there was no move, no sound. He was
-opposite the tip now. He was past it. He was coming on. Had Scar Face
-weakened? Had he lost his courage?
-
-The silence was broken by a sudden menacing sound, not loud but strangely
-blood-chilling; the Ojibwa war whoop. On the near side of the islet a
-figure leaped into view. At the same instant, it seemed, Murray swung
-about on his horse's back, musket raised. He was a breath too late. Scar
-Face had fired.
-
-The distance was too short, the target too good for the Ojibwa hunter to
-miss. Even as his own gun went off, Murray swayed forward. The white
-horse leaped and plunged. More shots came from the island. Horse and
-rider went down, and the muddy water flowed over them.
-
-On the farther bank, the slender Dakota's horse was hit. As it fell, the
-man leaped clear, and darted back among the willows. There followed an
-exchange of shots between shore and islet, without a man visible in
-either place. Only the puffs of smoke betrayed the hiding places.
-
-Gray eyes gleaming, Duncan McNab turned to Neil. "Get you awa'," he
-ordered. "Ta Traverse as fast as your legs can carry ye."
-
-"And you?" the boy asked.
-
-"I'll o'ertak ye. I'll be seein' the end o' this, ta mak sure there's na
-followin'. On your wa', all o' ye."
-
-
-
-
- XXXIX
- SAFE
-
-
-Not one of the three boys thought of disobeying Duncan McNab's stern
-command. On hands and knees, for fear some Indian might catch a glimpse
-of them and send a shot in their direction, they crawled through the
-bushes. Not until they were out of sight as well as out of range, did
-they stand upright.
-
-They tried to follow McNab's instructions and make good speed towards
-Lake Traverse, but all three suddenly found themselves very tired. The
-night before, after a hard day's journey, they had had not a wink of
-sleep. It had been a night of continuous physical exertion and intense
-strain. Then came the meeting with Scar Face, and the anxious waiting for
-Murray and the Dakotas, capped by the excitement of the brief fight. The
-time had seemed long, yet in reality events had followed one another so
-swiftly that the sun even now was scarcely more than half-way up the sky.
-
-"If I didn't know we were going in the right direction, I should think we
-were headed north, not south," said Walter, as he plodded wearily along.
-"It seems as if the sun must be on the way down, instead of up."
-
-Neil nodded. "I'm dead sleepy," he admitted, "but we must try to keep on
-going till McNab overtakes us."
-
-"The firing has stopped," put in Raoul. "The fight must be over."
-
-"Or else the noise doesn't reach us here."
-
-If the fight was over, who had won? The answer to that question might
-mean life or death to the fugitives. Murray had fallen, but if the
-Dakotas had destroyed the Ojibwas, they might, even without his
-leadership, cross the river and continue the pursuit. The boys felt they
-must go on as long as they possibly could. They trudged doggedly on,
-casting many a glance behind them.
-
-At last Neil, turning to look back, gave a cry of joy. A single horseman
-was on their trail, coming at good speed. He raised one long arm in the
-friendship sign. The three stopped short and dropped down to rest and let
-him overtake them. They were almost asleep when he reached them.
-
-McNab reined in his horse and looked down at the weary figures with a
-grim smile. "Weel," he said slowly, in his peculiar Scots' English with
-its guttural suggestion of Dakota, "ye disappeart sa quick I thocht the
-prairie had swallowed ye."
-
-"Did the Saulteux win?" Neil roused himself to ask.
-
-"Aye, an' withoot losin' a man. Scar Face himsel got a shot in the thigh,
-but it's only a flesh wound. The ither side didna ken the number o' the
-enemy, an' they were mair nor a little upset by Murray's fa'. When they
-found they coudna drive the Ojubwas fra the wee isle, they turnt tail
-theirsel an' were awa'. If ye can mak it, we'd best be gettin' ta that
-bit _le des bois_ ower yon, where ye can be sleepin' in the shade."
-
-The clump of small trees was only a short distance away. There, shaded
-from the heat of midday, the boys slept, utterly relaxed, until the sun
-was far on its downward course. Duncan McNab kept watch. He had had no
-more sleep than they the night before, but he was more used to going
-without and needed less than growing boys required.
-
-Neil's first words, when he woke to find the sun low in the west, were,
-"How far have we got to go to Lake Traverse?"
-
-"Ta the post thirty mile or mair," was the reply.
-
-Neil groaned and stretched. "And we've got to walk it," he muttered.
-
-"Weel, ye may be glad ye've got twa soond legs left ta walk it wi',"
-McNab returned with his grim smile. There were no more complaints.
-
-McNab, old campaigner that he was, carried cooking utensils, pemmican,
-and a packet of tea in his saddle bags. A hot meal put new courage into
-the lads. Before the sun was down they were on their way again. The night
-was clear and light, and they kept up a steady pace till midnight. Then
-they stopped for a brief rest and more tea.
-
-Luckily for the boys they did not have to walk the whole distance to the
-trading post. Dawn had not yet come, when McNab made out a party of
-horsemen coming towards them. The foremost rider waved his arms and
-shouted. The boys knew that voice. Louis had come back to seek them.
-
-Unashamed to display his feelings, Louis sprang from his pony to hug his
-brother and his friends. "Thank the good God," he cried. "I felt like a
-coward and a traitor to leave you behind."
-
-"It was the only thing to do," Walter and Neil exclaimed together. "Are
-the others safe?"
-
-"All safe, but we did not reach the fort till after sunset. After we
-crossed the Bois des Sioux we had to rest our horses a little, and the
-children slept. We dared not stop long. The ponies did their best, but
-they could not carry double all the time. My mother and M'sieu Perier and
-I walked much of the way, and sometimes Marie and Elise walked also."
-
-"And you started right back to find us?" cried Walter.
-
-"I rested a while first, but I could not sleep. M'sieu Renville gave me a
-fresh horse, and these men offered to come with me. I thought you would
-follow our trail. If I kept to it, I would find you; if _le Murrai_ had
-not overtaken you."
-
-The _bois bruls_ from the trading post gladly gave up their horses to
-the weary boys, and went afoot. So Lake Traverse and the shelter of the
-Columbia Fur Company's fort was reached at last. There, in one of the log
-buildings within the stockade on the shore of the lake, the rest of the
-little party were waiting anxiously. The boys, almost dropping from their
-saddles with sleep and weariness, were embraced and shaken by the hand,
-and cried over, and questioned, until the trader, Joseph Renville,
-intervened. He led them away to bunks where they could sleep undisturbed
-for as many hours as they cared to.
-
-When the boys had had their sleep out, the two sections of the party
-exchanged stories. Afterwards Duncan McNab had something to add. He had
-returned to the Indian camp two nights before to find the dance in full
-swing. Within the medicine lodge, Murray was instructing the chosen
-initiates in some sort of mystic rites. From time to time one of them
-would come out to chant or howl a few words or syllables and to go
-through the steps and posturings of the new dance. The men around the
-fires would repeat the lesson over and over, until another of the chosen
-ones appeared to teach them something new.
-
-"As near as I could mak oot," said Duncan, "it was something like the
-medicine dance the Mdewakanton Dakota on the Mississippi mak ta their god
-Unktahi, that Murray was teachin' yon Wahpetons, but he was puttin' in
-some stuff of his ain. Some o' the words o' the sangs soundit like
-Gaelic, but made na sense as far as I could ken, an' I hae a bit o' the
-Gaelic mysel. I'm thinkin' he picked the words for their mysterious sound
-like."
-
-When the excitement had reached the right pitch, Murray began to serve
-out liquor. "I dinna ken where he got sa mickle,"--McNab shook his head.
-"He had a cairt loadit wi' goods an' kegs an' what a'. He must be in wi'
-ither free traders, some o' the men on the Missouri most like, or mayhap
-he stole the stuff fra them. It's the wrang time o' year ta be buyin'
-furs. It was the good will o' the sauvages an' power ower 'em he was
-after, sa they'd be sure an' bring him their next winter's catch."
-
-As the liquor flowed more freely, the performance grew frenzied. It was a
-wild night in Tatanka Wechacheta's village, and McNab spared his
-listeners the details. He feared every moment that the Indians would raid
-the neighboring camp, and discover too soon that the white men had gone.
-But the Black Murray overdid the celebration. He supplied liquor so
-lavishly that his followers were soon entirely overcome by it. Perhaps he
-dared not try to withhold what they knew he had. And he failed to curb
-his own immoderate thirst, but overindulged until, inert in the medicine
-lodge, he slept as heavily as they. "I'm thinkin' it was the rascal's
-owerfondness for _minnewakan_ that saved a' your lives," said McNab. "If
-he hadna slept sa late, he wad sure hae owertaken the lads on foot an'
-maybe the rest o' ye."
-
-When Murray finally roused himself, in ugly mood, he gathered together
-eight or ten reckless young braves who could still sit their horses, and
-started for the white men's camp. Up to that time McNab had not felt
-himself in any great danger, as long as he kept to his own lodge. He was
-a man of influence among the Dakotas, and back of him was the authority
-of the Columbia Fur Company and of Joseph Renville. Renville himself was
-half Dakota and powerful and respected among his mother's people. But the
-young chief, still partially drunk, was in almost as savage a mood as
-Murray that morning, and McNab did not know what might happen.
-
-As soon as Murray had gone, McNab took his leave. On the other side of a
-tiny clump of trees, he threw his buffalo robe over his horse and
-himself, hoping that, seen from behind, horse and rider might be taken
-for a lone bull. He made for the head of the coulee, intending to follow
-the fugitives and lend his aid if they were attacked. Finding that Murray
-and his men were coming, he urged his horse to its best speed, to get
-across the Bois des Sioux before them.
-
-After he had sent the boys on their way, McNab remained to watch the
-outcome of the fight. It was soon over. The fall of Murray had struck
-panic into the hearts of his followers. "There was reason for that,"
-Duncan explained. "Yon Wahpetons are na cowards, but Wechacheta's chief
-medicine man was against Murray. The auld fellow claimed Murray was na
-medicine man at a' an' had na _wakan_ or _tonwan_, na magic powers. When
-Murray was gatherin' men ta plunder the white men, the auld man tauld 'em
-they'd gang ta destruction sure. Murray's time was come, he said. Afore
-the sun gaed doon, he wad be deed, an' likewise a' that followt him. Sa
-it was na wonder the young braves was scairt when Murray was shot doon at
-the ford."
-
-"You're sure he was killed?" questioned Renville. "From what I have heard
-of the fellow, he seems to have as many lives as a cat."
-
-"I made sure afore ever I left the Bois des Sioux," McNab replied
-quietly. "An' there's his medicine bag ta prove it." He handed Renville a
-curious looking pouch made of rattlesnake skin. "An' a fine lot o' trash
-there is in it,--birds' claws, an' dried roots, a copper nugget, a
-snake's fang, a man's finger bone, an' a wee packet o' black, sticky
-stuff. Do na handle that, it micht be poison."
-
-"It is poison," asserted Walter, and told the story of his infected hand.
-
-
-
-
- XL
- CONCLUSION
-
-
-As guests of Joseph Renville, French _bois brul_, and Colonel Jeffries,
-Scotchman, partners of the Columbia Fur Company, the Brabant-Perier party
-remained at Lake Traverse for more than a week. Guided to the spot by
-Louis, Renville himself went to find the abandoned carts. The vehicles
-were where the boys had left them, but empty and so badly wrecked that
-the remains were good for nothing but firewood. Tatanka Wechacheta's band
-was gone. From the appearance of the camp ground, the Wahpetons'
-departure had been a hurried one. Scar Face and his Ojibwas had vanished
-also. No doubt they had returned full speed to their own country,
-satisfied with their revenge and a scalp or two.
-
-Stripped of practically all of their belongings, the Brabants and Periers
-were obliged to run in debt to the traders for supplies and equipment for
-the rest of the journey. The boys agreed,--if they could pay the debt no
-other way,--to work it out the next winter. With that arrangement the
-partners seemed satisfied.
-
-Of the remainder of the long journey overland and down the St. Peter,--as
-the Minnesota River was called in those days,--to the Mississippi, there
-is no room here to tell. The trip was not without hardship and adventure.
-Fort St. Anthony,--later to be renamed Fort Snelling,--at the junction of
-the St. Peter with the Mississippi, was reached at last. There a
-disappointment awaited the immigrants. St. Antoine, in his talks with
-them, had not overstated the beauty and attractiveness of the country,
-but his assurance that they might take possession of whatever land they
-chose was an error. The country was not yet open to settlement. They
-might squat on or near the military reservation, they found, but could
-not obtain title to the land or be sure of undisturbed possession. They
-were treated with kindness at the fort, but were not encouraged to settle
-near by. Instead, they were advised to go on down the Mississippi.
-
-Neil had a chance to join a party just setting out for the Red River.
-After parting with him, the others went on again, traveling by river in
-an open boat not unlike the York boats that had taken them from Fort York
-to Fort Douglas. At Prairie du Chien, on the east side of the river, they
-disembarked. Prairie du Chien was in what was then Michigan Territory,
-but later became Wisconsin. The little settlement resembled Pembina in
-that many of its people were French Canadians and _bois bruls_. There
-were, however, some Americans who had come from farther east. There were
-good farms and a military post. It was not necessary at Prairie du Chien
-to depend entirely on hunting for a living.
-
-There the weary immigrants decided to try to make homes for themselves.
-They made friends at once, who helped them to get a start, and prospects
-seemed more encouraging than in the Red River Colony. The Brabants showed
-no desire to return, and certainly the Periers and Walter did not want
-to. When, late in the autumn, Louis and Walter left the settlement to
-work out the family debts to the Columbia Fur Company, they went well
-assured that those left behind would be comfortable and well cared for.
-Other families of the Swiss had already left the Red River and more
-followed, including the Scheideckers, in the next and succeeding years.
-Like the Periers, they took the long journey to the Mississippi, and
-settled at the junction of that river with the St. Peter or lower down
-its course in what was to become Wisconsin and Illinois.
-
-The Brabants and the Periers had their ups and downs, but on the whole
-they prospered. In time Mr. Perier's dream of an apothecary shop in the
-new land came true. He even had his herb garden, started from the few
-packets of seeds he had carried in his pockets during all his wanderings.
-Walter became a successful farmer on his own land and married Elise, as
-he had dreamed of doing. Little Max was ambitious to be a physician. He
-helped in his father's shop and went to school, until he was old enough
-to go east to study medicine.
-
-Louis and his mother were land owners also, but farming was less to
-Louis' taste than following the river. He found employment on a
-Mississippi steamboat, became a skilled pilot, and in time owned the boat
-he captained. Of all the boys Raoul was the only one to follow the fur
-trade. As a clerk and trader with the American Fur Company, he traveled
-and traded over much of the northwest. The Brabant girls grew into
-bright, attractive women. Marie married a Canadian settler, Jeanne, a
-merchant and trader.
-
-Of Neil the others heard nothing for several years. Then, after the
-disastrous Red River flood of 1826 that almost destroyed the Selkirk
-Colony, he appeared at Prairie du Chien. His father still refused to
-leave Kildonan, but Neil had decided to emigrate to the United States. He
-took up land in Wisconsin, and afterwards, when the Indian lands of
-Minnesota were opened to settlement, moved to the Minnesota valley.
-
-The bonds of friendship and understanding which had been knit by the long
-journey together and the perils and hardships undergone, remained firm
-and strong between the Periers, and Rossels, and Brabants, and MacKays.
-Even after all had their separate homes and families, they enjoyed many a
-reunion when they recalled the old days and told children and
-grandchildren of the long and perilous journey from the Red River to the
-Mississippi.
-
-
- THE END
-
-
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- Transcriber's Notes
-
-
---Copyright notice provided as in the original--this e-text is public
- domain in the country of publication.
-
---Research suggests that the copyright date in the printed text is not
- accurate.
-
---Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and
- dialect unchanged.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of South from Hudson Bay, by
-E. C. [Ethel Claire] Brill
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-Title: South from Hudson Bay
- An Adventure and Mystery Story for Boys
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@@ -9796,381 +9759,6 @@ by thousands.</i></p>
<li>Research suggests that the copyright date in the printed text is not accurate.</li>
<li>Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and dialect unchanged.</li></ul>
-
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+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 43905 ***</div>
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-Project Gutenberg's South from Hudson Bay, by E. C. [Ethel Claire] Brill
-
-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: South from Hudson Bay
- An Adventure and Mystery Story for Boys
-
-Author: E. C. [Ethel Claire] Brill
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2013 [EBook #43905]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SOUTH FROM HUDSON BAY ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Stephen Hutcheson, Rod Crawford, Dave Morgan
-and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at
-http://www.pgdp.net
-
-
-
-
-
-
- "WHEN LAROQUE'S BOAT REACHED THE LANDING, THE SHORE WAS LINED
- WITH PEOPLE."
- "South from Hudson Bay." (See Page 82)
-
-
-
-
- SOUTH FROM
- HUDSON BAY
-
-
- AN ADVENTURE AND MYSTERY
- STORY FOR BOYS
-
- BY
- E. C. BRILL
-
- _ILLUSTRATED_
-
- CUPPLES & LEON COMPANY
- PUBLISHERS NEW YORK
-
- ADVENTURE AND MYSTERY
- STORIES FOR BOYS
-
-
- _By_ E. C. BRILL
-
-
- Large 12 mo. Cloth. Illustrated.
-
-
- THE SECRET CACHE
- SOUTH FROM HUDSON BAY
- THE ISLAND OF YELLOW SANDS
-
-
- Copyright, 1932, by
- Cupples & Leon Company
- PRINTED IN U. S. A.
-
-
- Copyright, 1932, by
- Cupples & Leon Company
- PRINTED IN U. S. A.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- I The New Land 9
- II Fort York 14
- III The Selkirk Colony and the Rival Fur Traders 24
- IV The Start from Fort York 32
- V The Black Murray 39
- VI Toiling Up Stream 45
- VII Norway House 53
- VIII The Missing Pemmican 61
- IX Hunger and Cold 67
- X The Red River at Last 74
- XI Fort Douglas 81
- XII By Cart Train to Pembina 89
- XIII The Red-Headed Scotch Boy 97
- XIV Pembina 108
- XV The Ojibwa Hunter 118
- XVI Letters from Fort Douglas 124
- XVII Christmas at Pembina 134
- XVIII Mirage of the Prairie 140
- XIX Blizzard 147
- XX A Night Attack 154
- XXI The Burned Cabin 161
- XXII The Painted Buffalo Skull 167
- XXIII Unwelcome Visitors 176
- XXIV A Sore Hand 186
- XXV The Travelers without Snowshoes 193
- XXVI Elise's Story 200
- XXVII Why the Periers Came to Pembina 207
- XXVIII The Land to the South 214
- XXIX The Coming of the Sioux 225
- XXX With the Buffalo Hunters 231
- XXXI The Charging Buffalo 239
- XXXII To the Sheyenne River 245
- XXXIII A Lonely Camp 253
- XXXIV Danger 261
- XXXV In the Chief's Tipi 270
- XXXVI The White Trader 280
- XXXVII Flight 289
- XXXVIII The Fight at the Bois des Sioux 299
- XXXIX Safe 309
- XL Conclusion 316
-
-
-
-
- I
- THE NEW LAND
-
-
-Before Walter Rossel was wholly awake, even before he opened his eyes, he
-realized that the ship was unusually quiet. There was only a slight
-rolling motion from side to side, a dead roll. Was she caught in the ice
-again, or had she reached Fort York at last? Could it be that the long
-voyage was really over? Walter hurried into the few clothes he had taken
-off, and ran up on deck, hoping to see land close by.
-
-He was disappointed. He could see nothing but gray water, a line of white
-where waves were breaking on a long bar, and the dim, shadowy forms of
-the other ships, hulls, masts, and spars veiled in dense fog. There was
-no ice in sight, yet all three vessels were riding at anchor.
-
-Eagerly the boy turned to a sailor who was scrubbing the deck. Walter's
-native tongue was French, but he had picked up a little English during
-the voyage, enough to ask why the ships were at anchor, and to understand
-part of the man's reply. They had crossed the bar in the night, the
-sailor said, and were lying in the shallow water of York Flats. Over
-there to the south, hidden in the fog, was the shore.
-
-The news that they had arrived off Fort York spread rapidly among the
-passengers on the _Lord Wellington_. Men, women, and children crowded on
-deck, gazed into the fog, questioned one another and the sailors in
-French, German, and broken English, and talked and laughed excitedly. A
-little boy of seven and his older sister, a bright-faced girl of thirteen
-with hazel eyes and heavy braids of brown hair, joined Walter and poured
-out eager questions.
-
-"They say we are at the end of our voyage," cried the girl, "but where is
-the land?"
-
-Walter pointed to the south. "We'll see it when the fog lifts. Does your
-father know we are almost at Fort York?"
-
-"Yes, he is coming on deck. There he is now."
-
-A middle aged man, thin and somewhat stooped, was coming towards them,
-his pale face smiling and eager. "Well, my boy," he greeted Walter, "this
-is good news indeed. We shall soon be settled on our own farm. Think of
-that, children, our own farm, a far larger one than we could ever dream
-of having in Switzerland."
-
-"Yes, Monsieur Perier," replied Walter, "the voyage is almost over,
-and----"
-
-"Look, Walter," Elise interrupted. "The fog is thinner. See how red it is
-in the east. And look at that dark line, like a shadow. Can that be the
-shore?"
-
-The fog was certainly thinning. A wider stretch of water had become
-visible, and the outlines of the other ships were clearer. Though steam
-power was coming into use for river navigation on both sides of the
-Atlantic, there were no ocean-going steamships in 1821. The _Lord
-Wellington_, the _Prince of Wales_, and the _Eddystone_ were sailing
-vessels, sturdily built craft with extra heavy oak sheathing and
-iron-plated bows, suitable for cruising ice-strewn, northern waters. That
-all three had been in contact with the ice, their scraped and battered
-hulls betrayed. From each mizzen peak fluttered the British red ensign,
-and the mainmast head bore a flag with a red cross and the letters H. B.
-C., the flag of the Hudson Bay Company.
-
-The immigrants aboard the _Lord Wellington_ wasted scarcely a glance on
-the other ships. It was the land they were interested in. As the rising
-sun drank up the fog, and the shore line grew clearer, the eager faces of
-Elise and Walter sobered with disappointment. A most unattractive shore
-was revealed. It was low, swampy, sparsely clad with stunted trees, a
-desolate land without sign of human dwelling. Fort York could not be
-seen. It was fifteen or twenty miles in the interior, on the Hayes River.
-
-Unpromising as the land appeared, it was land nevertheless, and everyone
-longed to set foot upon it. To the one hundred and sixty Swiss
-immigrants, the voyage had seemed endless. On May 30 they had sailed from
-Dordrecht in Holland. Now it was the last of August. For nearly three
-months they had been on shipboard. Delayed by stormy weather and crowding
-ice, they had spent a whole month navigating Hudson Straits and Bay.
-Luckily for them they did not realize what a long and toilsome way they
-had yet to travel before they reached their destination, the Selkirk
-Colony on the Red River of the North.
-
-Though many of the new colonists looked thin, worn, and even ill from the
-hardships of the long voyage, they appeared to be neat, self-respecting
-folk, intelligent and fairly well to do. Some wore the peasant dress of
-their native cantons, but the majority were townspeople,--shopkeepers and
-skilled workmen. Mr. Perier was a chemist and apothecary.
-
-Walter Rossel had not one blood relation in the whole company, but he
-considered himself one of the Perier family. For the past two years, as
-an apprentice in Mr. Perier's shop, he had lived with them. When his
-master had decided to emigrate, he had offered to either release Walter
-from his apprenticeship or take the boy with him. Walter had decided
-quickly, and his father and stepmother had given their consent.
-
-The Periers and Walter had breakfasted, packed their personal belongings,
-and were on deck again, when a small, open sailboat came in sight from
-the direction of the shore. It headed for the _Eddystone_ and disappeared
-on the other side of that ship. Presently it reappeared, visited the
-_Prince of Wales_, and finally came on to the _Lord Wellington_.
-
-As the little boat drew close, Elise, Walter, and Max looked curiously
-down on the crew of sun-tanned, bearded men, strangely dressed in hooded
-coats of bright blue or of white blanketing, bound about the waists with
-colorful silk or woolen sashes. The man in command came aboard, climbing
-the ladder up the side. He was broad shouldered and strongly built, with
-reddish hair, bristly beard, and skin burned red-brown. With his blue
-coat and bright red sash, he wore buckskin trousers fringed at the seams,
-and the queerest footgear Walter had ever seen, slipper-like, heel-less
-shoes of soft leather embroidered in colors. They were Indian moccasins
-ornamented with dyed porcupine quills.
-
-After glancing about him and inclining his head slightly in a general
-greeting, the newcomer shook hands with the Master of the ship and with
-Captain Mai, the man in charge of the Swiss immigrants, who had hurried
-forward to greet him. He went below with them, but remained only a few
-minutes.
-
-As soon as the red-haired man was overside again, the Swiss crowded
-around their conductor to ask when they were to go ashore. Captain Mai
-pointed to the other ships. Their sails were up and they were getting
-under way.
-
-"A pilot has just gone aboard the _Eddystone_," he said. "We are to
-follow her."
-
-Even before Captain Mai had finished speaking, the _Lord Wellington_ was
-waking to activity. The anchors came up, the sails were set, and caught
-the breeze. In a few moments the immigrant vessel was following the
-supply ships towards the mouth of the Hayes River.
-
-
-
-
- II
- FORT YORK
-
-
-The first view of Fort York was as disappointing as the first glimpse of
-shore. To Elise and Walter a fort meant massive stone walls and towers,
-rising from some high and commanding position. A stretch of log fencing
-in a bog was not their idea of fortification. It had the interest of
-novelty, however, for it was very different from anything they had ever
-seen before. The logs were set upright and close together, and above this
-stockade rose the flat, leaded roofs of the buildings. Near the fort
-stood a cluster of strange dwellings, quite unlike the Eskimo summer huts
-of stones, sod, and skins, with which the Swiss had become familiar since
-reaching Arctic waters. These queer skin tents were roughly cone-shaped,
-and the ends of the framework of poles projected at the peak. They were
-Cree Indian summer lodges. Up the wide board walk from the dock to the
-fort gates, men were carrying sacks and boxes. The unloading of the
-supply ships had begun.
-
-The Perier family were among the last of the immigrants to go ashore.
-Very much like a homeless wanderer, motherless Elise Perier felt as she
-stood on the river bank beside her father, with Max clinging to her hand,
-and their scanty belongings piled around them. It was good to be on land
-again of course, but this was such a strange land. In spite of cramped
-quarters, poor food, seasickness, and the other hardships of the voyage,
-the _Lord Wellington_ seemed almost homelike compared to this wild,
-barren country. Elise tried bravely to smile at her father and Walter,
-but she felt as if she must cry instead.
-
-Captain Mai was calling them. "Go right up to the fort, Perier. I want to
-get you all together."
-
-Walter picked up as much of the luggage as he could carry. Mr. Perier was
-looking doubtfully at a heavy wooden chest, when a boyish voice at his
-shoulder said in French, "Let me help, M'sieu. If you will put that on my
-back, I will carry it for you."
-
-Walter dropped his own load, and he and Mr. Perier lifted the chest and
-placed it so it rested on the portage strap, as the young Canadian
-directed. Then the latter led the way up the walk. He was a slender,
-supple lad, not as tall as Walter, but he carried the heavy load with
-apparent ease. The Swiss boy admired the young fellow's strength as much
-as he liked his face, with its bright brown eyes and clean-cut features.
-
-The log stockade proved to be more imposing and fort-like than it had
-appeared from the river. It was about twenty feet high, with bastions at
-the corners pierced with openings for cannon. The massive entrance gates
-stood open, and in front of them was a tall flagstaff, bearing the
-Company flag with the letters H. B. C. and the curious motto, "_Pro pelle
-cutem_,"--"Skin for skin." Entering the gates and passing within the
-double row of stockades, their guide led the Perier family among
-workshops and cabins to an inner court, which was surrounded with
-substantial log structures where the officers lived and where the
-merchandise and furs were stored. In this court the Swiss were gathered.
-
-Mr. Perier tried to thank the friendly lad, but he shook his head. "It is
-nothing, nothing, M'sieu," he replied, a quick smile displaying his even,
-white teeth. "I must not linger. There is much to do." And he was off at
-a run.
-
-When all of the Swiss were assembled, one of their leaders suggested that
-it was fitting they should give thanks to God that the dangerous ocean
-voyage was over and they were safe on land once more. They stood with
-bowed heads while he led the prayer. The lump in Elise's throat
-disappeared and she felt better.
-
-In the meantime, Captain Mai had been arranging with the Chief
-Factor,--as the Hudson Bay Company officer in charge of the fort was
-called,--for quarters for the immigrants. There was not room for all in
-the buildings, so many of the men and boys would have to sleep in tents.
-A place in one of the houses was found for the Periers, but Walter was
-assigned to a tent with Mr. Scheidecker and his sons, German Swiss from
-Berne.
-
-That first night on land was a miserable one for Walter. Fort York stood
-in a veritable bog or muskeg, firm and hard enough the greater part of
-the year, when it was frozen, but wet and soft in the short summer
-season. The ground was damp of course, and Walter's one blanket did not
-keep out the chill. To make matters worse, he and his companions were
-pestered by the bloodthirsty mosquitoes that bred in inconceivable hordes
-in the swampy lowlands. But the discomfort of the night was quickly
-forgotten the next day.
-
-A busy and interesting place the Swiss boy found York Factory, as the
-Hudson Bay men called the fort. It was not a factory in our common
-meaning of the word,--not a _manufactory_,--for nothing was manufactured
-there except boats for river traffic, dog sleds, wooden kegs, and such
-articles of use and trade as an ordinary carpenter, blacksmith, or
-tinsmith could make with simple tools. _Factory_ in the fur trade meant a
-trading post in charge of an officer called a _factor_, a commercial
-agent who bought and sold.
-
-For more than a century York Factory had been the principal port of entry
-for the Hudson Bay Company. There the Company's ships from England
-brought the supplies and trade goods destined for all the widely
-separated posts in the interior. To York Factory, in bark canoes and
-wooden boats, down rivers and lakes, from all parts of the Company's
-great domain, came the bales of costly furs to be sorted and repacked and
-shipped. A considerable staff was employed at the place, a Chief Factor,
-a Chief Trader, a surgeon, several clerks and apprentice clerks, a
-steward, a shipwright, a carpenter, a mason, a cooper, a blacksmith, a
-tailor, laborers, cooks, and servants. The boatmen or _voyageurs_ who
-went to and fro into the interior were hired independently for each trip.
-
-Until he sailed for America, Walter had never even heard of the Hudson
-Bay Company or the fur trade. Everything in the fort was novel and
-interesting to him. A good-natured apprentice clerk, who spoke French
-readily, showed him the Indian store, a large room well filled with all
-sorts of goods used in the Indian trade, from bales of heavy blankets,
-blue and red woolens, calicos of every color, long-barreled trading guns,
-kegs of powder, and big iron and copper kettles, to drawers of useful
-little things, gun flints, fire steels, files, awls, needles, fish hooks,
-twine, beads of all imaginable tints, and ochre, vermilion, and other dry
-colors, used by the Indians to adorn both their handiwork and themselves.
-
-"I never saw so many different things in one shop," Walter commented.
-
-The clerk laughed. "The worst of it is that we have to keep the closest
-account of it all. We must know what is in every package sent out and
-what post it goes to. Being a fur trader isn't all adventure I can tell
-you. There is a lot of office drudgery, with all the bookkeeping,
-invoicing, and checking of lists. We can't afford to make mistakes," he
-added soberly. "The very lives of the men in some far-away post may
-depend on their getting the right supplies. Why, last year----" He broke
-off suddenly, and switched to English. "I spoke to the Chief Trader about
-your proposal. He says it can't be done. It's not the policy of the
-Company to send voyageurs out to trade, especially on such long trips."
-
-Walter had turned to see to whom the clerk was speaking. He had heard no
-footsteps, but there, close behind him, was a tall man in blue coat,
-deerskin leggings, and moccasins. In his surprise, the boy drew back a
-little and stood staring. Of all the men he had seen since coming ashore,
-this one was the strangest and most striking. He was tall, powerfully
-built, and very dark of skin, with high cheek bones and high-bridged
-nose. His long, coarse black hair, slick and shining with grease, was
-worn in what seemed to the Swiss boy a curious fashion for a man, parted
-in the middle and plaited in two braids bound with deerskin thongs and
-hanging one over each shoulder.
-
-"You not give me goods?" The man's voice was peculiarly deep, not
-unmusical but of a hard, metallic quality. His small, dark eyes looked
-straight into the clerk's large blue ones.
-
-The young man shook his head. "No, your plan is too wild, too much risk
-in it. That sort of thing is against the Company's policy."
-
-The voyageur's brown face stiffened. His hard eyes seemed to catch fire
-as they rested first on the clerk and then, for a moment, on Walter.
-Without a word he turned and with long, soft-footed stride, left the room
-as noiselessly as he had entered it.
-
-"Pleasant manners," commented the clerk. "He needn't have included you in
-his wrath."
-
-"What did he want?" asked Walter. He had understood but little of the
-brief conversation.
-
-"A lot of goods on credit. He claims to have great influence with the
-Sioux, and he wants an outfit to go and trade with them. Of course we
-can't let him have it."
-
-"You don't trust him?"
-
-"We don't know anything about him, except that he is a good voyageur.
-It's against the Company's policy to send voyageurs out to trade. And his
-scheme is a crazy one. The Sioux country is a thousand miles away. He
-said he would bring all the furs back here and take whatever commission
-we chose to give, but probably we should never hear of him or the goods
-again."
-
-"Is he an Indian?"
-
-"Half-breed I imagine. Finely built fellow, isn't he? Has the strength of
-a moose, they say. He is an expert voyageur."
-
-"I don't like him," Walter commented.
-
-"Neither do I, and I suppose he has a grudge against me now, though the
-refusal wasn't my doing of course. Well, I must stop talking and get to
-work checking this new stuff that has come in."
-
-Thus dismissed, Walter wandered out into the court, through the open
-gates and down to the shore. Everywhere was bustle and activity. There
-was much to be done, and done quickly. With the least possible delay the
-ships must be unloaded and loaded again with the furs waiting packed and
-ready for the voyage to England. The little fleet must get away promptly
-while Hudson Straits were still open. All the goods and supplies received
-had to be checked, examined, and sorted. The things to be sent to trading
-posts in the interior were repacked for transport in open boats up the
-rivers, and every package was invoiced and plainly marked. Boats must be
-made ready and equipped and provisioned, not only to carry the supplies
-and trade goods, but the one hundred and sixty new settlers as well. The
-twelve hours a day that the employees of the Company were required to
-work in summer, if necessary, were not enough. Most of the men were
-simply doing all they possibly could each day until the rush should be
-over.
-
-Down by the river Walter found the young fellow who had carried Mr.
-Perier's chest. He was putting a new seat in one of the large, heavily
-built boats ranged along the bank. Looking up from his work, he greeted
-the Swiss boy with a cheery "_Bo jou_," which the latter guessed to be
-the Canadian way of saying "_Bon jour_" or "Good day." Walter, who was
-handy with tools, offered his help.
-
-As they worked they talked. His new acquaintance's French was fluent, but
-Walter found it puzzling. To a Swiss, the Canadian dialect seemed a
-strange sort of French, differing considerably in pronunciation and in
-many of its words from his own native tongue. Yet Walter and Louis
-Brabant managed to understand each other fairly well.
-
-"I suppose this is your home, here at the fort," said Walter.
-
-"My home? _Non_, I live at the Red River."
-
-"Why, that is where we are going!"
-
-"You go to the Selkirk Colony at Fort Douglas. It is not there that I
-live, but at Pembina, farther up the river."
-
-"Is Pembina a town?"
-
-"Not what you would call a town. It is a settlement and there are trading
-posts there, a Hudson Bay post and a Northwest Company post. Now the two
-companies have united, one of the forts will be abandoned I suppose. You
-may be glad the fighting between them is over. There will be better times
-in the Selkirk Colony now. They have had a hard time and much trouble,
-those poor settlers!"
-
-"What do you mean by fighting,--and trouble?" asked the surprised Walter.
-"What is the Northwest Company? Isn't the Hudson Bay the only trading
-company? Doesn't it own all the country where the Indians and the fur
-bearing animals are?"
-
-"Oh no," returned Louis with a smile and a shake of his head. "Farther
-south there is fur country that belongs to the United States. The Hudson
-Bay Company has no power there. It is true that the Company claims all
-the northern fur country, but the Northwest Company said they had a right
-to trade and trap there too, and that was how the trouble began. Have you
-never heard of the Northwest Company, and how for years they have fought
-the Hudson Bay men for the furs, and how they drove the settlers from the
-Selkirk Colony and captured Fort Douglas and killed the Governor?"
-
-Walter shook his head in bewilderment, and Louis went on to tell, briefly
-and vividly, something of the conflict between the two great trading
-companies, and the disasters that conflict had brought upon the settlers.
-The Swiss boy listened in amazement, understanding enough of the story to
-grasp its significance.
-
-"But why didn't Captain Mai tell us all that?" he cried. "Why did he let
-us think that everything was all right?"
-
-"Perhaps he thought you would not come if you knew. But those old
-troubles are all over. Last spring the two companies became one."
-
-Louis' story troubled Walter. He retold it to Mr. Perier and Mr.
-Scheidecker, and they carried it to other leading men of the prospective
-settlers. Several of them sought out Captain Mai and demanded to know why
-they had not been informed of all those wild doings in the colony.
-Unsatisfied by their conductor's explanations, they asked for an
-interview with the Chief Factor, and put their questions to him. He
-confirmed the statement that the fur-traders' rivalry and warfare were at
-an end. About five months before the arrival of the Swiss, the two great
-trading companies had united under the Hudson Bay name. The colony on the
-Red River would now have a chance to develop in peace.
-
-In spite of this assurance, the Hudson Bay officer's replies to some of
-their queries left the Swiss in no happy mood. Mr. Perier was stunned to
-learn that they still had some seven hundred miles to travel, all the way
-through untamed wilderness. But he had no thought of turning back. He had
-signed an agreement with Captain Mai, and had paid for his family's
-passage,--a moderate sum, but he could ill afford to lose it. To pay
-their fare back again would leave him penniless. Fertile land, one
-hundred acres of prairie,--that would not have to be cleared,--had been
-promised him rent free for a year. After that he was to pay a rent of
-from twenty to fifty bushels of wheat from his crop, or he might buy the
-land outright for five hundred bushels. The offer was enticing, and he
-and Walter had made many plans for the future.
-
-
-
-
- III
- THE SELKIRK COLONY AND THE RIVAL FUR TRADERS
-
-
-What was the Selkirk Colony, and how did it happen that this party of
-Swiss had come so far to join it?
-
-When Thomas Douglas, Earl of Selkirk, one of the famous Douglas family of
-the Scottish border, planned the settlement on the Red River of the
-North, his purpose was to find homes and livelihood for the
-poverty-stricken Scotch Highlanders. Hundreds of those unfortunate people
-had been turned out of their homes through changes in the system of
-management of the great landed estates in Scotland, and there was little
-opportunity in the old country for them to make a living. Though a
-Lowlander himself, Lord Selkirk had often visited the Highland glens. He
-knew the people, and had learned their native Gaelic language. He
-sympathized with them in their misfortunes. Seeking for some way to help
-them, he realized that their only chance for prosperity and success lay
-in emigration to a country where land was cheap and plentiful. He had
-heard of the rich soil of the Red River valley, and decided that was the
-place to plant his colony.
-
-The lower Red River valley was included in the vast domain of the Hudson
-Bay Company. The charter from King Charles II of England issued in 1670
-had given to Prince Rupert and the "Company of Adventurers of England,
-trading into Hudson Bay"--"the whole trade of all those seas, streights,
-and bays, rivers, lakes, creeks, and sounds,--that lie within the
-entrance of the streights commonly called Hudson's Streights, together
-with all the lands, countries, and territories upon the coasts and
-confines of the seas, streights, bays, lakes, rivers, creeks, and sounds
-aforesaid, which are not now actually possessed by any of our subjects,
-or by the subjects of any other Christian prince or State." Not only did
-the royal charter grant the "Adventurers" the trade of that vast
-region,--which, in the widest interpretation of the terms, included a
-quarter or a third of the whole of North America,--but it conferred upon
-the Company the right to hold the land "in free and common socage" which
-means absolute proprietorship. Whether King Charles really had the right
-to give away this vast territory to anyone may be questioned, but the
-Hudson Bay Company claimed proprietorship under the charter.
-
-The Red River empties into Lake Winnipeg, and the northern end of the
-lake drains into the Nelson River which flows to Hudson Bay. Accordingly
-the valley of the Red was included in the territory claimed by the
-Company. However, before the time of this story, the purchase from France
-by the United States of a vast extent of country west of the Mississippi
-River,--the Louisiana Purchase--and the boundary treaties with the
-British government, gave the greater part of the Red River to the United
-States. Only the stretch from what is now the northern limit of Minnesota
-and North Dakota to Lake Winnipeg remained in English possession. It was
-to this lower part of the valley that Lord Selkirk wished to take his
-colonists. He knew well enough that the Hudson Bay Company would not be
-inclined to part with any of its domain for such a purpose, but he had
-set his heart upon planting his colony in that particular spot.
-
-Accordingly he laid his plans to get possession of the required land.
-Quietly, by buying shares himself and persuading his friends to buy also,
-he obtained control over a majority of the stock of the great trading
-company. Then he offered to purchase a wide strip of land on the Red and
-Assiniboine rivers. As he controlled the majority of votes in the
-Company, he got what he wanted, about one hundred and sixteen square
-miles, of which he became absolute proprietor.
-
-The first settlers he sent over were of course Scotch Highlanders, with a
-few Irish. They arrived at Fort York in the autumn of 1811, too late to
-go to the Red River that year. The next summer they reached their new
-home on the Red, and were followed within three years by other parties,
-numbering in all a little more than two hundred, most of them Scotch.
-
-The troubles of the settlers were many and discouraging. Had the Earl of
-Selkirk been a more practical man he would scarcely have undertaken to
-plant a farming colony in the midst of a wilderness, hundreds of miles
-from any other settlement, and without communication with the civilized
-world except by canoe and rowboat over long and difficult river trails.
-Not all of the colonists' troubles were due to natural conditions
-however.
-
-The Hudson Bay Company had a strong trading rival in the Northwest Fur
-Company. The latter was a Canadian organization with headquarters at
-Montreal, while the Hudson Bay Company was strictly English, its chief
-offices in London. The Northwest men had established trading posts along
-the Great Lakes and far to the west and north beyond Lake Superior. They
-had penetrated farther and farther into the country claimed by the Hudson
-Bay Company. The Hudson Bay men themselves had done almost nothing to
-develop trade in the interior, until the Canadian traders began to go
-among the Indians and secure furs that might otherwise have been brought
-to the posts on the Bay. Awakening to the realization that the Northwest
-Company was actually taking away the trade, the Hudson Bay men also
-sought the interior. In this way began a race and a fight for the furs
-that grew hotter and fiercer with each year. Everywhere on the principal
-lakes and streams of the west and northwest, rival posts were
-established, sometimes within a few hundred rods of each other.
-
-The rivalry between the fur traders was approaching its height when Lord
-Selkirk founded his colony. From the first, the Northwest Company opposed
-the scheme. The fur trader never likes to see the country from which the
-pelts come opened up to settlement. He knows that as the land is settled
-the wild animals disappear. Moreover Lord Selkirk was now the controlling
-power in the Hudson Bay Company, and the Northwesters suspected him of
-some deep laid plan to interfere with and ruin their trade. Several years
-before, they had established a post called Fort Gibraltar at the junction
-of the Red and the Assiniboine, and their route to the rich fur districts
-of the west lay up the latter river. They believed that the settlement
-was merely a scheme to cut off their trade. So they looked with
-unfriendly eyes upon the colony, and even persuaded a considerable number
-of the colonists to leave and settle on lands farther east in Canada.
-Most of the Northwest traders were of Scotch blood, many of them of
-Highland descent, and doubtless they honestly thought that their
-countrymen would find better homes elsewhere. The chance that the Red
-River settlement would ever succeed seemed, to practical-minded men, very
-slender indeed.
-
-The ill feeling between the two great trading companies and between the
-Northwest Company and the Selkirk settlement grew stronger and bitterer
-as time went on. Mistakes and high handed acts on both sides, in a land
-where there was no law, led at last to open conflict. In 1815 the
-colonists were driven from their homes and obliged to flee to the shelter
-of a Hudson Bay post at the northern end of Lake Winnipeg. The Hudson Bay
-men made reprisals by capturing the Northwesters' posts and interrupting
-their trade. The settlers were rallied and taken back to their homes,
-only to face a worse disaster the next year. An open fight between the
-men of Governor Semple of the colony and a party of half-breeds in the
-employ of the Northwest Company resulted in the killing of the Governor
-and his twenty followers, and the capture of their stronghold, Fort
-Douglas.
-
-Lord Selkirk was in America at the time seeking from the Canadian
-government some means of protection for his colonists. Failing to get
-satisfaction from a government whose sympathies were with the Northwest
-rather than with the Hudson Bay company, he had hired, to guard his
-colony, one hundred men from two regiments of mercenary soldiers that had
-been disbanded after the War of 1812. While he was traversing Lake
-Superior on his way west with these men, he met canoes bringing word of
-the disastrous fight of Seven Oaks, the death of Governor Semple, and the
-capture of Fort Douglas. Skirting the shores of the lake, Lord Selkirk
-went to Fort William, the headquarters of the Northwest Company on
-Thunder Bay. There he demanded the release of the prisoners who had been
-brought from the Red River. The controversy that followed finally led to
-his taking possession of the fort. The fact that he had been appointed a
-magistrate for the Indian country and sought the arrest of the
-Northwesters who had taken part in or instigated the troubles at Fort
-Douglas, gave his action some color of legal right. From Fort William he
-went on to his disordered and devastated colony, and gathered together
-all the settlers who were willing to remain.
-
-In spite of all the settlement had been through, Lord Selkirk had no
-intention of giving up his plans. So many of the colonists had been
-driven or enticed away and would not return, that he sought to find
-others to take their places. It was then that he hit upon the idea of
-bringing over the steady, hard-working Swiss, who would, he believed,
-make the very best of settlers.
-
-Captain Mai or May,--the English spelling of his name,--a Swiss who had
-served as a mercenary soldier in the British army, and other agents were
-sent to Switzerland to secure settlers. Throughout the cantons of
-Neuchatel, Vaud, Geneva, and Berne, they traveled, explaining the
-advantages of emigration to the Red River country. The pamphlets they
-distributed, printed in French and German, gave a highly colored and
-alluring description of that country with its many miles of fertile soil
-to be had for the asking. Like all emigration agents, Captain Mai and his
-assistants told all the good things about both country and colony and
-left out the bad. About the civil war between the fur companies and the
-troubles it had led to, they said nothing.
-
-Early in May 1821, about one hundred and sixty emigrants were gathered
-together at a small village on the Rhine near Basel. In great barges they
-were taken down the Rhine, a delightful trip on that famous river with
-its beautiful and striking scenery, to Dordrecht in Holland. There they
-embarked on the _Lord Wellington_ for the trip to Hudson Bay. The voyage
-took far longer than they had realized it would take, the food provided
-was inferior to what they were used to, the drinking water became bad,
-and storms and ice caused delay. At Hudson Straits the _Lord Wellington_
-overtook the two Hudson Bay Company supply ships, and the three were held
-for three weeks in the ice with which the Straits were filled. The heavy
-swell coming in from the open ocean and rushing between the icebergs,
-caused rapid tides and currents in which sailing ships were almost
-helpless. Luckily the _Lord Wellington_ escaped serious injury, but one
-of the supply ships was nearly wrecked and badly damaged by collision
-with a berg. Not far away were two other vessels also caught in the ice,
-the _Fury_ and the _Hecla_ carrying Captain Parry and his Arctic
-exploring expedition. The _Hecla_ had one of her anchors broken and
-several hawsers carried away.
-
-The Swiss emigrants were a hopeful, cheerful folk. They had been together
-so long they had become like a large family party, and they made the best
-of their hardships. When it was safe to do so, the young and active
-climbed down from the ship to the solid ice field, ran races, and even
-held a dance on a particularly smooth stretch. At last the ships
-succeeded in entering the bay. Skirting the barren shores, the three
-vessels destined for the Hudson Bay post reached anchorage off York
-Factory in safety.
-
-
-
-
- IV
- THE START FROM FORT YORK
-
-
-Finding transport for so large a party of settlers taxed the resources of
-the Hudson Bay Company. Several new boats had to be built, and every one
-of the immigrants who could handle wood-working tools was called upon to
-help.
-
-The boats were to be despatched in two divisions or brigades. Walter had
-taken for granted that he would travel with the Periers, but he found
-himself assigned to the first division, the Periers to the second. He
-asked to be transferred to their boat, but Captain Mai declared the
-change could not be made. Only young people were to go in the first
-brigade which was expected to make the best possible speed. Walter was
-young and strong and without family. The boy protested that he was one of
-the Perier family, he had come with them, and was to live with them in
-the settlement, but his protest was of no avail. Elise and Max were as
-much distressed as he was at the arrangement, and he had to comfort them
-with the assurance that they would all be together soon at the Red River.
-
-It was well after noon on the day appointed for departure, when the start
-was made. The boat carrying the guide, who was really the commanding
-officer of the brigade, was propelled by oars out into the stream, and
-the square sail raised. With shouts, cheers, and farewells, the long,
-open craft, well laden with settlers, supplies, and goods, was away up
-the river.
-
-When Walter took his place he was pleased to find himself in the same
-boat with Louis Brabant. In spite of his disappointment at not traveling
-with the Periers, the Swiss boy was in high spirits to be away at last,
-headed for the wonderful Red River country where his fortune, he felt
-sure, awaited him. He waved his hat and shouted himself hoarse in
-farewells to those on shore.
-
-It was a picturesque crowd massed on the dock and fringing the river
-bank. Mingled with the Swiss were brown-skinned, long-haired post
-employees and voyageurs with bright colored sashes, beaded garters tied
-below the knees of their deerskin or homespun trousers, caps of fur or
-cloth, or gaudy handkerchiefs bound about their heads. A little to one
-side stood a group of Indians from the wigwams, in buckskin, bright
-calicos, blankets, feathers, and beadwork. One old Cree was proudly clad
-in a discarded army coat of scarlet with gold lace and a tall black hat
-adorned with feathers. The dress of the Swiss, though in general more
-sober, was brightened by the gay colors of shawls, aprons, and kerchiefs,
-of short jackets or long-tailed coats with metal buttons, and of
-home-knit stockings. As various as the costumes were the shouts and
-farewells and words of advice exchanged between boats and shore in a
-babel of tongues, English, Scots English, Swiss French, Canadian French,
-German, Gaelic, and Cree.
-
-The sail was raised and caught the breeze. Sitting at his ease, Walter
-turned his attention to what lay ahead. The surrounding country was not
-very pleasing in appearance. Scantily wooded with a scrub of willow,
-poplar, tamarack, and swamp spruce, it was low and flat, especially on
-the west, where the York Factory stood between the Hayes and the Nelson
-rivers. The Nelson, Louis said, was the larger stream, but the Hayes was
-supposed to afford a better route into the interior. Certainly the latter
-river was not attractive, with its raw, ragged looking, clay banks,
-embedded with stones, its muddy islands, and frequent bars and shallows
-that interfered with navigation.
-
-The immigrants were not suffered to sit in idleness all that afternoon.
-There were two or more experienced rivermen in each boat, but the new
-colonists were required to help. When the wind went down before sunset,
-Walter expected to be called upon to wield an oar. But the current of the
-Hayes was too strong and rapid to be stemmed with oars. The boat was
-brought close to the bank, and the sail lowered. Standing in the stern,
-the steersman surveyed his crew. Walter, in the other end of the boat,
-had not noticed the steersman before. Now, he recognized the tall man
-with the braided hair, who had come up behind him so noiselessly in the
-Indian trading room at the fort.
-
-In his deep, metallic voice the steersman began to speak, pointing first
-at one man, then at another. When his bright, hard little eyes alighted
-on Walter, and his long, brown forefinger pointed him out, the boy was
-moved by the same strong, instinctive dislike, almost akin to fear, he
-had felt when he first looked into the half-breed's face. The fellow's
-French was so strange that Walter could not grasp the meaning. With a
-questioning glance, he turned to Louis Brabant.
-
-"You are to go ashore," Louis explained. "Murray has chosen you in his
-crew. The tracking begins now."
-
-Walter had no idea what tracking might be, but he rose to obey. With
-several others, including Louis, he jumped from the boat to the muddy bit
-of beach. The steersman handed each a leather strap, and Louis showed
-Walter how to attach his to the tow-line and pass the strap over his
-"inshore" shoulder. Like horses on a tow-path, the men were to haul the
-boat, with the rest of the party in it, up stream.
-
-The steep, clay banks were slippery from recent rains. Fallen trees, that
-had been undermined and had slid part way down the incline, projected at
-all angles. The willing, but inexperienced tracking crew slipped,
-stumbled, scrambled, and struggled along, tugging at the tow-line. With
-maddening ease the tall steersman, in the lead, strode through and over
-the obstacles, turning his head every minute or two to shout back orders
-and abuse. He seemed to have the utmost contempt for his greenhorn crew,
-but he tried to urge and threaten them to a pace of which they were quite
-incapable. Every time a man slipped or stumbled, jerking the tow-line,
-Murray poured out a torrent of violent and profane abuse, in such bad
-French and English, so intermixed with Gaelic and Indian words, that,
-luckily, the Swiss could not understand a quarter of it.
-
-Walter understood the tone, if not the words. He grew angrier and
-angrier, as he strained and tugged at the rope and struggled to keep his
-footing on the slippery bank. But he had the sense to realize that he
-must not start a mutiny on the first day of the journey. He held his
-tongue and labored on. The boy was thin, not having filled out to his
-height, but he was strong. He was mountain bred, with muscular legs, good
-heart and lungs. Nevertheless when at last Murray gave the order to halt,
-only pride kept Walter from dropping to the ground to rest.
-
-The second shift was led by a fair-haired, blue-eyed man from the Orkney
-Islands, off the coast of Scotland, where the Hudson Bay Company
-recruited many of its employees. Before his crew were through with their
-turn at the tow-line, they came in sight, on rounding a bend, of the
-first two boats with bows drawn up on a stretch of muddy beach. Farther
-back on higher ground tents were going up and fires being kindled. Murray
-ordered out the oars, and boat number three was run in beside the others.
-
-After the tent, bedding, and provisions for the night were unloaded, the
-tall steersman, without troubling to help with the camp making, took
-himself off. It was young Louis Brabant who took charge. He selected the
-spot for the one tent and helped to pitch it. Then he sent a man and a
-boy to collect fuel, and Walter and another into the woods to strip
-balsam fir branches for beds. Louis himself started the cooking fire,
-between two green logs spaced so that the big iron kettle rested upon
-them. From a chunk of dried caribou meat,--so hard and dry it looked a
-good deal like sole leather,--he shaved off some shreds. After he had
-ground the bits of meat between two stones, he put the partly pulverized
-stuff to boil in a kettle of water. This soup, thickened with flour, was
-the principal dish of the meal. Several handfuls of dark blue saskatoon
-or service berries, gathered near by, served as dessert. By the time
-supper was ready, the young Canadian's swift, deft way of working, his
-skill and certainty, his good nature and helpfulness, had won the good
-will of everyone.
-
-Walter asked Louis how long it would be before the second brigade left
-Fort York.
-
-"That I cannot tell. As soon as all is ready. You regret to be separated
-from your family?"
-
-"They aren't really my family. I am apprenticed to Monsieur Perier."
-
-"The young Englishmen who come over to be clerks for the Company," Louis
-remarked, "sign a paper to serve for five years. Is it so with you?"
-
-"Something like that, and in return Monsieur Perier agrees to give me a
-home and teach me the business. When he decided to come to America, he
-really released me from the agreement though. He offered to treat me like
-his own son if I came with him."
-
-"If you are twenty-one you can get land of your own in the Colony."
-
-"I'm not sixteen yet."
-
-"Is it so?" cried Louis. "Then we are the same age, you and me. Fifteen
-years last Christmas day I was born. So my mother told Pere Provencher
-when I was baptized."
-
-"My birthday is in February," Walter replied. "I thought you must be
-older than that. How long have you been a voyageur for the Company?"
-
-"For the Hudson Bay Company only this summer. This is the first time I
-have come to Fort York. Last year, after my father died, I went to the
-Kaministikwia with the Northwest men. But always since I was big enough I
-have known how to carry a pack and paddle a canoe. The birch canoe,--ah,
-that is the right kind of boat! These heavy affairs of wood," Louis
-shrugged contemptuously. "They are so slow, so heavy to track and to
-portage. You have the birch canoe in your country? No? Then you cannot
-understand. When you have voyaged in a birch canoe, you will want no more
-of these heavy things."
-
-"Why does the Company use them?"
-
-Louis shrugged again as if the ways of the Hudson Bay Company were past
-understanding. "The wooden boats will carry greater loads," he admitted,
-"and they are stronger, yes. Sometimes you get a hole in a canoe and you
-must stop to mend it. Yet I think you do not lose so much time that way
-as in dragging these heavy boats over portages."
-
-The wavering white bands of the aurora borealis were mounting the
-northern sky before the camp was ready for the night. The one tent
-carried by boat number three was given up to the women and children.
-Walter rolled himself in a blanket and lay down with the other men on a
-bed of fir branches close to the fire. The air was sharp and cold, and he
-would have been glad of another blanket. But he had been well used to
-cold weather in his native country, and had become still more hardened to
-it during the long voyage in northern waters.
-
-
-
-
- V
- THE BLACK MURRAY
-
-
-Louis' voice, almost in Walter's ear, was crying, "_Leve, leve_,--rise,
-rise!"
-
-Surely the night could not be over yet. Walter threw off his blanket,
-scrambled up, shook himself, and pulled out his cherished silver watch.
-It was ten minutes to five.
-
-In a few moments the whole camp was stirring. Following the usual
-voyageur custom, the boats got off at once, without delaying for
-breakfast. After a spell of tracking, the Swiss boy was more than ready
-for the pemmican and tea taken on a small island almost in midstream. The
-Swiss lad had never tasted tea until he sailed on an English ship, but
-after the drinking water had turned bad, he had been driven to try the
-strange beverage and had grown accustomed to it. Tea was the universal
-drink of the northern fur country, where coffee was practically unknown.
-He was amazed at the quantity of scalding hot, black stuff the voyageurs
-could drink.
-
-Pemmican, the chief article of food used in the wilderness, he had eaten
-for the first time at Fort York. The mixture of shredded dried meat and
-grease did not look very inviting, but its odor, when heated, was not
-unappetizing. He tasted his portion gingerly, and decided it was not bad.
-The little dark specks of which he had been suspicious proved to be dried
-berries of some kind. Walter had a healthy appetite, and the portion
-served him looked small. He was surprised to find, before he had eaten
-all of it, that he had had enough. Pemmican was very hearty food indeed.
-
-That was a day of back-breaking, heart-breaking labor towing the heavy
-boats up the Hayes. The clay banks grew steeper and steeper. Sometimes
-there was a muddy beach at the base wide enough for the trackers to walk
-on. Often there was no beach whatever, and they were forced to scramble
-along slippery slopes, through and over landslips, fallen trees,
-driftwood, and brush. Where tiny streams trickled down to join the river,
-the ground was soft, miry, almost impassable. The forest crowning the
-bank had become thicker, the trees larger and more flourishing. Poplars
-and willows everywhere were flecked with autumn yellow. The tamarack
-needles,--which fall in the autumn like the foliage of broad leaved
-trees,--were turning bronze, and contrasted with the dark green of the
-spruce. There was more variety and beauty in the surroundings than on the
-preceding day, but Walter, stumbling along the difficult shore and
-tugging at the tow-line, paid little attention to the scenery. With
-aching back and shoulders and straining heart and lungs, he labored on.
-Each time his shift was over and he was allowed to sit in the boat while
-others did the tracking, he was too weary to care for anything but rest.
-
-The boats were strung out a long way, some crews making better speed than
-others. Some of the leaders were more considerate of their inexperienced
-followers, though most of the voyageurs could scarcely understand why the
-Swiss could not trot with the tow-line and keep up the pace all day, as
-the Canadians and half-breeds were accustomed to. The steersman of boat
-number three drove his men mercilessly. When at the tow-rope himself, he
-kept up a steady flow of profane abuse in his bad French, almost equally
-bad English, occasional Indian and Gaelic. Even when seated in the boat,
-he grumbled at the slowness and lack of skill of those on shore, and
-shouted orders and oaths at them.
-
-At noon, when a short stop was made for a meal of cold pemmican and hot
-tea, Walter said to Louis, "If our steersman doesn't take care he will
-have a mutiny on his hands. You had better tell him so. We have kept our
-tempers so far, but we can't stand his abuse forever."
-
-Louis shrugged. "I tell him? No, no. I tell _le Murrai Noir_ nothing,
-_moi_. It would but make more trouble. With a crew of voyageurs he would
-not dare act so. They will endure much, but not everything. Someone would
-kill him. As a voyageur the Black Murray is good. He is strong, he is
-swift, he knows how to shoot a rapid, he is a fine steersman. But as a
-man--bah! Being in charge of a boat has turned his head."
-
-"He may get his head cracked if he does not change his manners."
-
-"We would not grieve, you and me, eh, my friend? But this is certain,"
-the Canadian boy added seriously. "_Le Murrai Noir_ can hurt no one with
-his tongue. Heed him not, though he bawl his voice away. It is so that I
-do."
-
-Of all the men in the boat, the one who found the tracking hardest was a
-young weaver named Matthieu. He was a lank, high-shouldered fellow, who
-looked strong, but had been weakened by seasickness on the way over, and
-had not regained his strength. Matthieu did his best, he made no
-complaint, but he was utterly exhausted at the end of his shift each
-time. The weaver was next to Murray in line, and much of the steersman's
-ill temper was vented on the poor fellow.
-
-Late in the afternoon, Murray's crew were tracking on a wet clay slope
-heavily wooded along the rim and without beach at the base. In an
-especially steep place Matthieu slipped. His feet went from under him.
-The tow-rope jerked, and Walter barely saved himself from going down too.
-Murray, his moccasins holding firm on the slippery clay, seized the rope
-with both hands and roared abuse at the weaver. Exhausted and panting,
-the poor fellow tried to regain his footing. Walter dug his heels into
-the bank, and leaned down to reach Matthieu a hand, just as the enraged
-steersman gave the fallen man a vicious and savage kick.
-
-The boy's anger flamed beyond control. He forgot that he was attached by
-the left shoulder to the towline. Fists doubled, he started for Murray.
-The rope pulled him up short. As he struggled to free himself and reach
-the steersman, one of his companions intervened. He was a big, strong,
-intelligent Swiss, a tanner by trade, who had assumed the leadership of
-the immigrants in boat number three. His size, his authoritative manner,
-his firm voice, had their effect on Murray. The half-breed paused, his
-foot raised for another kick.
-
-"There must be no fighting here," said the tanner, "and no brutality.
-Rossel, help Matthieu up. He must go back to the boat."
-
-Murray began to protest that he would allow no man to interfere with his
-orders. The Swiss was quiet, but determined. The steersman had no right
-to work a man to death, or to strike with hand or foot any member of the
-party. The settlers were not his slaves.
-
-Murray growled and muttered. His hard little eyes glowed angrily. When
-Louis shouted to the Orkneyman to bring the boat to shore to receive the
-worn-out Matthieu, the steersman opened his mouth to countermand the
-order, but thought better of it and merely uttered an oath instead. He
-could recognize the voice of authority,--when numbers were against him.
-
-After Matthieu had been put aboard, the work was resumed. Murray, very
-ugly, plodded sullenly ahead. He seized every opportunity to abuse
-Walter, but the boy, now that one victory had been scored over the Black
-Murray, did not heed his words.
-
-The sky had clouded over, and rain began to fall, a chilly, sullen
-drizzle. Yet the trackers toiled on. The oars were used only when
-crossing from one side of the river to the other to find a possible
-tow-path.
-
-As darkness gathered, camp was made in the rain. The pemmican ration was
-eaten cold, but by using under layers of birch bark shredded very fine,
-and chopping into the dry heart of the stub of a lightning-killed tree,
-Louis succeeded in starting a small blaze and keeping it going long
-enough to boil water for tea.
-
-After supper the tanner asked Walter to go with him to talk to the
-voyageur in charge of the entire brigade. Laroque, the guide, a
-middle-aged, steady-eyed French Canadian, listened to the complaint in
-silence, then shook his head gravely.
-
-"_Le Murrai Noir_ is not the best of men to be in control of a
-boat,--that I know," he admitted, "but it was hard to find men enough. He
-can do the work, and do it well,--and there is this to say for him. You
-settlers know nothing of voyaging. You are so slow and clumsy it is
-trying to the patience. I find it so myself. _Le Murrai Noir_ has little
-patience. It is you who must be patient with him."
-
-"But he has no right to strike and abuse men who are doing their best,
-men who are not even employees of the Company," protested the tanner.
-
-Laroque nodded in agreement. "That is true."
-
-"Can't you put someone else in as steersman of our boat?"
-
-"No, there is no man of experience to be spared. Let the young man who is
-sick remain in the boat with the women and children, until he is strong
-again. I will speak to _le Murrai_ in the morning, and I think things
-will go better. These first few days, they are the hardest for all."
-
-Wet, chilled, aching with weariness, and a bit discouraged, Walter
-trudged back to his own camping place. Louis and the Orkneyman had laid
-the mast and oars across the boat and had covered them with the sail and
-a tarpaulin. Under this shelter the men spent the night, packed in so
-closely there was scarcely room to turn over.
-
-
-
-
- VI
- TOILING UP STREAM
-
-
-Things did go better next day, as the guide had foretold. What he had
-said to Murray in that early morning talk, no one learned, but the
-steersman attempted no more kicks and blows. He took his revenge upon
-those who had complained of him by riding in the boat all day, devoting
-his whole time and attention to steering. Not once did he touch the
-tow-line, Louis taking his place. All the men, except the two voyageurs,
-were lame and muscle sore from the unaccustomed work, but they were
-gradually learning the trick of it. In comparison with trained rivermen,
-they made slow time, but they got along better than on the day before. To
-Walter it was a great relief to be freed from Murray's brutality. He was
-on his mettle to show the steersman that just as good progress could be
-made without him.
-
-On the fourth day of the journey a fork in the stream was reached, where
-the Shamattawa and the Steel rivers came together to form the Hayes.
-There Murray and Louis took down the mast and threw it overboard. There
-would be no more sailing for a long way, Louis explained.
-
-Up the winding course of the Steel the boats were hauled laboriously. The
-banks were higher than those of the Hayes, but less steep, affording a
-better tow-path. In appearance the country was far more attractive than
-the low, flat desolation around Fort York, and the woods were at their
-best in full autumn color. Utterly wild and lonely was this savage land,
-but by no means devoid of beauty. It seemed to the Swiss immigrants,
-however, that they were but going farther and farther from all
-civilization. Towns and farms, the homelike dwellings of men, seemed
-almost as remote as though on some other planet.
-
-Walter was surprised to see so little game in the wilderness, until he
-realized that the constant talking, laughing, and shouting back and forth
-must frighten every bird and beast. Wild creatures could not be expected
-to show themselves to such noisy travelers. Only the "whiskey-johneesh,"
-as Louis called the bold and thievish Canada jays, dared to cry out at
-the passing boats and come about the camps to watch for scraps.
-
-Just as the Swiss were growing used to the labor of the tow-rope, they
-were given a new task, portaging. Below the first really bad rapid, the
-boat was beached, everyone was ordered ashore, and the cargo unloaded.
-The traders' custom was to put all goods and supplies in packages of from
-ninety to one hundred pounds' weight. One such package was considered a
-light load. An experienced voyageur usually carried two. That the new
-settlers might help with the work, part of the food, clothing, and other
-things had, for this trip, been made into lighter parcels.
-
-The Orkneyman was the first to receive a load. He adjusted his portage
-strap, the broad band across his forehead, the ends passing back over his
-shoulders to support his pack. Picking up a hundred pound sack of
-pemmican, Murray put it in position on the small of the Orkneyman's back,
-then placed another bulky package on top of the sack. The load extended
-along the man's spine to the crown of his head, and weighed nearly two
-hundred pounds, but the Orkneyman, his body bent forward, trotted away
-with it. It was the steersman's work to place the packages, and the ease
-with which Murray had swung the hundred pound sack into position revealed
-one reason why he had been chosen.
-
-Walter's pack of forty or fifty pounds did not seem heavy. He felt
-confident that he could carry it easily enough, and imitated the
-Orkneyman by starting off at a trot. The portage trail was an unusually
-good one, neither very rough nor very steep, yet the boy soon found that
-he could not keep up the pace. He slowed down to a walk. His burden grew
-heavier. The muscles of his neck began to ache. He tried to ease them a
-little, and his pack twisted, pulling his head back with a wrench. He
-stumbled, went down, strove to straighten his load and get up again. One
-of his companions, plodding along, overtook him, stopped to laugh, tried
-to help him, and succeeded only in dislocating his own pack. Louis had to
-come to the rescue of both. Walter's confidence in his own strength had
-diminished, and he had discovered several new muscles in his back and
-neck. Moreover he had learned that balancing a pack is an art not to be
-acquired in a moment.
-
-Another forking of the streams had been reached, where the Fox and the
-Hill rivers joined to form the Steel. The Hill River proved shallower and
-more rapid than the Steel. Ledges, rocks, and boulders obstructed the
-current, and portages became so frequent that Walter got plenty of
-practice in carrying a pack. Sometimes the empty boats could be poled or
-tracked through the rapids or warped up the channel by throwing the line
-around a tree and pulling. In other places the men, standing in the
-water, lifted the heavy craft over the stones. Around the worst stretches
-they dragged it over the portage trails.
-
-At Rock Portage, where a ridge extends across the river and the water
-rushes down in rapids and cascades between small islands, each boat and
-its cargo had to be carried clear over one of the islands. Then, to the
-great relief of the crews, they were able to row a short distance to Rock
-House, a storehouse for goods and supplies for the Selkirk Colony. There
-more pemmican, dried meat, flour, tea, and a little sugar were taken
-aboard. To make room for the provisions, some of the personal belongings
-of the settlers had to be unloaded, but the man in charge of Rock House
-promised to send the things to Fort Douglas at the first opportunity.
-
-Traveling up stream had now become an almost continual fight with rapid
-waters through rough and rocky country. Walter's muscles were hardening
-and he was learning how to use his strength to the best advantage, but
-each night when camp was made, he was ready to roll in his blanket and
-sleep anywhere, on evergreen branches, on the hard planks of the boat, or
-on the bare ground.
-
-How was Mr. Perier standing the tow-path and the portage, the boy
-wondered. The apothecary was far from robust. He had been so hopeful,
-too, looking forward so eagerly to the rich land of the Red River. He
-seemed to think of that land in the Bible terms, as "flowing with milk
-and honey." They would be too late to do any real farming this year, he
-had said, but they could plow their land and have it ready for seeding in
-the spring. Of course they would be provided with a house, fuel, and food
-for the winter. The contract he and Captain Mai,--in Lord Selkirk's
-name,--had signed, promised him such things on credit. He had brought
-with him some chemist's supplies; dried and powdered roots and other
-ingredients used in medicines. He and Walter would set up a shop and earn
-enough to buy whatever they needed during the cold weather. Walter had
-shared his master's hopefulness, but now, after questioning Louis about
-affairs in the Colony, he was beginning to doubt whether it would be so
-easy to make a fortune there as Mr. Perier believed.
-
-September was advancing. Most of the time the weather held good, but the
-nights were chilly and the mornings raw, often with fog on the river. One
-night, after the boat had been dragged through several short rapids, or
-"spouts," and carried over two portages,--the whole day's progress less
-than two miles,--snow fell heavily. When Walter, stiff with cold, crawled
-out from under the tarpaulin in the morning, the ground was white.
-
-"This looks more like Christmas than September," he grumbled between
-chattering teeth. "I'm glad of one thing, Louis, we're headed south, not
-north."
-
-"Oh, the winter is not quite so long at the Red River as in this
-country," Louis returned with a cheerful grin, "but it is long
-enough,--yes, quite long enough,--and cold enough too, on the prairie."
-
-So the journey went slowly on, rowing, poling, tracking, warping, and
-carrying the heavy boats up stream, and there was little enough rowing
-compared with the poling and portaging.
-
-Five or six miles had become a fair day's progress. In the worst
-stretches only a mile or two could be made by working from dawn to dark.
-The Swiss would have been glad to rest on Sundays, and had expected to
-observe the day as they were accustomed to, but the guide and the
-voyageurs would not consent. It was too late in the season, the journey
-was too long, the food supply too scanty, to permit the losing of one
-whole day each week. The immigrants had to be content with a brief prayer
-service morning and evening. The Swiss were Protestants, while all of the
-voyageurs, except two or three Orkneymen, belonged to the Roman Catholic
-church, so they worshiped separately. It surprised Walter at first to see
-the wild-looking rivermen kneeling with bowed heads repeating their
-"Aves" before lying down to rest. He never saw _le Murrai Noir_ in that
-posture, however. He wondered if the steersman was a heathen.
-
-There were accidents in the brigade now and then. Once when the
-Orkneyman's shift were tracking, the rope broke and boat number three
-began to swing broadside to the current. At Murray's fierce yell of
-command, the men in the boat jumped into the water nearly to their waists
-and held it headed straight, while Louis, keeping his footing with
-difficulty in the swift current, carried the remains of the line to
-shore.
-
-The next day the boat ahead met with misfortune, while it was being poled
-through rapids. To avoid a great rock, the bowman turned too far out into
-the strong current. The rushing water swung the clumsy craft about and
-bore it down the rapids. It struck full on its side on a rock that rose
-well out of water, and was held there by the strength of the current.
-There were but two men in the boat, and it was separated from shore by a
-channel of rushing white water. The crew of number three turned their own
-craft in to shore, and ran to help. Walter, carrying the tow-line,
-reached the spot first and attempted to throw the rope to the imperiled
-boat. The end fell short. Then Louis tried his hand, but succeeded no
-better. He was preparing for another attempt, when the line was snatched
-from his hands, and Murray sent the coiled end hurtling out across the
-water and into the boat.
-
-Growling and cursing, the half-breed took control of the rescue. Under
-his leadership, the men on shore succeeded in pulling the boat away from
-the rock, and warping it, half full of water, up the rapids. Walter's
-fondness for the Black Murray had certainly not increased as the days
-went by, but he had to admit that the brutal steersman knew how to act in
-an emergency.
-
-The toilsome ascent of Hill River was over at last when camp was made
-late one afternoon on an island which Louis called Sail Island. The
-reason for the name became apparent when Murray, after carefully
-examining the trees, selected a straight, sound spruce and ordered Louis
-and the Orkneyman to cut it down. The spruce was to be trimmed for a
-mast. If a mast was needed, thought Walter, the worst of the journey must
-be over. The night was cold and snow threatened, but there was plenty of
-fuel, and the camp on Sail Island was a cheerful one.
-
-
-
-
- VII
- NORWAY HOUSE
-
-
-The first thing Walter did when he woke the next morning was to notice
-the direction of the wind. Though light it was favorable. That made a day
-of easy, restful sailing. The weary men sat and lay about in as lazy
-positions as the well-filled boat would permit, while the women busied
-themselves with knitting and mending. The journey was a hard one on
-clothes, even of the stoutest materials, but by mending and darning
-whenever they had a chance, and by washing soiled things out at night and
-hanging them around the fire to dry, the Swiss managed to keep themselves
-fairly neat and clean. They had not been in the wilds long enough to grow
-careless.
-
-The following day's journey commenced with a portage. The brigade was
-going up the Jack River, which was short but full of rapids. All the
-rivers in this country were made up of rapids, it seemed to Walter. Then
-came another period of ease on Knee Lake, so called from an angle like a
-bent knee. About twenty miles were made that day, one of the best of the
-trip.
-
-The hard work was not over by any means. On Trout River were some of the
-worst portages of all. A waterfall, plunging down fifteen or sixteen
-feet, obstructed the passage. The boats were unloaded and dragged and
-carried up a rugged trail, to be launched again over steep rocks.
-
-On Holey Lake,--named from a deep spot believed by the Indians to be
-bottomless,--was Oxford House, a Hudson Bay Company post. The boats made
-a short stop there, then went on to pitch camp on one of the islands. The
-waters abounded in fish. With trolling lines Walter and his companions
-caught lake trout enough for both supper and breakfast. The fish, broiled
-over the coals, were a luxury after days of pemmican and hard dried meat.
-
-A narrow river, more portages, a little pond, a deep stream flowing
-through flat, marshy land, followed Holey Lake. In strong contrast was
-the passage called Hell Gates, a narrow cut with sheer cliffs so close on
-either hand that there was not always room to use the oars.
-
-A whole day was spent in passing the White Falls, where everything had to
-be carried a long mile. Three of the crews made the crossing at the same
-time, crowding each other on the portage. The Swiss caught the voyageurs'
-spirit of good-natured rivalry and entered heartily into the contest to
-see which crew would get boat and cargo over in the shortest time. With a
-ninety pound sack of pemmican, Walter trotted over the slippery trail and
-won a grin from Louis.
-
-"You will make a good voyageur when you have gone two or three voyages,"
-said the young Canadian.
-
-By the time Walter had helped to drag the heavy boat across three rock
-ridges, which caused three separate waterfalls, he felt that one voyage
-would be quite enough. Yet he was not too tired to dance a jig when he
-learned that his boat had won.
-
-Small lakes, connected by narrow, grassy streams, gave relief from
-portaging, tracking, and poling. Muskrat houses, conical heaps of mud and
-debris, rose above the grass in the swamps, and ducks flew up as the
-boats approached. The sight of those ducks made Walter's mouth water. His
-regular portion of pemmican or dried meat left him hungry enough to eat
-at least twice as much. He had not had a really satisfying meal since
-leaving Holey Lake. Yet he could do a harder day's work and be far less
-tired than at the beginning of the trip. His muscles had hardened, and he
-carried not one pound of extra weight. During the cold nights he would
-have been glad of a layer of fat to keep him warm.
-
-The boat was sailing along a sluggish, marshy stream, when Louis, who was
-in the bow picking the channel, raised a shout. "The Painted Stone," he
-cried, pointing ahead.
-
-"I don't see any stone, painted or not," Walter returned, gazing in the
-same direction.
-
-Louis laughed. "There used to be such a stone,--so they say. The Indians
-worshiped it."
-
-"But why make such a fuss about a stone that isn't there?"
-
-Again Louis laughed. "Do you see that flat rock? Perhaps it was painted
-once, I do not know, but it marks the Height of Land. All the way we have
-come up and up, but from there we go down stream,--until we come to Sea
-River, which is a part of the Nelson and takes us to Lake Winnipeg. Isn't
-that something to make a fuss about?"
-
-"It's the best news I have heard in many a day," Walter agreed.
-
-A short portage at the Height of Land brought the boats to the Echemamis
-River, where they were headed down stream into a rush-grown lake,
-connected by a creek with the Sea River. This stream is a part of the
-Nelson, which rises in Lake Winnipeg, so the brigade had to go against
-the current to Lower Play Green Lake and Little Jack River.
-
-From a log cabin on the shore of Little Jack, a bearded, buckskin-clad
-man came down to the water's edge. Louis called to ask if he had any
-fish. The man shook his head. The first boat had taken all he could
-spare. The fisherman, Louis explained, supplied trout and sturgeon to
-Norway House.
-
-Many a time during the trip Walter had heard of Norway House, an
-important Hudson Bay Company post. "Isn't that on Lake Winnipeg?" he
-cried. "Are we so near the lake?"
-
-"We shall be there to-morrow."
-
-Before sunrise next morning, the voyageurs bathed and scrubbed in Little
-Jack's cold, muddy-looking water. They appeared at starting time in
-clean, bright calico shirts, and new moccasins elaborately embroidered.
-Louis and the Orkneyman wore gaudy sashes. A broad leather belt girt the
-steersman's middle and held his beaded deerskin pouch. Around his oily
-black hair he had bound a scarlet silk handkerchief. The Orkneyman had
-trimmed his yellow beard. No hair seemed to grow on Murray's face.
-Possibly it had been plucked out, Indian fashion.
-
-Little Jack River is merely a channel winding about among the islands
-that separate Lower and Upper Play Green lakes, extensions of Lake
-Winnipeg. Louis told Walter that the "play green" was on one of the
-islands, where two bands of Indians had been accustomed to meet and hold
-feasts and games of strength and skill.
-
-Not a hundred yards behind the guide's boat, number three came in sight
-of Norway Point, the tip of the narrow peninsula separating Upper Play
-Green Lake from Lake Winnipeg proper. Shouts and cheers greeted the log
-wall of Norway House and the flag of the Hudson Bay Company. The Swiss
-were in high spirits. Once more they were nearing a land where men dwelt.
-Their journey would soon be over, they believed. Not yet could they grasp
-the vastness of this new world.
-
-As the boats drew near the post, dogs began to bark and men came running
-down to the shore. Voices shouted greetings in English and French, not
-merely to the voyageurs, but to the immigrants as well. Though the fur
-traders, trappers, and voyageurs were reluctant to see their wilderness
-opened up to settlement, yet the arrival of the white strangers, even
-though they were settlers, was too important a break in the monotony of
-life at the trading post for their welcome to be other than cordial.
-Moreover the white men and half-breeds at Norway House, and even the
-Indians camped outside the walls, were curious to see these new
-immigrants. So the Swiss were welcomed warmly by bronzed white men and
-dusky-faced mixed bloods, while the full blood Indians looked on with
-silent but intent curiosity.
-
-The first boats to arrive made a stay of several hours at the post, and
-Walter, conducted by Louis, had a good chance to see the place. Like York
-Factory, Norway House consisted of a group of log buildings within a
-stockade, but it stood on dry ground, not in a swamp, and its
-surroundings were far more attractive than those of the Hudson Bay fort.
-
-As the two boys were coming out of the big gate, after their tour of
-inspection, Walter, who was ahead, caught sight of a tall figure
-disappearing around one corner of the stockade. He glanced towards the
-shore. The boats were deserted. The voyageurs had sought friends within
-the stockade or in the tents and cabins outside the walls. The Swiss were
-visiting the fort or wandering about the point.
-
-"Do we take on more supplies here?" Walter asked his companion.
-
-"If we can get them," Louis returned. "They can spare little here, they
-say. Are you so starved that you think of food all the time?" he
-questioned smilingly.
-
-"No, I'm not quite so hungry as that. I just saw Murray carrying a sack,
-and I wondered what he had." Louis looked towards the boats. "Where is
-he? I don't see him."
-
-"He didn't go to the boat. He was coming the other way. He went around
-the corner of the wall."
-
-"With an empty sack?"
-
-"No, a full one."
-
-Louis stared at the corner bastion. "He was going around there, carrying
-a full sack? You are sure it was Murray?"
-
-"I saw his back, but I'm sure. He has that red handkerchief around his
-head, you know."
-
-"Well, it was not anything for us he was taking in that direction," Louis
-commented, "and we brought nothing to be left at Norway House. It is some
-affair of his own. He----"
-
-"Ho, Louis Brabant! What is the news from the north?"
-
-Louis had swung about at the first word. Two buckskin-clad men, one old,
-the other young, were coming through the gate. Louis turned back to
-reply, and Walter followed him to listen to the exchange of news between
-the newly arrived voyageur and these two employees of the post. The Swiss
-boy was growing used to the Canadian French tongue, and during the
-conversation he learned several things that surprised him.
-
-Walter had taken for granted that the journey would be nearly over when
-Lake Winnipeg was reached. Now he was amazed to learn that he had still
-more than three hundred miles to go to Fort Douglas, the stronghold of
-the Red River colony.
-
-"But how far have we come?" he cried.
-
-"About four hundred and thirty miles the way you traveled," the
-leather-faced old man answered promptly.
-
-"The rest of the voyage will not be so hard though," Louis said
-reassuringly. "There are few portages. If the wind is fair, we can sail
-most of the way. Of course if there are storms on the lake----"
-
-"There are always storms this time of year," put in the old voyageur
-discouragingly.
-
-The prospect of bad weather on Lake Winnipeg did not disturb Walter so
-much, however, as a piece of news which the old man led up to with the
-question, "How is it that settlers are still coming to the Colony on the
-Red River now that Lord Selkirk is dead?"
-
-"Lord Selkirk dead?" cried Walter and Louis together.
-
-"But yes, that is what people say. I was at Fort Douglas in June, and
-everyone there was talking about it, and wondering what would happen to
-the settlement."
-
-"They did not tell us that at Fort York," cried Walter. "When did he die?
-Since we left Europe in May?"
-
-"No, no, the news could not come to the Red River so quickly. It was last
-year some time he died."
-
-"You haven't heard of this before, Louis?" Walter turned to his
-companion.
-
-"No, I heard nothing of it when I came down the Red River in the spring.
-I left Pembina as soon as the ice was out, and at Fort Douglas I took
-service with the Company, but I did not stay there long. They sent me on
-here to Norway House. I heard no such story. Perhaps it is not true, but
-only a false rumor started by someone who wishes to make trouble in the
-colony."
-
-"That must be it," agreed Walter. "If Lord Selkirk died last year they
-would surely have heard it at Fort York. Captain Mai would have known it
-anyway before we left Switzerland. No, it can't be true."
-
-But the old voyageur shook his head. "Everyone at Fort Douglas believed
-it," he said.
-
-
-
-
- VIII
- THE MISSING PEMMICAN
-
-
-About the middle of the afternoon, Laroque the guide began to round up
-crews and passengers. His shout of "Embark, embark" was taken up by one
-man after another, and the idle sled dogs, that wandered at will about
-the post and the Indian village, added their voices to the chorus.
-
-Walter and Louis ran down to the shore at the first call. Most of the
-Swiss obeyed the summons promptly. Their fear of being left behind was
-too great to permit taking risks. Several of the voyageurs, however, were
-slow in appearing. When they did come, they gave evidence of having been
-too generously treated to liquor by their friends at the post. After
-everyone else was ready to start, Laroque had to go in search of Murray.
-Carrying a bundle wrapped in a piece of old canvas, Black Murray came
-back with the guide, his sullen face set and heavy, his small eyes
-shining with a peculiar glitter. He showed no other sign of drunkenness,
-but walked steadily to the boat, placed his bundle in the stern, and
-stepped in.
-
-Laroque sprang to his own place, oars were dipped, sails raised, and the
-boats were off, amid shouts of farewell and the howling of dogs. Leaving
-the handling of the sail to the Orkneyman, Murray remained stolidly
-silent in the stern. His steering was careless, even erratic, but no one
-ventured to try to take the tiller. Luckily the wind was light, the lake
-smooth, and the boats had not far to go. Camp was pitched on a beach of
-the long point, where the travelers had an unobstructed view down the
-lake to the meeting place of sky and water.
-
-"It seems as if we had come to another ocean," Walter confided to Louis.
-"Why do they call this Norway Point, and the trading post Norway House?
-What has Norway to do with Lake Winnipeg?"
-
-"I have heard," Louis replied, "that some men from a country called
-Norway were brought over by the Company and stationed here. Then too I
-have heard that the point was named from the pine trees that grow here,
-because they look like the pines in that country of Norway. Which story
-is true I know not. The post has been here a long time, and always, I
-think, it has been called Norway House. When the Selkirk colonists were
-driven from the Red River by the Northwesters, they came this way and
-camped on the Little Jack River."
-
-That night's camp was one of the most comfortable of the whole journey.
-The evening was fine, there was plenty of wood, and an abundance of fish
-for supper. The Swiss sat about their fires later than usual, talking of
-the journey, speculating on what was to come, and planning for the
-future. Nearly three weeks they had been on the way from Fort York. Now
-they looked out over the star-lit waters stretching far away to the
-south, and cheered their hearts with the hope and belief that the worst
-was over. At least they would not have to track up stream and portage
-around rapids for some days to come.
-
-"How long will it take us to reach the Red River?" The question was asked
-over and over again, with varying replies from the voyageurs. Walter
-asked it of Louis, and the young Canadian shook his head doubtfully. If
-the weather was good, the winds favorable, they might go the whole length
-of Lake Winnipeg in a week, but if the weather should be bad, no one
-could tell how long they might be delayed.
-
-The autumn weather showed its fickleness that very night. The wind
-shifted, the sky clouded over, and the morning dawned raw and
-threatening. The breeze was almost directly east, however, a favorable
-direction for the travelers, whose route lay along the north and west
-shores. So the boats got away early, and, with sails raised, held to the
-southwest, well out from land. They made good progress before the brisk
-wind, but as it grew stronger the lake roughened. Along the north shore
-high cliffs towered, with narrow stretches of beach here and there at the
-base. Safe landing places were few, but the waves were growing
-dangerously high, and the open boats were too heavily laden to ride such
-rough water buoyantly.
-
-Laroque changed his course, tacking in towards a bit of beach. Murray's
-boat was not far behind, and the half-breed handled it with skill and
-judgment. At just the right instant, he ordered the sail down, the oars
-out. The boat was run up on the sand without shipping a drop of water.
-
-The rest of the brigade were some distance behind. They were forced to
-put in close under the cliffs, but by using the oars managed to reach the
-beach.
-
-"We'll have to open that last bag of pemmican," said Walter to Louis who
-was kindling a fire.
-
-"Yes, but we must make it last through the voyage."
-
-Walter brought the rawhide sack, and Louis cut the leather cord with
-which it was sewed. An exclamation of surprise and anger escaped him.
-"What devil's trick is this? Look, Walter!"
-
-Walter looked, in amazement. "Why, it's not pemmican. How on earth----"
-
-"It is a fraud, a cheat." Walter had never seen Louis so angry. "Some
-fiend has filled this sack with clay and leaves and sold it to the
-Company for good pemmican."
-
-"See here, Louis." Walter lowered his voice. "This isn't the bag I
-carried over the portage at the White Falls." He turned the sack over and
-examined the other side. "There is no Company mark. Our pemmican has been
-stolen and this trash left in its place."
-
-"No one from the other boats would steal our supplies." Louis was
-puzzled. "It must have been done at Norway House. Yet I think the Indians
-would hardly dare to steal from a Company boat under the very walls of
-the post. And they did not take the tea. The Indians like tea so well
-they can never get enough."
-
-"Murray had a sack on his shoulder when I saw him dodge around the corner
-of the wall, and the sack had the Company mark." Walter's voice had sunk
-to a whisper. "But why in the world should he steal the provisions from
-his own boat?"
-
-Louis was thoughtful. "There might be a reason, yes," he said. "_Le
-Murrai_ might sell that pemmican for something he wanted. He has a bundle
-that he did not have before."
-
-"But how could he?" Walter objected. "They would know at Norway House
-that there was something wrong if the steersman of one of the boats
-offered to sell them a sack of pemmican."
-
-"That is true, but he might have traded it to the Indians, or some Indian
-friend of his might have sold it for him. I would like to know what is in
-that bundle. He slept with his head on it last night."
-
-"Shall we tell Laroque about this?"
-
-"That this sack is not good, yes, but not about _le Murrai_, no, not yet.
-We can prove nothing. It may not have been the pemmican he had."
-
-"I'm sure it was," Walter insisted stubbornly.
-
-Louis shrugged. "I am no coward, Walter, but I will not accuse _le
-Murrai_ of stealing and then voyage in the same boat with him. We have
-yet far to go."
-
-Louis was right and Walter knew it. Together they went to Laroque and
-told him of the fraud, but said nothing about their suspicions of Murray.
-
-The guide was much disturbed. He examined the sack of clay, and
-questioned Murray and the Orkneyman. Both disclaimed any responsibility.
-The Orkneyman agreed with the boys that the sacks brought from Fort York
-had all borne the Company mark. Murray said he had not noticed. He had
-had nothing to do with provisioning the boats. If the Company had been
-cheated, that was no affair of his.
-
-From his own supplies, Laroque lent boat number three a little pemmican
-for supper. The Swiss were indignant at the fraud. Some of them even
-wanted to return to Norway House and seek for the culprit.
-
-Before the scanty meal was over, rain began to fall. The beach was not a
-good camping ground. If the wind shifted to the south, the waves would
-wash over the narrow margin of sand and break against the perpendicular
-cliffs. To find a better place was impossible, for the lake was far too
-stormy to venture out upon. The boats were pulled well up, the tents
-pitched with one wall almost against the cliff, and the sails, masts, and
-oars converted into additional shelters. Luckily the campers were
-protected from the strong wind, which had become more northerly. But the
-water came down the cliffs in cascades, digging pools and channels in the
-sand and shingle.
-
-Fortunately the worst of the storm did not last long. The rain became
-fine and light like mist driven by the wind, and before sundown ceased
-entirely. As the wind shifted farther towards the north, the water
-receded from the base of the cliff, leaving a wider stretch of sand. The
-lake was still too rough for the boats to go out, but as long as the wind
-remained in the north, the beach was a safe camping place.
-
-A little dry driftwood had been collected and put under shelter before
-the rain began. So everyone was able to warm and dry himself before
-creeping between his blankets. Laroque assigned the voyageurs to watches,
-and cautioned each man to walk the beach while on guard and keep an eye
-on wind and waves.
-
-
-
-
- IX
- HUNGER AND COLD
-
-
-The guide aroused the camp before daylight. Wind and waves had fallen,
-and the boats got away quickly. All day they went ahead under sail or
-oars along the north shore. Camp was made on a narrow ridge of sand
-separating a large bay from the main body of water. A contrary wind kept
-the boats at Limestone Bay,--as it was called from the fragments of
-limestone strewn along its shores,--until late the following day.
-
-Among the reeds and wild rice ducks were feeding. The voyageurs succeeded
-in shooting a number of the birds, made a stew of some, and buried the
-rest, unplucked, in ashes and hot sand. A fire was kept going above them
-for several hours until they were well cooked. When they were taken out
-and the skins stripped off, Walter found his portion very good eating
-indeed.
-
-Two days later the mouth of the Saskatchewan River was reached. Walter
-was beginning to understand why the length of time required to traverse
-Lake Winnipeg could not be foretold. The lake is about two hundred and
-sixty miles long in a direct course, but the open boats were obliged to
-keep well in towards shore, making the journey upwards of three hundred.
-When the weather was favorable, sails were raised and good speed made,
-but the autumn gales had set in, and contrary winds were frequent.
-Skirting the shore in head winds and high waves was both slow and
-dangerous. Sometimes the boats had to be beached through surf, the men
-jumping into the water and dragging them above the danger line. By the
-time camp was pitched, both voyageurs and settlers were not only tired
-and hungry, but usually wet and chilled to the bone.
-
-October came with unseasonable cold, even for that northern country. With
-darkness the temperature sank far below the freezing point. One night
-Matthieu the unfortunate went to sleep without drying his wet shoes and
-stockings, and frosted both feet so that they were sore for the rest of
-the journey.
-
-Whenever it was possible to go on, whether at daybreak, noon, or
-midnight, the boats were away. Meals were irregular and food scanty. Much
-of the time the lake was too rough for fishing, but sometimes ducks were
-shot. To Murray's boat the loss of the sack of pemmican was serious. The
-supplies were reduced to tea and a little barley meal.
-
-The boats did not always make the same camping ground, though they tried
-to keep together. How far behind the second brigade might be, no one
-could guess. Walter worried about the Periers. Surely this must be a hard
-experience for Elise and little Max, and for Mr. Perier also.
-
-For two days the guide's boat and Murray's were windbound on an exposed
-beach where everything had to be carried well above the water line.
-
-Fishing was impossible in this open, wind-swept spot, but Louis shot a
-white pelican. The clumsy looking bird with its great pouched beak was a
-curiosity to Walter. If he had not been so very hungry he could not have
-eaten its fishy-tasting flesh.
-
-Suddenly the weather changed for the better. In less than eight hours
-after the boats got away from their enforced camping ground, the lake
-looked as if it had never been disturbed. There was not a breath of wind
-to catch the sail, not a wave, or even a ripple. Plying the oars, the
-crews held a course far out across the mouth of a bay. On and on they
-rowed, watching the sunset and the afterglow reflected in still water and
-the stars coming out one by one.
-
-The southern half of Lake Winnipeg is very broken in outline, with many
-points and islands. One night, reaching the sheltered head of a deep,
-sandy bay with a high background of rocks and forest, the travelers found
-the sands covered thick with the dead bodies of insects.
-
-"Grasshoppers!" exclaimed Louis. "They have come again!"
-
-Walter was gazing up and down the beach in amazement. "I never knew there
-could be so many grasshoppers in the world," he said. "Where did they all
-come from?"
-
-"From the prairie to the south. They're not ordinary grasshoppers like
-the big green ones. These are smaller and a different color, and their
-horns,"--Louis meant their antennae,--"are short. I never saw this kind
-till three years ago, and then they came all of a sudden. They ate up
-everything. Ugh, how they smell! We can't camp here."
-
-The place was indeed impossible as a camping ground. The boats put off
-again to seek a spot where the waves had washed the shores clean of the
-remains of the dead insects. Louis was right when he said that they were
-not ordinary grasshoppers. They were the dread locust,--the Rocky
-Mountain locust. At the camp fire that night, the Canadian boy told
-Walter and his companions how the locusts had come to the Red River
-valley.
-
-"I was at Fort Douglas with my father," he began. "We had just come down
-from Pembina with some carts. Everything looked well on the settlers'
-farms. The grain was in the ear and ripening. Then came the grasshoppers.
-These short-horned grasshoppers fly much higher than the ordinary kind.
-Their wings are stronger. They came in great clouds that darkened the air
-as if real clouds were passing across the sun. Late in the afternoon they
-began to alight, such hordes of them you can't imagine. Men, women, and
-children ran out into the fields, crushing grasshoppers at every step,
-the flying creatures dashing against them like hailstones. The poor
-settlers could do nothing against such an army. They saved a few half
-ripe ears of barley, the women hiding them under their aprons, but that
-was all. By the next morning everything was gone."
-
-"Do you mean that the grasshoppers ate the crops?" asked Walter, scarcely
-able to believe what he had heard.
-
-"They ate everything green," Louis replied impressively, "not only the
-grain and the gardens, but every green blade of grass on the prairie."
-
-"And they have come again this year," said Matthieu the weaver slowly,
-"and perhaps they have again taken everything." His voice sounded
-discouraged.
-
-"I fear it," was Louis' grave response.
-
-"What did the settlers do for food?" asked Walter. "Did Lord Selkirk
-supply it?"
-
-Louis shook his head. "That was a hard winter. Most of the colonists went
-to Pembina, where they could hunt the buffalo. They got some food from
-the Company and some pemmican from the Indians. But they had almost no
-seed for the next year. In the spring they sowed the little barley they
-had saved, and it came up and promised well. Then the young grasshoppers
-hatched out from the eggs left in the ground the year before, and ate it
-all. So again the settlers were without meal for the winter. The Governor
-sent M'sieu Laidlaw and other men into the Sioux country, up the Red
-River and down the St. Peter to the great Mississippi where there is a
-settlement called Prairie du Chien. It was a hard journey in winter on
-snowshoes, but they came back in June with more than three hundred
-bushels of seed wheat, oats, and peas. The seeding was too late for a
-good crop last year, but this year they hoped for a big one."
-
-"And the grasshoppers have come again," Matthieu repeated dully.
-
-Around points and among islands the boats threaded their way, hugging the
-shore most of the time, risking traverses across the mouths of bays when
-the weather permitted.
-
-No food was left in Murray's boat, nothing but a little tea. Fishing had
-to be resorted to, often with poor luck. Few animals were seen, though
-the howling of wolves had come to be a familiar sound at night. Flocks of
-ducks and geese passed high overhead, but to shoot them the hunters had
-to seek the marshy places in bays or at stream mouths. Bad weather caused
-so much delay that to take advantage of calm water or favorable wind
-everyone was compelled, more than once, to go breakfastless or
-supperless. Walter was reduced to skin, muscle and bone. He felt a
-constant gnawing hunger, was seldom warm except when exercising, and
-found his hard-won muscular strength diminishing. An hour's pulling at
-the oar almost exhausted him. He wondered at Murray, on whose strength
-and endurance starvation seemed to have no effect. Even Louis admitted
-weakness and had lost some of his cheery high spirits.
-
-At last the low shore at the south end of the lake, a long point of
-shingle and sand, came in view. When the water was high and the wind from
-the north, much of the long sand bar was covered, but luckily the lake
-was calm when the guide's boat reached the point. Murray's craft followed
-Laroque's closely.
-
-Sharing one gun between them, Louis and Walter went, with some of the
-others, hunting for their supper. They rowed along the sand spit to the
-marsh which was alive with birds,--ducks, geese, tall herons, and many
-other smaller kinds. In a little pond several graceful, long-necked swans
-were feeding. Walter did not think of firing at swans, but Louis had no
-scruples. He brought one down with his first shot.
-
-At sunset the hunters returned to camp with four fat geese, one of which
-Walter had killed, two swans, and eighteen or twenty ducks. A party from
-one of the other boats brought in almost as many. For the first time in
-many days Walter had a chance to really satisfy his appetite. Wrapped in
-his blanket, he slept soundly on his bed of sand, untroubled by hunger
-dreams.
-
-
-
-
- X
- THE RED RIVER AT LAST
-
-
-The mouth of the Red River divides into several channels that wind
-through the marsh. The guide chose one of the main waterways, of good
-depth and gentle current, and the oarsmen, eager to reach the settlement,
-pulled with a will. They had some forty miles, by water, yet to go.
-
-"Why do they call it _Red River_?" Walter asked Louis. "Not from the
-color of the water?"
-
-"It is from the Indian name, Miscousipi," was the reply. "I have heard
-that when the Saulteux and the Sioux fought a great battle on the banks,
-the water ran red with blood. Both nations claim the valley as a hunting
-ground."
-
-"Then it can hardly be a good place for settlers if the Indians fight
-over it," Walter said doubtfully.
-
-"There are only Saulteux and Crees on the lower river now. The Sioux no
-longer dare venture here. The upper river is the dangerous country."
-
-Where the marsh gave way to firmer ground, in an open space on the low
-bank of a creek coming in from the west, stood a group of Indian lodges.
-As the boat passed, the Swiss boy looked with interest at the low, round
-topped structures of hides and rush mats.
-
-"Those are Saulteur wigwams," Louis explained.
-
-"No one seems to be at home to-day."
-
-"No, but they intend to come back or they would have taken down the
-lodges. There was a fight in this place many years ago. A band of Crees
-came down that stream, and the old people and children camped here, while
-the young men went to Fort York with their furs. That was before the
-Hudson Bay Company had posts in this part of the country. While the
-braves were all away, the Sioux came and killed the old people and took
-the children captive. So the stream is called Riviere aux Morts--the
-river of the dead."
-
-"What a fiendish thing to do," Walter exclaimed, "and cowardly."
-
-Louis shrugged expressively. "It is the Indian way of fighting. The Sioux
-are not cowards, but fiends, yes. And so are the Crees and the Saulteux
-in war. I say it though my grandmother was an Ojibwa."
-
-"Have you Indian blood, Louis?" Walter asked in surprise. "I supposed you
-were pure French."
-
-"I am _bois brule_, as we mixed bloods are called from our dark skins,
-and I am not ashamed of it. My father, he was pure French, and my mother
-is half French, but her mother was Ojibwa, Saulteur. Perhaps I do not
-look so Indian as _le Murrai Noir_." Louis lowered his voice. "They say
-he is at least half Sioux."
-
-"Sioux! Well, he certainly doesn't act like a white man."
-
-"He has the worst of both the white man and the Indian I think."
-
-As the boats went on up stream, the banks became higher and covered with
-trees, not willows and aspens only, but elms and oaks and maples. The
-frosty weather had practically stripped the trees of what leaves the
-locusts had left, yet no wide view was possible, for the river ran
-through a narrow trench with steep sides.
-
-At the foot of a stretch of rapids camp was made, and a number of small
-fish caught for supper. Early in the morning the ascent was begun. The
-fall was slight, but the current was strong, and the channel sown with
-boulders and interrupted by ledges. After the boats had been tracked
-through, the voyageurs delayed for the scrubbing and hair trimming that
-preceded their approach to the dwellings of men. Again they put on their
-best and brightest shirts, sashes, and moccasins, which they had
-carefully stowed away after leaving Norway House.
-
-After he was washed and dressed, Louis, with an air of secrecy, drew
-Walter aside. "I have seen the inside of Murray's big package," he
-whispered.
-
-"You have? How did that happen?"
-
-"He left the package in the boat. I opened it."
-
-"What did you find?"
-
-"Little things,--awls, flints, fish hooks, net twine, beads, all wrapped
-in red or blue handkerchiefs. I had no time to unwrap them, but I could
-feel some of them. I wonder what he wants of all those things."
-
-Walter remembered the conversation in the Indian room at Fort York.
-"Can't he sell them to the Indians for furs?" he asked.
-
-"The Company will not permit a voyageur to trade. Sometimes, it is true,
-they may send a man out to buy skins. Perhaps they might send Murray, but
-I do not think so, and he would need more goods, a whole canoe or cart or
-sled load."
-
-"But the Company refused to let him have them," Walter explained. "At
-Fort York he asked for a lot of goods, on credit, so he could go trade
-with the Sioux."
-
-"The Sioux?"
-
-"Yes, I heard the clerk tell him that the Chief Trader wouldn't give him
-the goods. The clerk said it was a crazy scheme. Murray must have stolen
-our pemmican and exchanged it, or got someone else to do it for him, at
-Norway House. He must have wanted those things badly to be willing to go
-hungry for them."
-
-"He can endure hunger like an Indian," Louis returned, "and one of the
-voyageurs in Laroque's boat has been sharing his food with him. I saw him
-do it. He is afraid of Murray for some reason. It may be you are right
-about his selling the pemmican. The Indians want all those little things.
-They are eager to get them. He might begin----"
-
-"Embark, embark!"
-
-The two boys hurried towards the boat. As they went, Walter whispered,
-"Are you going to tell about that package?"
-
-"I think so. Not to Laroque, but to the Chief Trader at Fort Douglas."
-
-When Murray stepped into the boat, he stooped to examine his bundle.
-Would he discover that it had been opened? It was an anxious moment for
-Louis and Walter, but the steersman took his place without even looking
-in their direction. Walter would not have thought of opening Murray's
-package. But the Canadian boy's upbringing had been different.
-
-The banks bordering the rapids were gravelly, the growth thinner and
-smaller. Then came lower, muddy shores, and Walter got his first glimpse
-of the prairie. On the west side, only a few trees and bushes edged the
-river. The country beyond stretched away flat and open, but it was not
-the fertile, green land the Swiss boy had heard about. The plain was
-yellow-gray, desolate and dead looking. In one place a wide stretch was
-burned black. Could this be the rich and beautiful land Captain Mai had
-described?
-
-Walter's disappointment was too deep for expression. All he said was, "I
-thought the prairie would be like our meadows at home. It doesn't look as
-if anything could grow here."
-
-"Oh, things grow very fast, once the ground is broken," Louis assured
-him. "Wheat, barley and oats, peas and potatoes, everything that is
-planted. And the prairie grass is fine pasture. The buffalo eat nothing
-else. It is as I feared though. The grasshoppers have taken everything.
-But the grass will grow again. It is coming now. Look at that low place.
-It is all green. Wait until spring and then you will see. The prairie is
-beautiful then, the fresh, new grass, and flowers everywhere."
-
-"And the grasshoppers come and eat it all up," Walter added dejectedly.
-
-"They may never come again. No one at Fort Douglas or Pembina had ever
-seen the short horned grasshoppers till three years ago. And they didn't
-come last year. Perhaps we shall never see them again."
-
-Walter knew that Louis was trying to cheer him, and he felt a little
-ashamed of his discouragement. He put aside his disappointment and
-forebodings, and tried to share in his friend's good spirits. In a few
-hours the long journey would be over, and that was something to be
-thankful for. He hoped it was nearly over for Elise and Max and their
-father. The second brigade could not be very far behind.
-
-The current was not strong and there were no rocks, so making their way
-up stream was not hard work for the boat crews. The first person from the
-settlement who came in sight was a sturdy, red-haired boy of about
-Walter's own age, fishing from a dugout canoe. He raised a shout at the
-appearance of the brigade, and snatching off his blue Scotch bonnet or
-Tam-o'-Shanter, he waved it around his head. Then he paddled to shore in
-haste to spread the news.
-
-Log houses came in view on the west side of the river at the place Louis
-called the Frog Pond. Lord Selkirk himself, when he had visited the
-settlement four years before, had named that part of his colony Kildonan
-Parish, after the settlers' old home in Scotland. The little cabins were
-scattered along the bank facing the stream, the narrow farms stretching
-back two miles across the prairie. From the river there was but little
-sign of cultivation and scarcely anything green to be seen.
-
-From nearly every house folk came out to watch the brigade go by. Roughly
-clad, far from prosperous looking they were, in every combination of
-homespun, Hudson Bay cloth, and buckskin. Some of the men wore kilts
-instead of trousers, and nearly all waved flat Scotch bonnets. Walter's
-heart warmed to these folk. Like himself they were white and from across
-the ocean, though their land and language were not his own. One bent old
-woman in dark blue homespun dress, plaid shawl, and white cap reminded
-him of his own grandmother.
-
-All the Swiss were waving hats and kerchiefs, and shouting "_Bon jour_"
-and "_Guten Tag_," the women smiling while the tears ran down their
-cheeks. The long journey with all its suffering and hardships was
-over,--so they believed. At last they had reached the "promised land." As
-yet it did not look very promising to be sure, but they would soon make
-homes for themselves. The thin face of Matthieu, the weaver, who had been
-so disheartened when he heard about the grasshoppers, was shining with
-happiness.
-
-
-
-
- XI
- FORT DOUGLAS
-
-
-"Where do we land, Louis?" asked Walter.
-
-"At Fort Douglas, where Governor Sauterelle lives."
-
-"I thought the Governor's name was Mc-something."
-
-"It is McDonnell, but people call him Governor Grasshopper because, they
-say, he is as great a destroyer as those pests."
-
-"What do they mean?"
-
-"They do not like their Governor, these colonists. You will soon hear all
-about him."
-
-A few cabins, set down hit or miss, less well kept than those on the west
-bank, and interspersed with several Indian lodges, came in view on the
-east shore. Black haired, dark skinned men and women, and droves of
-children and sharp nosed dogs were running down to the river.
-
-"_Bois brules_," Louis explained, using the name he had given himself. It
-means "burnt wood" and is descriptive of the dark color of the
-half-breed.
-
-The boat made a turn to the east, following a big bend in the river.
-"This is Point Douglas, and there is the fort," said Louis, pointing to
-the roofs of buildings, the British flag and that of the Hudson Bay
-Company flying over them. Point Douglas had been burned over many years
-before, and was a barren looking place. The fort, like York Factory and
-Norway House, was a mere group of buildings enclosed within a stockade.
-
-When Laroque's boat reached the landing, the shore was lined with people;
-Hudson Bay employees, white settlers, and _bois brules_. As each craft
-drew up to the landing place, the boatmen sprang out to be embraced and
-patted on the back by their friends. The new settlers' warmest reception
-came from a group of bearded, bold eyed, rough looking, white men. When
-one of these men spoke to Walter in German, and another in unmistakably
-Swiss French, the boy's face betrayed his astonishment.
-
-The first man, a red-faced fellow with untrimmed, sandy beard, laughed
-and switched from German to French. "Oh, I am a Swiss like you," he
-explained, "though I have not seen Switzerland for many a year. I am a
-soldier by trade, and I served the British king. We DeMeurons are the
-pick of many countries."
-
-Walter did not like the man's looks. He had seen swaggering, mercenary
-soldiers of fortune before, and he was not sorry when his bold-mannered
-countryman turned from him to make the acquaintance of his companions.
-
-The voyageurs were hastily unloading. They had reached the end of the
-journey and were in a hurry to be paid off. Murray did not even wait for
-the unloading. Carrying his big bundle, he strode quickly towards the
-fort. Louis looked after him, swung a bale of goods to his back, and
-trotted up the slope.
-
-Seeing no reason why he should stand idle when there was work to do,
-Walter shouldered a package and followed. As he reached the gate, three
-men came through, and he stepped aside to let them pass. The leading
-figure, a red-faced man of middle age and important air, cast a sharp
-glance at the boy. Walter's clothes betrayed him.
-
-"Ye're na voyageur." The man spoke peremptorily in Scotch sounding
-English. "Put down that packet and follow me. I've a few words to say to
-a' of ye."
-
-Walter had learned enough English to understand, and the tone warned him
-that obedience was expected. He left his load lying on the ground, and
-followed down the slope towards the river. From the red-faced man's
-dictatorial manner, the boy guessed him to be Alexander McDonnell, the
-"Grasshopper Governor." He was obeyed promptly, but the sullen, even
-angry, looks on the faces of the half-breeds and Scotch settlers who made
-way for him, showed that he was not popular. Only the ex-soldiers seemed
-boldly at their ease in his presence.
-
-The new colonists were quickly gathered together so that the Governor
-might address them. To make his meaning plain, he used both English and
-French. His manner was abrupt, yet what he said was reasonable enough,
-discouraging though it was to the newcomers. After a few words of welcome
-to the Selkirk Colony and an expression of hope that the Swiss would be
-industrious and would prosper accordingly, he told them frankly that they
-had come at an unfortunate time. The settlement was ill prepared for
-them. The grasshoppers had utterly destroyed the crops. The food supply
-for the coming winter was inadequate. There was not enough to feed the
-colonists already established. Most of the settlers, old and new, must
-spend the winter farther up the Red River at Fort Daer, the Colony post
-at the mouth of the Pembina. Game animals, especially the buffalo upon
-which the people must depend for food until new crops could be grown,
-were much more abundant and easily reached near Fort Daer. Pemmican could
-be obtained there from the _bois brules_ and the Indians. Some of the
-settlers had already gone. Every one of the newcomers able to endure the
-journey must leave on the morrow. They might pitch their tents near Fort
-Douglas for the night. Fuel for their fires would be supplied and food
-for the evening meal and for the journey to the Pembina. More than this
-the Governor could not promise. At the Pembina they would find timber for
-cabin building, game for the hunting. Some other necessaries might be
-bought at Fort Daer. In the spring they could return, and land for
-farming would be assigned to them. The Swiss had arrived at a bad time
-when the Colony could do little for them. They would have to do the best
-they could for themselves.
-
-It was a sober and depressed group of immigrants who listened to Governor
-McDonnell's speech. In spite of what they had heard and seen of the
-ravages of the locusts, they had clung to the hope that their worst
-troubles would be over when they reached Fort Douglas. They had expected
-to be housed and fed for a little while at least, until they could make
-homes for themselves on their own land. Now that dream was over. They
-must go on,--all of them who could go on. And when they reached a
-stopping place at last, it would be only a temporary one, with the
-doubtful prospect of depending on hunting for a living, and perhaps
-starving before spring. No wonder discouragement and foreboding rested
-heavily upon their hearts. Even Walter Rossel, young and strong and
-hopeful, was dismayed at the Governor's words.
-
-The Swiss were a steadfast and courageous people. They soon roused
-themselves to make the best of a bad situation. Food and fuel for the
-night at least had been promised them. They left the future to
-Providence, and set about pitching camp. Heretofore the voyageurs had
-done part of that work. Now, having reached the end of their journey,
-having unloaded the boats and been paid off, they joined their own
-friends at Fort Douglas or crossed the river to the _bois brule_
-settlement on the east bank. Only Louis Brabant lingered to lend
-encouragement and help to those whom the long journey had made his
-friends.
-
-After their first curiosity, the old settlers showed little interest in
-the new. To the Scotch and Irish, the Swiss were foreigners in speech and
-ways. The colonists knew from experience the hardships of the voyage
-across the ocean and of the wilderness trip from Fort York. They could
-understand the discouraging situation in which the newcomers found
-themselves, but they could do little or nothing for them. They were not
-hard hearted, but, pinched for food themselves, they could not be
-overjoyed at the coming of all these additional hungry mouths to be fed.
-Had the Swiss been actually starving, the old settlers would have shared
-with them the last pint of meal and ounce of pemmican, yet they could
-scarcely help resenting the arrival of the strangers. Why did the heirs
-of Lord Selkirk keep on sending settlers without providing for them even
-the barest necessities? No wonder the old colonists grumbled and growled.
-If their attitude towards the new was not actually unfriendly, it was far
-from cordial or encouraging. Only the ex-soldiers mingled freely with the
-Swiss, and even invited certain families to their cabins.
-
-Walter did not like the appearance and manner of these men, but they
-aroused his curiosity. "Who are the DeMeurons?" he asked Louis. "How did
-they come here, and why do they call themselves by that name?"
-
-"They came with Lord Selkirk when he recaptured Fort Douglas from the
-Northwesters. They were soldiers brought over from Europe to fight for
-the King in the last war with the Americans. After the war they were
-discharged and Lord Selkirk engaged about a hundred of them to protect
-his colony. Because most of them had belonged to a regiment commanded by
-a man named DeMeuron, the settlers call them all DeMeurons. Lord Selkirk
-gave them land along the _Riviere la Seine_, which comes into the Red
-about a mile above here, but they do little farming, those DeMeurons.
-They would rather hunt. I blame them not for that. The other colonists
-have no love for them."
-
-"I don't like their looks myself," Walter replied, "but they seem kinder
-to strangers than anyone else here is."
-
-"The DeMeurons are all bachelors," Louis explained with a grin. "They
-seek wives to keep their houses and to help them farm their lands, and
-perhaps they think Swiss girls will work harder than _bois brules_. So
-they are kind to the fathers and brothers that they may not be refused
-when they propose marriage to daughters and sisters. Soon there will be
-weddings I think."
-
-"I should hate to see a sister of mine marry a DeMeuron," was Walter's
-emphatic comment. He changed the subject. "Have you found out," he asked,
-"if it is true that Lord Selkirk is dead?"
-
-"Yes, it is true. He died, they say, a year ago last spring."
-
-"Then who owns the Colony now, the Hudson Bay Company?"
-
-"I don't quite understand about that," was the doubtful reply. "I asked
-one of the Company clerks at the fort and he said that the land and
-everything belong to Lord Selkirk's heirs. But M'sieu Garry, the
-Vice-Governor of the Company, as they call him, was here during the
-summer, and with him was M'sieu McGillivray, a big man among the
-Northwesters, and now, since the two companies are one, of the Hudson Bay
-also. They were much interested in the settlement, the clerk said, and
-made plans about what should be done."
-
-"Lord Selkirk was one of the owners of the Company, wasn't he?" Walter
-questioned. "Then his heirs must own part of it. Perhaps the Company is
-going to run the Colony for them. Does Governor McDonnell belong to the
-Company?"
-
-"That I don't know. It was Lord Selkirk who made McDonnell governor.
-Truly it is _he_ who runs the Colony now, with a high hand."
-
-Mention of Governor McDonnell brought Walter's own personal problem
-uppermost in his thoughts. "Do you suppose they will really send us on up
-the river to-morrow?" he asked.
-
-"Yes, truly. It is the only place for you to go. Here you would starve
-before spring. Perhaps a few may stay, those the DeMeurons have taken
-into their cabins. You, Walter, will go of course, and I am glad. Pembina
-is my home, and we go together."
-
-"But I can't go until the Periers come," the Swiss boy protested. "I
-intend to stay with them wherever they are, and I ought to wait for
-them."
-
-Louis shook his head. "I think the Governor will not let you. What good
-would it do? As soon as the second brigade arrives, they will be sent on
-to Pembina. You can wait for them there as well as here. Come with me
-to-morrow. My mother will make you welcome, and we will find a place for
-your friends. Perhaps we can have a cabin all ready for them. They would
-be glad of that."
-
-
-
-
- XII
- BY CART TRAIN TO PEMBINA
-
-
-Louis slept with friends on the other side of the river, Walter remaining
-with his country people. The weather was sharp and cold, but Governor
-McDonnell's promise of fuel and food was fulfilled. After a hearty meal,
-the newcomers, in spite of their disappointment, passed a more
-comfortable night than many they had endured during the long journey.
-They were somewhat disturbed, however, by the sounds of revelry borne on
-the wind from Fort Douglas. That the voyageurs and their friends would
-celebrate hilariously, the Swiss had expected, but not that such wild
-revels would take place within the fort walls, where lived the Governor
-and his household.
-
-"The Colony is short of food, so they say," Matthieu the weaver
-complained bitterly, "but the folk in the fort must have plenty to eat
-and drink and make merry with."
-
-Walter clung to the hope that the departure for Pembina might be delayed
-until after the arrival of the second boat brigade. But early in the
-morning word came from Fort Douglas that the Swiss must make ready to
-leave at once. The boy resolved to ask the Governor to let him remain. He
-went up to the fort, and felt encouraged when he was admitted at the gate
-without question, but his request to see the Governor met with flat
-refusal. The Governor was busy and could not be disturbed. He had given
-his orders and those orders must be obeyed. Walter was well and strong
-and able to travel. He had no friends in the settlement to take him in.
-Well, then, he must go on to Pembina.
-
-Finding it useless to plead his cause to the Governor's underlings and
-impossible to get to McDonnell himself, the angry, discouraged lad left
-the fort. He found Louis Brabant at the Swiss camp, and poured out his
-story wrathfully. "I have a notion to stay here anyway," he concluded
-stubbornly. "I can find someone who will give me lodging for a few days."
-
-"Yes," Louis admitted. "At St. Boniface, across the river, I can ask my
-friends to take you in, but if the Governor learns you have disobeyed his
-command he will be most angry."
-
-"What can he do to me? I have a right to be here."
-
-"Perhaps, but when the Governor is angry, he does not think of the rights
-of others. You would have to go anyway, tied in a cart as a prisoner, or
-he would shut you up in the fort, or send you out of the Colony."
-
-"Where could he send me except to Pembina?" Walter questioned, still
-unconvinced.
-
-"To Norway House,--to be taken to Fort York in the spring and sent back
-to Europe in a ship," was the startling reply. "Oh, yes, as Governor of
-the Colony, he could do all that."
-
-"But surely he wouldn't do it, for such a little thing?"
-
-"Governor 'Sauterelle' does not think it a little thing when he is
-disobeyed. He is not gentle to one who opposes his will. No, no, Walter,
-you must not think of it. At Pembina you will be far enough away to do as
-you please, but not here. Come, you shall stay at my home, and we will
-find a place for your friends and make all ready for them. It won't be
-long until they join you."
-
-Reluctantly Walter yielded to the Canadian boy's advice. He did not want
-to yield, but, if what Louis said of the Governor was true, the risk of
-disobedience was too great. He himself had seen enough already of
-Alexander McDonnell to realize that he was not the kind of man to be
-lenient with anyone who disobeyed his orders. So the Swiss boy set about
-getting his own scanty belongings ready for the journey. He had taken for
-granted that the party would travel by boat, but he had returned to the
-camp on the river bank to find his companions' baggage being loaded into
-carts.
-
-Clumsy looking things were those carts,--a box body and two great wheels
-at least five feet tall, with strong spokes, thick hubs, and wooden rims
-three inches wide and without metal tires. Between the shafts, which were
-straight, heavy beams, a small, shaggy, sinewy pony, harnessed with
-rawhide straps, stood with lowered head and tail and an air of dejection
-or sleepy indifference.
-
-"What queer vehicles," Walter exclaimed. "Are we to travel overland?"
-
-"Yes, the journey is much shorter that way. By water, following the bends
-of the river, is almost twice as far. You never saw carts like these
-before? No, I think that is true. The _bois brules_ of the Red River
-invented this sort of cart. It is made all of wood, not a bit of metal
-anywhere. Every man makes his own cart. All the tools he needs are an
-axe, a saw, and an auger or an Indian drill. I have a cart at home I made
-myself, and it is a good one. In this country you must make things for
-yourself or you have nothing."
-
-Examining one of the queer contrivances, Walter found that Louis had
-spoken the simple truth. No metal had been used in its construction.
-Wooden pegs and rawhide lashings took the place of nails and spikes. Even
-the harness was guiltless of a buckle. The carts were far from beautiful,
-but they were strong and serviceable. The Swiss boy, who knew something
-of woodworking, admired the ingenuity and skill that had gone into their
-making. Enough vehicles had been supplied to transport the few belongings
-of the Swiss and to allow the women and children to ride. Now other
-carts,--with the families and baggage of the Scotch settlers who were
-leaving for Pembina,--began to arrive at the rendezvous, the discordant
-squeaking and screeching of their wooden axles announcing their approach
-some time before they came in sight.
-
-It took so long to gather the cart train together and make everything
-ready for departure, that Walter kept hoping for the appearance of the
-boat brigade. But not a craft, except a canoe or two, came into view
-around the bend of the river, and no songs or shouts of voyageurs were
-heard in the distance. The boy, still determined to plead his cause, kept
-a lookout for Governor McDonnell, but he did not appear. He left the
-carrying out of his commands to his assistants.
-
-The start was made at last. At the sharp "_Marche donc!_" of the drivers,
-the sleepy looking ponies woke into life and were off at a brisk trot.
-The carts pitched and wobbled, each with a gait of its own, over the
-rough, hard ground, the ungreased axles groaning and screeching in every
-key. The discord set Walter's teeth on edge, as he walked with Louis
-beside the vehicle the latter was driving.
-
-At the head of the column the guide in charge, Jean Baptiste Lajimoniere,
-rode horseback, followed closely by the cart carrying his wife and
-younger children. The whole family had come from Pembina a short time
-before to have the newest baby christened by Father Provencher, the
-priest. Behind the Lajimonieres, the train stretched out across the
-plain, the two wheeled carts piled with baggage and household belongings
-or occupied by the women and children sitting flat on the bottom, their
-heels higher than their hips. The drivers sat on the shafts or walked
-alongside. The Swiss men and boys went afoot, but some of the Scotch and
-Canadians rode wiry ponies and drove a few cattle. The riders used
-deerskin pads for saddles and long stirrups or none at all. Spare cart
-horses ran loose beside their harnessed companions.
-
-Not all of the Swiss were in the party. Several families, taken into the
-cabins of the DeMeurons, had been allowed to remain. Matthieu and his
-wife also stayed behind. The baby was ill and Matthieu himself scarce
-able to travel. The Colony had started a new industry, the manufacture of
-cloth from buffalo hair, and the weaver was to be given employment. When
-Walter learned that Matthieu was to remain, the boy entrusted to him a
-letter for Mr. Perier, explaining how he had been forced to go on to
-Pembina.
-
-Leaving Point Douglas, the cart train turned southeast, traveling a
-little back from the west bank of the river, along a worn track across
-open prairie. Beyond the narrow valley, scattered cabins could be seen
-among the trees on the east side.
-
-"That is St. Boniface settlement," Louis told his companion. "Pere
-Provencher is building a church there."
-
-About a mile south of Point Douglas, the carts approached the junction of
-the Assiniboine River with the Red, the place Louis called _Les
-Fourches_, the Forks. On the north bank of the Assiniboine stood a small
-Hudson Bay post, and not far from it were piles of logs for a new
-building or stockade.
-
-"The Company is going to make a new fort," Louis explained. "M'sieu Garry
-and M'sieu McGillivray chose this spot. There was an old Northwest post,
-Fort Gibraltar, here, but five years ago M'sieu Colin Robertson, a Hudson
-Bay man, seized it, and Governor Semple had it pulled down. The logs and
-timber were taken down river to Fort Douglas. Fort Gibraltar had been
-here a long time, and so has this trading house. Les Fourches is an old
-trading place. Men say there was a fort here a hundred years ago, when
-all Canada and the fur country were French, but nothing is left of those
-old buildings now."
-
-The cart train halted near the trading post, as some of the men had
-business there, and Louis asked Walter to go with him to see the Chief
-Trader. "At Fort Douglas I told a clerk how our pemmican disappeared and
-about _le Murrai's_ package of trade goods. _Le Murrai_ had received his
-pay and had left the fort. The clerk knew not where he had gone. He told
-me to report the affair to M'sieu the Chief Trader here. Come with me,
-and we will tell what we know."
-
-The men of the little post were busy outfitting boats to go up the
-Assiniboine with goods and supplies for stations farther west, but the
-two boys had a few minutes' conversation with the Chief Trader. Louis
-told the story and Walter corroborated it. The trader looked grave and
-shook his head perplexedly. The charge against Murray,--stealing supplies
-and exchanging them for goods with which to trade on his own
-account,--was a serious one. Could it be proved? The trader did not doubt
-the story of the contents of the bundle, but Murray might have come by
-the things honestly and for a legitimate purpose.
-
-"He is due here to-day to go with the Assiniboine brigade," the trader
-explained, "but I have seen nothing of him. You have no proof that he
-took the pemmican and substituted the bag of clay. If he denies it, the
-only thing I can do is to report the matter to Norway House at the first
-opportunity. They ought to know whether anyone exchanged pemmican for
-goods while your brigade was there. Of course Murray didn't make the
-bargain himself. Someone else did it for him. It won't be necessary to
-mention your names at present, to Murray I mean. You would find the Black
-Murray a bad enemy."
-
-"Yes," Louis agreed. "He does not love either of us now. I thank you,
-M'sieu."
-
-"The thanks are due to you, from the Company, for reporting this matter.
-Don't you want to sign for the Assiniboine voyage? We can use you both."
-
-Walter shook his head. He had had quite enough voyaging for the present.
-Louis answered simply, "No, M'sieu. I go to my mother at Pembina."
-
-
-
-
- XIII
- THE RED-HEADED SCOTCH BOY
-
-
-Instead of continuing on the west bank of the Red River and crossing the
-Assiniboine, the cart train turned to the east, followed a well-traveled
-track down to the Red, and forded that river below the Forks. The country
-just south of the Assiniboine was marshy and thickly wooded with willows
-and small poplars. By following the east bank of the Red the almost
-impassable low ground was avoided.
-
-The carts were now on the St. Boniface side, where the stream that Louis
-called _Riviere la Seine_, and the Scotch settlers, German Creek, entered
-the river. Some of the DeMeuron cabins were near at hand, and the Swiss
-who were to remain there were on the lookout for a chance to say good-bye
-to their friends. Walter saw again the red-faced ex-soldier who had
-boasted that he and his comrades were the pick of many countries. He
-carried a gun on his shoulder and looked as if he had been drinking. The
-boy liked him even less than before.
-
-The carts crossed the creek, which was narrow and shallow where it joined
-the river. Ten or twelve miles farther on, they forded the Red again,
-above the mouth of the _Riviere la Sale_, a small, muddy stream coming in
-from the west.
-
-Their way now lay across the open prairie west of the Red River; treeless
-plains such as the Swiss immigrants had never seen before. Trees grew
-along the river bank only. The few elevations in sight seemed scarcely
-high enough to be called hills. This was the fertile, rich soiled land of
-which the new settlers had been told. Its grass ravaged by locusts, dried
-by the sun, withered by frost, in some places consumed by sweeping fires;
-the prairie showed little outward sign of its fertility. The immigrants
-gazed across the yellow-gray expanse and the unsightly black stretches,
-and shook their heads wonderingly and doubtfully. Many a heart was heavy
-with homesickness for native mountains and valleys.
-
-Walter Rossel was not a little heartsick, as he walked beside the loaded
-cart or took a turn at riding on the shafts and driving the shaggy pony.
-He was trudging along, absorbed in his own thoughts, when he was startled
-by the sudden dash of a horse so close that he instinctively jumped the
-other way. Looking up, he saw a freckled, red-haired lad in a
-Tam-o'-Shanter, grinning cheerfully down from the back of the wiry, black
-pony he had pulled up so short it was standing on its hind legs.
-Instantly Walter recognized the horseman. This red-headed boy was the
-first of the settlers he had seen when the brigade approached the Scotch
-settlement of Kildonan. He was the fisherman who had waved his blue
-bonnet to the boats.
-
-The Scotch lad was greeting Louis as an old friend, and the Canadian
-responded smilingly. "_Bo'jou_, Neil MacKay," he cried. "So your family
-goes again to Pembina."
-
-"What else can we do?" was the question. "We must eat, and there is sure
-to be more food at Pembina this winter than at Kildonan. We will hunt
-together again, Louis."
-
-"Yes, you and I and my other friend here, Walter Rossel."
-
-Walter and Neil responded to this introduction by exchanging nods and
-grins. The red-haired lad dismounted, and, leading his pony, fell into
-step by Walter's side. The conversation of the three was carried on
-principally in French. The Scotch boy had learned that language during
-his first winter at the Red River. That winter, and several of the
-succeeding ones, he had spent at Pembina. Among the French and _bois
-brules_ he had had plenty of practice in the Canadian tongue. Indeed he
-spoke it far better than English, for his native speech was the Gaelic of
-northern Scotland. Already familiar with Louis' Canadian French, Walter
-had little difficulty in understanding Neil, except when he introduced a
-Gaelic word or phrase.
-
-The Scotch boy answered the newcomer's questions readily and told him
-much about the Colony. Neil had come from Scotland with his father and
-mother, brothers and sisters, before he was nine years old. He was just
-fifteen now. When the MacKays and their companions had reached the Red
-River, they had found the settlement deserted, the houses burned. The
-settlers were gathered together again and spent the winter at Pembina,
-returning to Fort Douglas in the spring. Then came Cuthbert Grant and his
-wild _bois brule_ followers. Governor Semple was killed and Fort Douglas
-captured for the Northwest Company. The colonists, including the MacKays,
-were compelled to go to Norway House. They had returned when Lord Selkirk
-and his DeMeurons arrived and had gone on with their farming.
-
-There were some two hundred settlers at Kildonan now, Neil said, and
-about a hundred DeMeurons along German Creek. How many Canadians and
-_bois brules_ really belonged at St. Boniface it was hard to tell, they
-came and went so constantly. "They do little farming on the east side of
-the river," the boy remarked. "Hunting and fishing are more to their
-taste. I don't blame them. They can get enough to eat more easily that
-way. Raising crops here is discouraging work. You will learn that soon
-enough."
-
-"Isn't the soil good?" asked Walter. "We were told it was rich."
-
-"Oh, the soil is all right, after you get the ground broken. Breaking is
-hard work though, when you have nothing but a hoe and a spade. There is
-scarcely a plow in the Colony. There hasn't been an ox till just lately.
-The Indian ponies aren't trained for farm work. Things grow fast once
-they are planted, but what is the good of raising them when the
-grasshoppers take them all? I would go to Canada, as so many have done,
-or to the United States, but my father is stubborn. He won't leave
-Kildonan. He has worked hard and he doesn't want to give up his land. Yet
-if the grasshoppers keep coming every year, they will drive even him
-away." Neil shook his red head, his face very sober.
-
-The settlers, he went on to say, had no sheep and few pigs. Until a few
-weeks before, they had had no cattle. Alexis Bailly, a _bois brule_
-trader had come, during the summer, clear from the Mississippi River with
-a herd of about forty.
-
-"He got a good price for the beasts," Neil commented, "but he deserved
-it, after bringing them hundreds of miles through the Sioux country. Why
-the Indians didn't get every one of them I can't understand."
-
-"It was a great feat truly," Louis agreed. "But most of those cattle will
-be killed for food this winter."
-
-"I'm afraid so. It will be hard times in the Colony, and everyone is deep
-in debt to the store now."
-
-"The prices are high there I hear," Louis remarked.
-
-"High? Yes, and that's not the worst of it. The Colony store isn't run
-honestly. So many of the settlers can't read or write, it is easy to
-cheat them. My father can write and he keeps account of everything he
-buys, but they won't let him have anything more until he settles the bill
-they have against him. Half of that bill is for things he never had, and
-he swears he won't pay for what he didn't buy."
-
-"I should think not," cried Walter indignantly. "Why doesn't he appeal to
-the Governor?"
-
-Neil laughed shortly. "He tried, but it did him no good. If the Governor
-doesn't do the cheating himself, he winks at it. Governor 'Grasshopper'
-is one of the Colony's worst troubles. He thinks he is a little king,
-with his high-handed ways, and the court he keeps at Fort Douglas, and
-the revels he holds there."
-
-"We heard something of that last night."
-
-"Aye, it's no uncommon thing. McDonnell is not the man to be at the head
-of the Colony. We're all hoping he won't last much longer. Many
-complaints have been made to the Company, to Nicholas Garry and Simon
-McGillivray when they were here in the summer, and even by letter across
-the sea."
-
-The prairie track the carts followed ran well back from the wooded river
-banks. As the sun was setting behind a far distant rise of land across
-the plain, the guide turned from the trail. The squeaking carts followed
-his lead, bumping, pitching, and wobbling over the untracked ground.
-Supposing that Lajimoniere was seeking the shelter of the woods, Walter
-was surprised when the guide reined in his mount at a distance of at
-least a half mile from the nearest trees. His cart stopped also and the
-flag it bore was lowered, as a signal to the rest of the train. Camp was
-to be made on the prairie in the full sweep of the sharp northwest wind.
-
-"This is a poor place it seems to me," the Swiss boy commented. "Farther
-over, among the trees, there would be shelter, and plenty of wood."
-
-"Lajimoniere prefers the open. It is safer."
-
-"What is there to fear?"
-
-"Nothing probably, but we can't be sure." Neil MacKay spoke quietly but
-seriously. "Out here on the prairie, we can see anyone approaching."
-
-"You mean Indians? I thought the Saulteux and Crees were friendly."
-
-"They are. Lajimoniere is thinking about Sioux. Whether the Sioux are
-friendly or not is an open question just now. Didn't you hear what
-happened at Fort Douglas a few weeks ago?"
-
-"The visit of the Sioux?" questioned Louis. "I was told of it last night
-at St. Boniface. It was a most unfortunate affair."
-
-"What was it?" Walter asked. "I didn't know the Sioux ever came to Fort
-Douglas. Louis told me their country was farther south."
-
-"So it is," replied the Scotch lad. "A Sioux seldom ventures this far
-down the Red River nowadays, but a party of them did come clear to the
-fort a while ago. They said they had heard how fine the Company's goods
-were and what generous presents the traders gave. So they came to pay a
-visit to the Hudson Bay white men. They were friendly, almost too
-friendly. They expected drink and gifts. The Governor was away, and one
-of the Company clerks was in charge. He didn't know just what to do with
-such dangerous guests. He told them there wasn't any rum in the fort, and
-gave them tea instead. Then he fed them and distributed a few trinkets
-and little things. If they would go back to their own country, he said,
-the Company would send traders to them with goods and more presents."
-
-"The Company will get into trouble with the American traders if goods are
-sent to the Sioux country beyond the border," Louis commented.
-
-"Yes, but he had to promise something to get rid of the fellows. If they
-stayed around, he was afraid of trouble with the Saulteux. The Sioux
-seemed satisfied when they left the fort. But several Saulteux were
-hiding in ambush in the fort garden. They fired on the Sioux, killed two,
-and wounded another, then escaped by swimming the river and dodging
-through the willows. Of course the Sioux were furious. They said the
-white men had given the Saulteux powder and shot to kill friendly
-visitors. One of them boasted to a _bois brule_ from St. Boniface,--who
-is part Sioux himself and speaks their language,--that they were going
-back to the fort to scalp the clerk. The half-breed went right to the
-fort with the story. Things looked serious. If the party of Sioux had
-been larger they might have attacked the fort or massacred all of us, but
-they knew they were far outnumbered. Somehow they learned that the men in
-the fort had been warned of their plot. They decamped suddenly, and
-nothing more has been seen of them. Probably they have gone back to their
-own country, but no one knows. They may be hiding somewhere waiting for a
-chance to attack any Saulteur or _bois brule_ or white man who comes
-along."
-
-Louis nodded soberly. "When an Indian seeks revenge he is not always
-careful what man he strikes. Lajimoniere does well to camp in the open."
-
-Neil's story had sent a chill up Walter's spine. Hardship he had become
-used to during the journey from Fort York, hardship and danger from the
-forces of Nature; water and wind, cold and storm. But this was the first
-time in his life that real peril from enemy human beings had ever
-confronted him. He had known of course that there might be danger from
-Indians in this wild land to which he had come, but he had never actually
-sensed that danger before. He glanced towards the woods, and saw, in
-imagination, half naked, copper colored savages concealed in the shadows
-and watching with fierce eyes the approaching carts.
-
-Although camp was pitched out of musket range from that belt of trees,
-the woods nevertheless must be penetrated. The beasts must be taken to
-the river. Water and fuel must be brought back. After listening to Neil's
-story, Walter was surprised at the apparent light-hearted carelessness of
-the men and boys who started riverward with the horses and cattle. Neil
-had a cow and three ponies to water, and he offered one of the latter to
-Walter.
-
-"Ride the roan," he advised, "if you're not used to our ponies. He is
-older and better broken."
-
-Neil took for granted that Walter wanted to go with Louis and himself,
-and the Swiss boy, who was far from being a coward, did not think of
-declining. He had not been on a horse for several years, but before his
-apprenticeship to Mr. Perier, he had been used to riding. The roan was
-unusually well broken and sedate for a prairie pony. Though obliged to
-ride bareback and with only a halter instead of bridle and bit, Walter
-had no trouble with the animal. The horse knew it was being taken to
-water and needed no guidance to keep with the other beasts.
-
-The boy could not help a feeling of uneasiness as he approached the
-woods, and he noticed that Louis, though he seemed to ride carelessly,
-kept one hand on his gun. The irregular cavalcade of mounted men and boys
-and loose animals passed in among the trees,--sturdy oaks, broad topped
-elms, great basswoods, which Louis called _bois blanc_,--white wood,--and
-Walter _lindens_. All were nearly leafless now, except the oaks, which
-retained part of their dry, brown foliage, but the trunks stood close
-enough together to furnish cover for any lurking enemy. Without alarm,
-however, the animals threaded their way through the belt of larger growth
-to the river bank. The steep slopes and narrow bottom were covered with
-smaller trees and bushes, aspen poplar, wild plum and cherry, highbush
-cranberry, saskatoon or service berry, prickly raspberry canes, and,
-especially along the river margin, thick willows.
-
-Following a track where wild animals had broken a way through the bushes
-and undergrowth, dogs, cattle, horses, and men made their way down the
-first slope, along a shelf or terrace, and on down a yet steeper incline
-to the river bottom. The sure-footed, thirsty beasts made the descent in
-quick time, and crashed eagerly through the willows to the water. The Red
-River ran sluggishly here. It was smooth and deep, with muddy shores. In
-the dried mud along the margin were the old tracks of the animals that
-had broken the trail down the slope.
-
-When the boys had dismounted to water their horses, Louis pointed out the
-prints, which resembled those of naked feet. "Somewhere near here," he
-said, "the bears must cross. They have regular fords. Once in the fall I
-watched a band of bears cross the Pembina. I was up in a tree and I
-counted nineteen, old and young, but I was too far away for a good shot."
-
-The bear tracks led up stream. Leaving the horses to bathe and splash,
-Louis and Walter, who preferred to drink at a less muddy spot, pushed
-their way among the willows. A hundred yards up stream, they came to a
-bend and shallows, caused by a limestone cliff.
-
-"This is the bears' fording place," said Louis, "and a good one too. Not
-only bears but men have been here," he added quickly, "and not long ago.
-Look."
-
-On the bit of beach at the base of the cliff lay a little heap of charred
-wood and ashes. Near by, clearly imprinted in the damp sand, were foot
-tracks and marks that must have been made by the bow of a boat.
-
-"Indians?" questioned Walter, the chill creeping up his spine again.
-
-"Or white men," Louis returned. "These are moccasin prints, but the color
-of the feet inside those moccasins I know no way to tell. There were two
-men, that is plain, and one is tall, I think, for his feet are long. They
-were voyaging, those two, and stopped here to boil their tea. They have
-not been gone many hours. That fire was burning since last night's
-frost." The Canadian boy's tone was careless. His curiosity had in it no
-suggestion of fear.
-
-Walter was more concerned. "Those Sioux," he ventured. "Do you
-suppose----"
-
-"No, no," came the prompt reply. "The Sioux had horses. They didn't come
-by river. Sioux seldom travel by water. These men were white, or _bois
-brules_, or Saulteux, or other Ojibwas. They had a birch canoe. No clumsy
-wooden boat or dugout made that mark." Louis examined the footprints
-again. "That one man is a big fellow truly. See how long his track is."
-The boy placed his own left foot in the most distinct of the prints. "He
-must be as tall as _le Murrai Noir_."
-
-
-
-
- XIV
- PEMBINA
-
-
-Without alarm or hint of lurking enemy, men and beasts made their way
-slowly up the steep river bank and through the woods to the prairie. The
-carts, shafts out, had been arranged in a circle, and within this
-defensive barricade camp had been pitched. Families fortunate enough to
-have tents had set them up. Others had devised shelters by stretching a
-buffalo skin, a blanket, or a square of canvas over the box and one wheel
-of a cart. The ponies, hobbled around the fore legs or staked out with
-long rawhide ropes, were left to feed on the short, dry prairie grass,
-and to take care of themselves, but the few precious oxen and cows were
-carefully watched and guarded against straying.
-
-With the fuel brought from the woods fires were kindled within the
-circle. Kettles were swung on tripods of sticks or on stakes driven into
-the hard ground and slanted over the blaze. Pemmican and tea had been
-supplied to the Swiss. The older settlers had, in addition, a little
-barley meal for porridge and a few potatoes which they roasted in the
-ashes. Louis and Walter eked out their scanty supper with a handful of
-hazelnuts that had escaped the notice of the squirrels in the woods. The
-autumn was too far advanced for berries of any kind.
-
-After the meal, Walter made the acquaintance of the MacKay family, Neil's
-burly, red-bearded father, his mother, his two sisters, and next younger
-brother. The eldest brother, who was married, had gone to Pembina nearly
-a month earlier. Mrs. MacKay, a tall, thin woman with a rather stern
-face, spoke little French, but with true Highland hospitality she made
-Walter and Louis welcome to the family fire. Wrapped in a blanket and
-knitting a stocking, she sat on a three-legged stool close to the blaze.
-At her right was her older daughter patching, by firelight, the sleeve of
-a blue cloth capote. On the other side, the father was mending a piece of
-harness, cutting the ends of the rawhide straps into fine strips and
-braiding them as if he were splicing a rope. Neil too was busy cleaning
-and oiling his gun, and his younger brother, a sandy-haired lad of ten,
-was whittling a wooden arrow. The two little children had been put to bed
-in a snug nest of blankets and robes underneath the cart. The sight of
-this family gathering around the fire gave Walter a feeling of
-homesickness and loneliness that brought a lump to his throat. The
-feeling deepened as he and his companion strolled from cart to cart and
-fire to fire. Everyone in the camp but Louis and himself had his own
-family circle, and Louis was on the way to home and mother.
-
-It was the Lajimonieres who gave the two boys the warmest welcome and
-made the Swiss lad forget his homesickness. They were old friends of the
-Brabant family, and Louis called Madame Lajimoniere "_marraine_." She had
-acted as his godmother when Pere Provencher baptized him. Indeed she was
-godmother to so many of the Canadian children at St. Boniface and Pembina
-that the younger members of the two settlements seldom called her by any
-other name. There was no Indian blood in Marie Lajimoniere, and she had
-lived in the valley of the Red River longer than any other white woman.
-Several years before the first band of Selkirk settlers had reached the
-forks of the Assiniboine and the Red, she had come with her husband to
-the Red River country from Three Rivers on the St. Lawrence. When, in
-1818, the Roman Catholic missionaries, Father Provencher and Father
-Dumoulin, had arrived in the Selkirk Colony, Madame Lajimoniere had
-received them with warmth and enthusiasm. She was a devout member of
-their church, and she gladly stood sponsor for the Canadian and _bois
-brule_ children brought to the priests for baptism. Louis had a warm
-affection for his _marraine_, and Walter took an immediate liking to her
-and her family.
-
-One of the Lajimoniere children was a girl of about Elise Perier's age, a
-slender, black-haired, red-cheeked girl named Reine. When Reine, somewhat
-shyly, questioned the Swiss boy about his long journey from Fort York, he
-told her of Elise and Max and Mr. Perier, and how anxious he was about
-their welfare.
-
-"Oh, we will all help to make them comfortable and happy when they come
-to Pembina," Reine eagerly assured him. "It will be delightful to have a
-new girl, just my age, who speaks French. The Scotch girls are so hard to
-talk to, when you don't know their language or they yours. I shall like
-your sister I know, and I hope she will like me."
-
-At Louis' urging, Jean Baptiste Lajimoniere told Walter of the greatest
-adventure of his adventurous life. In the winter of 1815 and '16 he had
-gone alone from Red River to Montreal. He carried letters to Lord
-Selkirk,--who had come over from England,--telling how the Northwesters
-had driven away his colonists. All alone, the plucky voyageur faced the
-perils and hardships of the long wilderness journey. He came through
-safely, to give the letters into Lord Selkirk's own hands and relate to
-his own ears the story of the settlers' troubles. Lajimoniere told his
-tale well, and the boy forgot his own perplexities as he listened. Not
-until the story was finished did Walter realize how late the hour was,
-long past time to seek his blanket. Madame Lajimoniere and the children
-had already disappeared under their buffalo skin shelter, Louis had
-stolen quietly away, and the whole camp was wrapped in silence.
-
-Walter thanked the guide, said good night, and hurried back to his own
-camping place. The horses and cattle had been brought within the circle
-and picketed or tied to cart wheels. The settlers were taking no chance
-of Indian horse thieves making away with their beasts. Everyone in the
-camp, except the guards stationed outside the barricade, was sleeping,
-and the fires were burning low. The night was dark, without moon or
-stars. How lonely and insignificant was this little circle of carts, with
-the prairie stretching around it and the vast arch of the sky overhead!
-The flickering light of the fires, only partly revealing picketed beasts,
-clumsy carts, and rude shelters, seemed merely to intensify the darkness,
-the vastness, the loneliness beyond.
-
-Not a wild animal, except a few gophers, had been seen all day; the cart
-train was too noisy. But now the wind that swept the prairie brought a
-chorus of voices, the high-pitched barking of the small prairie wolves,
-and the long-drawn howling of the big, gray timber ones. The dogs
-answered, until their masters, waking, belabored them into silence. The
-camps along the rivers and the shores of Lake Winnipeg had seemed remote
-enough from civilization, but not one had impressed the mountain-bred lad
-with such an overwhelming sense of loneliness as did this circle of carts
-on the prairie.
-
-He found Louis already asleep, and crawled in beside him. There he lay,
-listening to the wolves and, when their howlings ceased for a time, to
-the faint and far-away cries of a flock of migrating birds passing high
-overhead. Then he drifted away into sleep.
-
-The approach of dawn was beginning to gray the blackness in the east when
-every dog in the camp suddenly began to growl. The horses grew restive,
-neighing and moving about. Startled wide awake, Walter, thrilling at the
-thought of a Sioux attack, asked his comrade what the matter was. Louis
-did not know. He had thrown aside his blanket and was crawling out from
-under the cart. As Walter followed, he heard the guide calling to the
-watchers beyond the barricade. The guards replied that all was quiet on
-the prairie. They could see nothing wrong, discern no moving form.
-
-For a few minutes everyone in the camp was awake, anxious, excited, but
-nothing happened, no war whoop came out of the darkness. The dogs ceased
-growling, the ponies neighing, and soon all was silence again. What had
-caused the alarm, whether prowling wild beast or skulking man, or the
-mere restlessness of some sleepless dog or nervous horse, no one could
-tell.
-
-The camp was astir before the sun was up, and the first task was to water
-the horses and cattle. Louis remained behind to get breakfast while
-Walter rode the pony to the river.
-
-The late start from Fort Douglas made getting to Pembina that day
-impossible. After plodding along the prairie track and crossing several
-small streams, the cart train passed a cold and stormy night in the open
-beyond the wooded bank of a muddy creek that Louis called Riviere aux
-Marais. Pembina was reached next day in a driving storm of rain, sleet
-and snow.
-
-The Pembina River took its name from _anepeminan_, the Ojibwa term for
-the shrub we call highbush cranberry. The junction of the Pembina with
-the Red was an old trading place. The Northwest men had established
-themselves there before the close of the eighteenth century, and in the
-early years of the nineteenth all three rival companies, the Northwest,
-the Hudson Bay, and the New Northwest or X. Y. Company, as it was called
-by the old Northwesters, maintained posts a short distance from one
-another. Those old posts were gone,--burned or torn down,--long before
-the time of this story. The two forts then standing had been built at a
-later date. Fort Daer, the Selkirk Colony post, dated from the autumn of
-1812, when the first of the colonists, under the leadership of Miles
-McDonnell, had come to the Pembina to winter. It stood on the south bank
-of that river near where it empties into the Red. Just opposite, across
-the Pembina, was a former Northwest fort, which had become, since the
-uniting of the companies, a Hudson Bay trading post.
-
-Some of the Scotch settlers and all of the Swiss except Walter were to be
-lodged at Fort Daer until they could build cabins of their own. Louis had
-asked Walter to be his guest. The cart he was driving, which was not his
-own, was loaded with the household goods of some of the settlers, and had
-to be taken to Fort Daer. After leaving the fort, the two boys, carrying
-their scanty belongings in packs, made their way to Louis' home. The
-little village of log cabins was not actually on the Pembina, but near
-the bank of the Red a mile or more from the junction point. The arrival
-at Fort Daer of a cart train from down river was an important event, but
-the abominable weather curbed curiosity, and the boys saw few people as
-they made their way against the storm to the Brabant cabin.
-
-Louis' mother, hoping that he might have come with the party from Fort
-Douglas, was on the lookout for him. Before he could reach the door, it
-flew open. Followed by the younger children and three shaggy-haired sled
-dogs, Mrs. Brabant ran out into the sleet and snow. Very heartily Louis
-hugged and kissed her. When he presented his companion, she welcomed
-Walter warmly. The children greeted him shyly. The dogs, inclined at
-first to resent his presence, concluded, after a curt command and a kick
-or two from the moccasined toe of Louis' younger brother, to accept the
-newcomer as one of the family.
-
-To the Swiss lad, weary, soaked, and chilled through, the rude but snug
-cabin with a fire blazing in the rough stone fireplace, promised a
-comfort that seemed almost heavenly. He had not spent a night or even
-eaten a meal inside a building for many weeks. The warmth was so
-grateful, the smell from the steaming kettle that hung above the blaze so
-appetizing, that for a few minutes he could do nothing but stand before
-the fire, speechless, half dazed by the sudden transition from the wet
-and the bitter cold.
-
-He was roused by Mrs. Brabant who offered him dry moccasins and one of
-the shirts she had been making for Louis during his absence. Walter had a
-dry shirt in his pack, but he accepted the moccasins gratefully. His
-shoes were not only soaked, but so worn from the long journey that they
-scarcely held together. The cabin, one of the best in the settlement,
-boasted two rooms, and Louis' mother and sisters retired to the other one
-while the boys changed their clothes. As soon as they were warm and
-partly dry, supper was served.
-
-The household sat on stools and floor in front of the fire, each with his
-cup and wooden platter. From the bubbling pot standing on the hearth
-Madame Brabant ladled out generous portions. The rich and savory stew was
-made up of buffalo meat, wild goose, potatoes, carrots, onions, and other
-ingredients that Walter did not recognize but enjoyed nevertheless. It
-was the best meal he had tasted in months, and he ate until he could hold
-no more.
-
-The hunters had returned only a few days before from the great fall
-buffalo chase, and there was abundance of meat in the settlement. It was
-during the autumn hunt two years before that Louis' father had been
-accidentally killed, and the Brabant family had not accompanied the
-hunters since that time, but Mrs. Brabant's brother had brought her a
-supply of fresh and dried meat and pemmican. The goose thirteen-year-old
-Raoul had shot, and the potatoes and other vegetables were from the
-Brabant garden. The grasshopper hordes had missed Pembina. Mrs. Brabant
-expressed sympathy for the poor Selkirk colonists who had lost all their
-crops. She listened with lively interest to the boys' account of the trip
-from Fort York, and asked the Swiss lad many questions about his own
-people.
-
-Walter was so grateful for shelter, warmth, food, and the kindly welcome
-he was receiving that he could not have been critical of the Brabant
-family whatever they had been. As it happened, he liked them all
-heartily. He was to discover, within the next few days, that this
-household was considerably superior to most of those in Pembina. The
-interior of the cabin was neat and clean, differing markedly in this
-respect from many of the _bois brule_ dwellings. Her straight black hair,
-smoothly arranged in braids hanging over her shoulders, her dark skin,
-and high cheek-bones betrayed the Ojibwa in Louis' mother, but in every
-other way, especially in her ready smile, lively speech, and alert
-movements, she seemed wholly French. She wore deerskin leggings with
-moccasins, but her dark blue calico dress, belted with a strip of bright
-beadwork, was fresh and clean. Her little daughters were dressed in the
-same fashion, except that Marie, the elder, who was about ten years old,
-wore skirt and tunic of soft, fringed doeskin, instead of calico. The
-dark eyes of both little girls sparkled when Louis, unknotting a small
-bundle wrapped in a red handkerchief, handed each one a length of
-bright-colored ribbon, one red, the other orange, to tie in their long
-black braids. For his mother he brought a silk handkerchief, a gilt
-locket, and a packet of good tea, the kind, he had been told, the Chief
-Factor at Fort York drank. Raoul was made happy with a shiny new knife.
-
-Louis and Walter were tired enough to take to their blankets early. Mrs.
-Brabant and the girls slept in a great box bed, made of hand-hewn boards
-painted bright blue, that stood in the corner of the room where the
-fireplace was. In the smaller room, which was nothing but a lean-to shed
-with a dirt floor, was a curious couch for the boys. It was made of
-strips of rawhide stretched tightly on a frame of poles, and was covered
-with buffalo robe and blankets. This cot Louis shared with Walter, who
-found the rawhide straps not nearly so hard as bare ground. Raoul rolled
-himself in a robe and lay down in front of the fire.
-
-
-
-
- XV
- THE OJIBWA HUNTER
-
-
-Walter was anxious to get a place ready for the Periers, but he found
-that every one of the fifty or sixty log cabins in Pembina was full to
-overflowing. Indeed he marveled at the number of men, women, and children
-of all sizes that could be packed into a one-room cabin. The houses were
-built of logs chinked with clay and moss, and roofed with bark or grass
-thatch, and few had more than one room.
-
-A straggling, unkempt place was the settlement, the cabins set down hit
-or miss, with cart tracks wandering around among them. The tracks and
-dooryards were deep in mud, which was stiff with frost when the boys
-started out that morning. As the sun softened the ground, Walter found
-walking in the sticky stuff something like wading through thick glue, it
-clung to his moccasins so. Gardens were rare. The surroundings of most of
-the cabins were very untidy, cluttered with broken-down carts, disorderly
-piles of firewood, odds, ends, and rubbish of all sorts. Shaggy, unkempt
-ponies, hobbled or staked out, and wolfish looking sled dogs, running
-loose, were everywhere.
-
-The people were most of them _bois brules_ whose hair, skin, and features
-showed all degrees of mixed blood from almost pure white to nearly pure
-Indian. They seemed good-natured and very hospitable. The merrymaking in
-celebration of the return of the hunt was not yet at an end. Everywhere
-Louis and his companion were urged to share in a feast of buffalo meat,
-to join in a gambling game or in dancing to the scraping of a fiddle. So
-pressing were the invitations that declining was difficult.
-
-The neatest, best kept buildings in the village were the mission chapel
-and presbytery. Father Dumoulin was setting a good example to his flock
-by cleaning up his garden patch. Looking up from his work, he greeted
-Louis by name. The priest was a striking looking man, tall and strong of
-frame, his height emphasized by his long, straight, black cassock. His
-face was strong too. Walter, though not of Father Dumoulin's church, felt
-instantly that here was a man to command the respect of white men,
-half-breeds, and savages. When the priest learned that the boy was one of
-the newly arrived immigrants, he asked a number of questions.
-
-Near Fort Daer, in the edge of the woods bordering the river, a cluster
-of better kept cabins housed some of the more thrifty of the Scotch. In
-one of the largest and best of the houses, the two lads found the MacKay
-family settled for the winter. Neil was eager to arrange for an immediate
-buffalo hunt, but Louis replied that he could not go for a while. There
-were things he must do for his mother, and Walter did not want to be away
-when his friends arrived.
-
-From the MacKay cabin the boys went on to Fort Daer. Like all the forts
-in that part of the world, Daer and Pembina House, the old Northwest
-post, consisted of log stockades enclosing a few buildings. They stood on
-opposite sides of the Pembina and the land about each had been cleared of
-most of its trees and bushes. The Pembina was a good-sized stream, deep,
-sluggish, and like the Red, colored with the mud it carried. At Fort Daer
-Walter talked with some of his countrymen, who were feeling somewhat
-encouraged. They had been well fed, and were grateful for warmth and
-shelter. Real winter, the bitterly cold winter of this northern country,
-might come at any moment now to stay.
-
-If Walter was to hunt to help supply himself and the Periers with food,
-he needed a gun. With Louis he went to the Company store at Pembina House
-to buy one. He could not pay for it in money, but hoped that he might get
-it on credit, paying later in buffalo skins and other furs. The Hudson
-Bay Company frowned on fur hunting as well as on Indian trading by the
-colonists, but the settlers would be obliged to hunt that winter if they
-wished to eat. Louis thought that if Walter agreed to turn over to the
-Company the pelts of the food animals he killed, and not to engage in
-barter with the Indians, he might arrange for a gun and ammunition.
-
-The two were explaining Walter's needs, when an Indian burst suddenly
-into the room. His buckskin clothing was covered with mud. Blood matted
-his black hair and stained one dark cheek which was disfigured by a great
-scar. His eyes glittered, and his manner was wild and excited. The boys
-thought for a moment that he was going to attack the trader. The Indian,
-however, had no weapons,--no gun, hatchet, or knife. He began to talk
-rapidly, angrily. Walter could not understand a word of Ojibwa, but he
-could see that the Indian's speech startled both Louis and the trader.
-The latter replied briefly in the same tongue, then darted out of the
-door, the Ojibwa after him. Before Walter could voice a question, Louis
-was gone too. The Swiss boy turned to follow, hesitated, and decided to
-stay where he was.
-
-In a few moments Louis was back again. "What is it? Are the Sioux
-coming?" Walter asked anxiously.
-
-"No, unless this affair is the work of spies."
-
-"What affair? Could you understand what he said?"
-
-"Most of it. He was so wild it was hard to follow him. He has been
-attacked. He was down at the river loading his canoe. Two men came along.
-While one was talking to him, the other stole up behind him, knocked him
-over the head, and 'put him to sleep.' When he came to his senses, the
-goods he had just bought and his gun and knife were gone. There was a
-hole cut in his canoe. Of course he may be lying. He may have hidden the
-things and made up the story."
-
-"Why would he do that?"
-
-"To get a double supply of goods and ammunition. The trader believes him
-though. He is sending men in search of those two fellows."
-
-When the trader returned he added further details to the story. The
-Ojibwa, he said, was an honest, trustworthy hunter, who had been bringing
-his furs to the Company for several years. He had come alone from Red
-Lake to get his winter's supplies and ammunition. Having finished his
-bargaining, he was loading his boat at the riverside when another canoe,
-with two men, appeared, coming up stream. One of the men shouted a
-greeting in Ojibwa, they turned their boat in to shore, jumped out, and
-engaged him in talk. Entirely unsuspicious of treachery, Scar Face was
-answering one man's questions, when the other struck him from behind and
-knocked him senseless.
-
-"Does he know the fellows?" questioned Louis.
-
-"He never saw them before."
-
-"Could they be Sioux passing themselves off as Ojibwa?"
-
-"No, one was a white man, he says, and the other,--the man who attacked
-him,--was in white man's clothes, but looked like an Indian. He wore his
-hair in braids, had no beard, and spoke like a Cree. He was a very tall
-man, strong and broad shouldered."
-
-"Do you think he is telling the truth?"
-
-"I'm sure he is. Scar Face is a reliable fellow, always pays his debts,
-and has never tried to deceive us in any way. You saw the blood on his
-face. He has a bad cut on the side of his head. One of our men is
-dressing it for him. No, he isn't lying. His description of the men is
-good, and he was not in the fort when they were here."
-
-"They have been here? You know who they are?"
-
-"I think so; beyond doubt. Two fellows answering to the description were
-here this morning and bought some tobacco. They said they had just come
-from St. Boniface with a letter for Father Dumoulin. The white man is a
-DeMeuron, a red-faced fellow with a sandy beard. I don't know his name.
-The other one is a _bois brule_ voyageur called Murray."
-
-"Not Black Murray?" cried Walter.
-
-"That's the name he goes by. You know him?"
-
-"_Vraiment_, we know him," put in Louis emphatically. "So he did not go
-up the Assiniboine with the western brigade, but came this way. He must
-have started before we did, to get here by water so soon. We found his
-tracks and those of his companion, where they had landed to boil their
-kettle. They were ahead of us then. He wasted little time at Fort
-Douglas, _le Murrai Noir_."
-
-"Whatever possessed him to attack that Ojibwa?" queried the puzzled
-trader.
-
-"I think I can guess," replied Louis slowly, "though I know not for sure.
-He wanted the Ojibwa's supplies. He plans, I think, to become a trader.
-To trade he must have some goods to commence with. This is not the first
-time he has obtained them dishonestly." Louis told the story of the
-missing sack of pemmican and Murray's bundle of trade articles.
-
-The Hudson Bay man listened intently and nodded thoughtfully. "That must
-be what the rascal is up to. Well, I have sent men out on horseback, up
-and down the Red River. The thieves haven't come by here on the Pembina.
-They're not likely to show themselves in the neighborhood of the forts.
-Perhaps they will be caught, though I doubt it. They have a good start
-and there is plenty of cover to hide in until the going is safe. It is
-useless to try to overtake them by canoe."
-
-
-
-
- XVI
- LETTERS FROM FORT DOUGLAS
-
-
-The white man and the half-breed were not caught. Had the thieves trusted
-merely to speed in paddling, the men sent out from the post must have
-overtaken them. Even down stream, canoemen, obliged to follow every bend
-and twist of the river, could not make as good time as mounted men riding
-along the bank. Probably the two had crossed to the other shore and had
-concealed themselves and their canoe until the search was over. There was
-little chance that Pembina settlement would see or hear anything more of
-them for a long time.
-
-The Ojibwa being a skilful hunter whose goodwill was worth retaining, he
-was supplied with another outfit. He went away contented with his
-treatment at the post, but seething with desire for vengeance on the men
-who had robbed him.
-
-When questioned, Father Dumoulin said that the white man, Kolbach, had
-brought him a letter from his superior, Father Provencher, at St.
-Boniface. "The Father said in his letter," Dumoulin explained, "that
-Kolbach had just come to tell him that he was going to Pembina. He asked
-if the Father had any message to send me. So Pere Provencher wrote
-hastily, while Kolbach waited. Kolbach is a DeMeuron, a German Swiss. He
-is a wild, unruly fellow who comes but seldom to confession. I felt
-surprised that he had taken the trouble to do Pere Provencher and myself
-a kindness."
-
-Louis and Walter had failed to find an unoccupied cabin that could be
-made ready for the Periers. When Louis suggested that they set to work at
-once to build one, his mother interposed. It would be better to wait, she
-insisted, until the Periers arrived. They could stay in her house for a
-few days. The cabin would be a little crowded to be sure, but there would
-be room enough to make three extra ones comfortable. "Then M'sieu Perier
-can decide where he wishes his house and can help to build it," she
-concluded.
-
-Walter rather doubted if the apothecary would prove of much help in cabin
-building, but he yielded to Mrs. Brabant's decision. He knew she would do
-everything in her power for the comfort of the homeless immigrants.
-
-While he waited for the coming of his friends, Walter helped Louis
-prepare the Brabant home for winter. They put fresh mud chinking in the
-holes between the logs, mended the bark roof, cut firewood and hauled it
-in Louis' cart. The cart itself had to have one new wheel rim. The rim,
-which was about three inches thick, was made in sections, and put
-together without nails. Louis wanted a new dog sled, and Walter would
-need snowshoes. For the sled, thin oak boards were bent at one end by
-steaming them over the big kettle, and lashed together. Louis called the
-affair a _tabagane_, the French version of an Indian word. Nowadays we
-spell it _toboggan_.
-
-The snowshoe frames were of birch wood bent to the required racket form,
-the toes turned up a little to prevent tripping. The netting of sinew,
-Louis explained, must be put in with the greatest care. Where the weight
-of the foot would rest he used a fine mesh of _babiche_ or twisted sinew.
-The ankle and toe loops he was careful to make just the right size to
-slip on and off easily, yet not too loose to hold the foot in the proper
-position. Walter had been trained to use his hands, and he was deft and
-sure with them. He made one of the shoes himself, and did a workmanlike
-job. Learning to walk with the awkward things might be more difficult
-than making them, he thought.
-
-Louis examined his dog harness and shook his head. "The beasts need a new
-harness truly," he said, "but that will have to wait until we can kill a
-buffalo, and get fresh _shaganappy_."
-
-Though the buffalo hunt had been postponed, Walter found plenty of
-opportunity to use his new gun. Migrating flocks of water fowl passed
-every night, and many of them stopped to rest and feed by day along the
-rivers and in the marshes. It was the boys' duty to keep up the food
-supply by shooting as many ducks and geese as possible. The weather was
-now cold enough so the birds could be kept several days. Those that the
-Brabant and MacKay families could not use were disposed of at Fort Daer.
-Neil MacKay and Raoul Brabant, who was almost as good a shot as his elder
-brother, were included in the hunting party.
-
-Every day Walter watched for the Periers. Whenever he heard the creaking
-of a cart, he hoped that another brigade was arriving from Fort Douglas.
-He never went a mile from the settlement without wondering if his friends
-would be there when he came back. As the days passed, he grew more and
-more anxious. Had disaster overtaken the boats of the second division?
-
-One day, just at dusk, as the four hunters were returning along the bank
-of the Pembina, there came to their ears, faintly at first, from the
-prairie to the north, the screeching of ungreased axles. As the noise
-grew louder, the boys realized that such a squawking and screaming could
-never come from two or three carts only. A whole brigade must be
-approaching. Leaving the woods along the river, the lads started across
-the prairie to meet the cart train. They could hear it much farther than
-they could see it in the gathering darkness.
-
-Louis was the first to make out a line of black objects against the sky.
-He and Walter were some distance ahead of their companions when they met
-the guide of the brigade riding in advance. Louis shouted a question and
-the reply in Canadian French came promptly:
-
-"We come from Fort Douglas. We bring some of the new colonists."
-
-At the guide's words, Walter dropped his gun and his birds and ran
-towards the carts. He was too impatient to wait for them to come to him.
-The first vehicle belonged to the guide and his family, but walking
-beside the second was someone Walter knew, Johan Scheidecker. He and the
-Scheidecker boys had shared the same tent at York Factory. As he greeted
-Johan, Walter looked eagerly around for some sign of his friends.
-
-"Where is Monsieur Perier?" he demanded.
-
-"He is not with us."
-
-"Not with you? Why, what has happened?"
-
-"Nothing,--to the Periers," was Johan's reassuring reply. "They remain at
-Fort Douglas. A man named Kolbach has taken them into his house. I have a
-letter for you that will explain it all." He handed Walter a folded
-packet of coarse paper.
-
-The boy was dumbfounded. The possibility that the Periers might not come
-on to Pembina had never occurred to him. It was too dark to read his
-letter, so he fell into step beside Johan and questioned him.
-
-"Are they all right? How did they stand the trip? Are they well?"
-
-"About as well as any of us."
-
-Even in the darkness Walter could see that Johan was very thin. His voice
-was husky, and he plodded along with drooping shoulders and bent head.
-"We were all nearly starved, and some of us were sick, when we reached
-Fort Douglas," he explained. "Elise and Max were as well as any, but
-Perier himself had a bad cough. One of the soldiers who live above the
-fort, a Swiss, took them into his house. My sister Marianne stays behind
-too. She was married to one of those soldiers the morning we left. Tell
-me, can we get food at Fort Daer?" he asked abruptly.
-
-"Oh, yes. Wait a moment." Walter had remembered his gun and birds. He ran
-to where they lay, and, returning, thrust the two fat geese into Johan's
-hands. "Take them," he cried. "They are good eating and we have more."
-
-Walter did not accompany the cart train to Fort Daer. He and the Brabant
-boys made speed to the cabin, where, by the light of a candle of buffalo
-tallow, he read his letters. There were two, one from Mr. Perier, the
-other from Elise. Mr. Perier's was brief. The trip had been a very hard
-one, but he and the children had come through safely. Matthieu had given
-him Walter's note, and he appreciated the boy's thought for their
-comfort. It seemed best, however, for them to remain at Fort Douglas. He
-was suffering with a bad cold and was scarcely able to travel farther.
-One of the DeMeurons had shown them great kindness. He had offered to
-share his cabin with them and had assured them that by hunting and
-fishing he could provide food for all.
-
-"I am disappointed," Mr. Perier wrote, "that I cannot open a shop. All my
-chemical and medical supplies were lost when our boat was wrecked. I
-saved only a few packages of herb seeds that I was carrying in my
-pockets. I intend in the spring to plant an herb garden. Through Matthieu
-I hope to obtain a place in the buffalo wool factory for the winter. Do
-not think that you must come back here to be with us. It would not be
-wise. If you have found food and shelter, remain where you are till
-spring. Then you can return and we will begin cultivating our land. You
-need not be concerned for us, for we have fallen among friends. Our
-nearest neighbor will be Marianne Scheidecker who is to be married
-to-morrow to one of the ex-soldiers. Several of them have found wives
-among our Swiss girls. I would not want a daughter of mine to marry in
-such haste. I am glad Elise is still a little girl."
-
-Elise's letter, dated November 4th, the day of arrival at Fort Douglas,
-told more of the journey. The second division had traveled slowly, and
-with many delays. On September the twentieth another boat from Fort York,
-carrying the Rev. John West, the English clergyman of the Selkirk Colony,
-had overtaken the Swiss. The first of October the weather had turned very
-cold, and some nights the travelers had nearly frozen, especially when
-everything was so wet or frost covered that the fires would not burn. In
-a storm on Lake Winnipeg, the boat the Periers were in was wrecked.
-
-"No one was drowned," wrote Elise, "but we were all soaked, and we lost
-most of our food and blankets and other things. The men had to cut down
-trees and split them into boards to mend our boat, and that took a long
-time. It rained and snowed, and the nights were terribly cold. M. West
-gave Max and me one of his blankets. We had plenty of wood for fires, but
-very little food left, only some barley that we boiled. The weather was
-so stormy the men could not catch fish, but they shot a few birds. We ate
-a big owl and a raven that M. West shot. It was a week before we could go
-on. Then Samuel Scheidecker was taken sick and died, and we stopped at an
-island to bury him. I feel so sorry for the Scheideckers. By the time we
-came to the mouth of the Red River we were starving, but there were
-Indians there, and the chief, Peguis, gave us dried fish."
-
-Elise went on to say that her father had a bad cough and needed a warm
-place to stay. So Sergeant Kolbach had kindly taken them in. "This house
-is only one room with a loft above that has a floor of loose boards and a
-ladder instead of a stairway. But there is a fireplace, and it is warm
-and dry. M. Kolbach sleeps in the loft and lets us have the room. It is
-rather dirty, but I have cleaned it up a little and will do more
-to-morrow. We shall be comfortable here and kind Mr. West wants Max and
-me to go to his school and learn English. We miss you very much, Walter,
-but Father says you must not come back here till spring. We are going to
-be all right now. It is so good to be warm and dry and have enough to
-eat, and in the spring we can be together again."
-
-Walter read this letter aloud to Louis and his mother. "The poor child!"
-Mrs. Brabant exclaimed again and again. At the close Louis said
-earnestly, "That is a brave little girl, your little sister."
-
-Walter was disappointed that his friends were not coming to Pembina, but
-relieved to know that they were safe and comfortable. He was quite ready
-to go back to Fort Douglas and share any hardships they might have to
-undergo, but Mr. Perier had forbidden him to do so. Apprentices in those
-days seldom thought of disobeying their masters. Moreover Walter felt
-that his return to Fort Douglas would probably do more harm than good.
-There was no employment for him, no way to earn a living, and very likely
-the Governor would not let him stay. Louis was strongly against his going
-back.
-
-Walter was not wholly at ease about his friends. "I wonder," he pondered,
-"if that DeMeuron really will provide for them. What will happen if he
-doesn't keep his promise?"
-
-"If there is not food for them they will be sent on here to Pembina
-later."
-
-"Could they make the trip when the snow is deep and the weather very
-cold?"
-
-"Oh, yes. By dog sled the journey is easier and, if the trail is good,
-quicker than by cart. Dogs can travel where ponies can not. Write to your
-friends and tell them if all is not well to send word to you here, and
-you and I will go get them. Ask someone at Fort Daer to send your letter
-the first time anyone goes to Fort Douglas. Every week or so someone
-comes and goes between the two forts. What is the name of that DeMeuron
-they live with?"
-
-Walter glanced at Mr. Perier's letter. "Kolbach, Sergeant Kolbach.
-Louis," he exclaimed, "that was the name of the man with Murray!"
-
-"Kolbach, yes, that was surely his name."
-
-"I wonder if he can be the same man who spoke to me when we landed at
-Fort Douglas. He had a red face and a sandy beard. I don't like it,
-Louis, their living with that fellow!"
-
-"No," the Canadian boy agreed thoughtfully. "We must go to Pere Dumoulin
-and ask him about that Kolbach. He may be a wild fellow, and yet be good
-to your friends. Oh, yes, that is quite possible."
-
-The two boys went to see the priest the next morning. They found him at
-the mission in the little room that served him as bedroom, living-room
-and study.
-
-"Pere Dumoulin," Louis asked, "was the man who brought you that letter
-from Fort Douglas Sergeant Kolbach?"
-
-"Sergeant Kolbach? Oh no," came the prompt reply. "It was Fritz Kolbach,
-the sergeant's brother."
-
-Walter felt relieved. "What kind of a man is Sergeant Kolbach?" he
-inquired.
-
-"Why do you ask?" The priest looked at the boy keenly.
-
-Walter explained, and Father Dumoulin listened with interest.
-
-"Sergeant Kolbach," he said thoughtfully, "is a very different person
-from his younger brother. The sergeant is a man of influence among the
-DeMeurons. I do not know him well, but I should think him a somewhat
-domineering man, used to authority and fond of exercising it, but he is
-quieter, more self-controlled, more steady going than most of the
-DeMeurons. He has usually exercised his influence over his fellows in the
-interest of law and order. I know no reason why you should fear that he
-will not treat your friends well, since he has chosen to take them into
-his house."
-
-"His brother lives with him?" asked Louis.
-
-"I do not think so. Every DeMeuron has his own land, and the Kolbachs are
-too unlike to live together peaceably."
-
-Reassured by Father Dumoulin's information, Walter did not think of
-disobeying Mr. Perier's instructions. At Fort Daer the lad obtained a few
-sheets of paper, and, borrowing quill pen and ink from a good-natured
-apprentice clerk, he wrote a letter to Mr. Perier and another to Elise,
-addressing them in Sergeant Kolbach's care. The clerk promised to send
-them at the first opportunity.
-
-
-
-
- XVII
- CHRISTMAS AT PEMBINA
-
-
-There was no reason now why Walter should hesitate to be away from the
-settlement, yet the proposed buffalo hunt was postponed again. The
-animals were far from Pembina that autumn. For miles to the south and
-west, the prairie had been swept by fires started by careless Indians or
-half-breeds who had allowed their camp fires to spread. In that blackened
-desolation there was no feed for buffalo. The boys had expected to go
-beyond the burned country in search of the herds, but, before they were
-ready to start, a heavy fall of snow made horseback travel impossible.
-Storm winds swept the prairie, and Louis shook his head at the prospect.
-
-"This will drive the beasts yet farther away," he said. "They will go
-where the snow is not so deep and where there are trees for shelter. We
-could travel with dog sleds of course, but we might search for long to
-find buffalo, and to hunt them on foot is much more difficult than on
-horseback. But perhaps this snow will not last."
-
-With the coming of deep snow Walter was given his first lessons in
-snowshoeing and dog driving. Learning to walk with the clumsy rackets was
-not easy, he found. He got more than one tumble before he mastered the
-art. Driving a dog sled looked simple enough, when Louis hitched up his
-dogs and took his little sisters for a ride. The three animals differed
-considerably in size, appearance and breed, but worked well together.
-Hitched tandem, they were off with a dash, the little bells on their
-harness jingling merrily. They followed a trail already broken by other
-sleds, and Louis ran alongside shouting and flourishing his whip. After a
-turn on the prairie, they were back again.
-
-"Come, you shall have a ride now," Louis said to Walter, as the little
-girls,--cheeks red and black eyes sparkling,--unrolled themselves from
-the fur robes.
-
-Curious to try this new mode of travel, Walter seated himself on the
-robes. "_Marche donc_," cried Louis, and the team was away, the toboggan
-slipping smoothly over the well-packed trail. Running alongside or
-standing behind Walter on the sled, Louis urged his dogs to their best
-speed. When, after a first spurt, they slowed to a steadier pace, he
-suggested that Walter try driving.
-
-"Stay where you are. You don't need to get up. There must be weight to
-hold the _tabagane_ down." Handing Walter the whip, Louis stepped off the
-sled.
-
-Louis seemed to manage the team easily, and Walter had no doubt of his
-own ability to drive. He shouted to the dogs in imitation of his friend,
-and, waving the long whip high in air, flicked the leader's back with the
-lash.
-
-The dogs must have noticed the difference in the voice. They must have
-sensed the awkwardness and inexperience of the new driver. Without
-warning, the leader,--a woolly haired, bushy tailed beast with fox-like
-head and sharp pointed ears,--swerved from the trail into untracked snow.
-In vain Walter tried to get him back on the track. The dogs were out for
-a frolic and they had it. They bounded and floundered through the soft
-spots and raced across hard packed stretches. The prairie, Walter
-discovered, was by no means so smooth as it looked. The wind had swept
-the snow into waves and billows. The toboggan mounted the windward side
-of a snow wave, balanced on the crest, and bumped down abruptly. Shouts
-and commands were of no avail. Walter could but cling to the swaying,
-jouncing, skidding sled, and let the dogs go where they would.
-
-Suddenly the beasts concluded they had had about enough of the sport. It
-was time for the grand climax. With a quick turn, they swung about
-towards home. The toboggan turned too, clear over, and Walter went
-sprawling. When he picked himself up, the provoking animals were sitting
-quietly in the snow, more or less tangled up in their traces, tongues
-hanging out, laughing at him. Louis, shouting hilariously, came running
-up on his snowshoes to right the toboggan.
-
-For a moment Walter was angry. "You knew what would happen," he cried
-accusingly. "What did you do to make them act that way?"
-
-"No, no," laughed Louis. "I did nothing. Askime knew you had never driven
-before, and so he played you a trick. He is a wise dog, Askime, but he
-deserves a beating."
-
-The leader of the team was a hardy, swift, intelligent beast, almost pure
-Eskimo, as his name indicated. The other dogs were of more mixed breed.
-Both had sharp muzzles and thick, straight hair, brown with white spots
-on one, dark wolf-gray on the other. Louis was proud of the husky, whom
-he had raised from puppyhood. Nevertheless he picked up his whip and
-started towards Askime.
-
-Walter, his flash of anger past, intervened. "No, don't thrash him. He
-was just having a little fun. He has taken the conceit out of me, but
-I'll get even with him yet. I'll learn to drive those dogs and make them
-behave."
-
-Louis was still grinning. "Truly you will learn," he hastened to say,
-"and--well--perhaps," his grin broadened, "I might have told you more
-before you tried this first time. Next time it will go better."
-
-It did go better next time, and before the winter was over, Walter could
-handle the dogs satisfactorily, though they never obeyed him as well as
-their real master.
-
-The snow remained, and the buffalo did not return to the neighborhood of
-Pembina. Winter had set in in earnest, but Walter was used to cold
-winters and the Brabant cabin was snug and comfortable. Even the bitter
-winds that swept the prairie could not find an entrance between the well
-chinked logs.
-
-The Swiss lad cherished the hope of spending Christmas with the Periers.
-He planned to go to the Selkirk settlement with a dog train that expected
-to leave Fort Daer December twenty-first or twenty-second, but he was
-disappointed. A hard snowstorm, a genuine blizzard, with a high wind out
-of the north, prevented the sleds from getting away, and he was forced to
-remain in Pembina.
-
-On Christmas morning he went with the Brabant family to Father Dumoulin's
-mission. There was no Protestant church in Pembina, he liked and
-respected Father Dumoulin, and he did not want to hurt Mrs. Brabant and
-Louis by refusing to go with them. The boy was surprised to see how
-crowded the mission chapel was with the Canadians and _bois brules_, men,
-women, and children. Very reverently and devoutly the rough, half savage
-hunters and voyageurs joined in the service and listened to the priest's
-words.
-
-The rest of the day the simple, light-hearted people of Pembina
-celebrated in a very different fashion, feasting, dancing, gaming, and
-drinking. Gambling and fondness for liquor were the besetting sins of the
-half-breeds as well as of the Indians, though Father Dumoulin was trying
-hard to teach them to restrain these passions.
-
-Walter had come to know the rough, wild, but generous and hospitable
-_bois brules_ well. He could not decline all their invitations to join in
-the merrymaking. Moreover he was young, and homesick, and he wanted to
-share in the festivities. He went with Louis and Neil MacKay to several
-of the cabins during the afternoon and early evening, where the three ate
-as much as they could manage of the food pressed upon them. The gaming
-was carried on principally by the older men, the younger ones preferring
-to dance. With a little diplomacy, drinking could be avoided without
-giving offence. Louis and Neil, as well as Walter, had been brought up to
-be temperate. They did not hesitate to take part in the dancing.
-
-Never had Walter seen such lively, agile jigging as some of the lithe,
-muscular, swarthy skinned half-breeds were capable of. Men and women were
-arrayed in their best, and the dark, smoke-blackened cabins were alive
-with the gay colors of striped shirts and calico dresses, fringed sashes,
-gaudy shawls, silk and cotton kerchiefs, ribbons, and Indian beadwork.
-
-After dancing until they were weary, the three boys slipped away early,
-before the fun grew too fast and furious. Walter found it good to be out
-in the clean, cold air again, away from the heat and smoke and heavy
-odors of the tightly closed cabins.
-
-The night was a beautiful one, clear and windless. To the north and
-northeast, from horizon to zenith, wavering, flashing bands and masses of
-light flooded the sky. Parting with Neil, Louis and Walter trudged
-through the snow towards the Brabant cabin. Both were absorbed in
-watching the aurora borealis, the ever changing rays and columns and
-spreading masses of white, green, and pale pink light, fading out in one
-spot only to flash up in another, in constant motion and never alike for
-two moments in succession. But when he turned from the beauty of the
-night to enter the cabin, there swept over Walter, in a great wave, the
-homesickness he had been holding at arms' length all day. He thought of
-the Christmas of a year ago in Switzerland, and he was heartsick for the
-mountains and valleys and forests of his native land,--so different from
-these flat, monotonous prairies,--heartsick for his own people and their
-speech and ways. What kind of a Christmas had this been for Elise and
-Max, he wondered. Were they homesick too?
-
-
-
-
- XVIII
- MIRAGE OF THE PRAIRIE
-
-
-Early in the New Year, Louis, Neil and Walter set out for the Pembina
-Mountains or the Hare Hills, as that ridge of rough land was sometimes
-called. New Year's day, ushered in with the firing of muskets, was
-another occasion for merrymaking and hilarity in the settlement. Indeed
-the feasting, dancing, and gaiety had scarcely ceased day or night since
-Christmas. Many a _bois brule_ family had shared their winter supplies so
-generously with their guests that they had almost nothing left and would
-have to resort to hunting and fishing through the ice. Though they might
-starve before spring, the light-hearted, improvident half-breeds did not
-grudge what had been consumed in the festivities. They would do the same
-thing over again at the first opportunity.
-
-The rapid decrease of supplies in the village gave Louis and Neil excuse
-for a hunting trip, and Walter was ready and eager to go along. At the
-Pembina Mountains they would be sure to find both game and fur animals,
-Louis asserted. He had been there the winter before and had found good
-hunting. On that trip he and his companion had come across an old and
-empty but snug log cabin that had been built by some hunting or trading
-party. He proposed to return to the old camp and stay several weeks.
-
-Walter was the more ready to go because, on the last day of the old year,
-he had received word from the Periers that they were getting along all
-right. The letter, from Elise, was brought by a half-breed who had come
-from St. Boniface to be married on New Year's day to a Pembina girl. Her
-father's cough was much better, Elise wrote. He was working at the
-buffalo wool factory with Matthieu. Max had been disappointed to find
-that Mr. West's school was a good two miles from Sergeant Kolbach's home,
-too far for the little fellow to go and come in cold weather. "But we are
-both of us learning some English without going to school," Elise added.
-
-The cabin was warm, and they had enough to eat, principally pemmican, and
-fish caught in nets set under the ice in the rivers. "You know I did not
-like pemmican," wrote Elise, "but now I am used to it. For Christmas we
-had a feast, a piece of fresh venison, and a pudding made with some wheat
-flour M. Kolbach had saved and with a sauce of melted sugar, the sugar
-the Indians make from the sap of the maple tree. Have you eaten any of
-that sugar, Walter? It is the best thing I have tasted since we came to
-this new land. You wrote to me that I must tell you if everything here
-did not go well. Of course it is not like home in Switzerland. We are not
-as comfortable or as happy as we were there, and sometimes Max and I are
-very lonely and homesick. Father does not complain of the hardships and
-is always planning what we are going to do when spring comes. We keep
-warm, we are well, and we have enough to eat, though we long for bread
-with butter, and milk, and cheese. I get the meals and wash and mend our
-clothes and keep the house clean. M. Kolbach says it is more comfortable
-than before we came. I can't really like M. Kolbach, though I know I
-ought to, it is so good of him to have us here. He is rather harsh to Max
-sometimes, but not to me, and yet I feel a little afraid of him. Isn't it
-strange that we can't like people by just trying to, no matter how hard
-we try? But I am very grateful to M. Kolbach for taking care of us."
-
-This part of the letter troubled Walter a little, but, reading it over a
-second time, he concluded that Elise was merely homesick. Kolbach was
-very likely a rough sort of man, but he must have a kind heart or he
-would not do so much for strangers. There was no mention of the younger
-brother. Probably Elise knew nothing of him. Father Dumoulin thought
-Fritz Kolbach might not be on very good terms with the Sergeant. Perhaps
-after the robbery of the Indian, Fritz had not returned to St. Boniface.
-Undoubtedly the trader at Pembina had sent an account of that affair to
-Fort Douglas. Kolbach and Murray might not dare to show their faces
-there.
-
-The day of their start for the Pembina Mountains, Louis and Walter were
-up before dawn. The morning was still and very cold. After packing their
-few supplies and belongings on the toboggan, the boys passed a long
-rawhide rope, or _shaganappy_, back and forth over the load and through
-the loops of the leather lashing that ran along the edges of the sled.
-Before the work was done their fingers were aching. They were glad to go
-back into the cabin for a breakfast of hot pemmican and tea.
-
-As he went out again, Walter paused on the threshold to stare in
-amazement. The sun was not yet above the horizon, but the whole world had
-changed. He seemed to be standing in the center of a vast bowl. On every
-hand the country appeared to curve upward. And the distance was no longer
-distant! Groves of bare branched trees, streams, heights of land that he
-knew to be miles away had moved in around the settlement until they
-seemed only a few rods distant. To the west the line of hills,--Pembina
-Mountains,--that he had never glimpsed, even on the clearest day, as more
-than a faint blue line on the horizon, loomed up a mighty, flat-topped
-ridge. Once before, in December, Walter had seen the landscape
-transformed, but it was nothing to compare with this. Louis, familiar
-from childhood with the mirage of the prairie, declared he had never
-known such an extraordinary one.
-
-Awed and wondering, the two lads stood gazing about them. Turning to the
-east, they watched a spreading ray of crimson light mount the sky from
-the soft, low lying, rose and gold bordered clouds at the horizon. The
-sun was coming up. As the horizon clouds reddened and the rim of the
-glowing disk appeared, an exclamation from his companion caused Walter to
-wheel about.
-
-Louis was pointing at two men and a dog team gliding through the
-air,--upside down! Every detail was startlingly clear, capotes with hoods
-pulled up, sashes, buckskin leggings, snowshoes. The driver with the long
-whip looked very tall. He belabored his dogs cruelly. It seemed to Walter
-that he ought to hear the man's shouts and curses, the howls and whines
-of the abused beasts. He could see their tracks in the snow, and a fringe
-of trees beyond them,--everything inverted as if he himself were standing
-on his head to watch men and dogs moving across the prairie. As he
-watched, the figures grew to gigantic stature, the outlines became
-indistinct. They vanished altogether. The sun was above the clouds now.
-The distance grew hazy. Only part of the chain of hills was visible.
-Louis turned to Walter, excitement in his voice.
-
-"I think those men go to the mountain too," he said. "Do you know how far
-away they are?"
-
-Walter shook his head. He felt quite incapable of estimating distance in
-this fantastic world, where things he knew to be miles away were almost
-hitting him in the face.
-
-"At least fifteen miles," declared Louis impressively.
-
-"Impossible. We couldn't see them so plainly."
-
-"And yet we have seen them. The mirage is always unbelievable."
-
-"What is it anyway, Louis? What causes it?"
-
-The Canadian lad shrugged his shoulders. "The Indians say the spirits of
-the air play tricks to bewilder men and make them wander off the trail to
-seek things that are not there. Once I asked Father Dumoulin and he said
-the spirits had nothing to do with it. He called it a false effect of
-light, but that does not explain it, do you think?"
-
-Again Walter shook his head.
-
-"This I have noticed," Louis went on. "I have never seen the mirage in
-winter except at dawn or sunset. In summer I have seen it in the middle
-of the day when it was very hot and still. But why it comes, winter or
-summer, I do not know."
-
-Neil's arrival stirred the others to action. The dogs were harnessed and
-good-byes said to Louis' mother and sisters and rather sulky younger
-brother. Raoul wanted to go too, but one of the boys was needed at home.
-
-Fresh and full of spirits, the dogs set off at such a pace that the boys
-had all they could do to keep up. When they left the trail and took to
-the untracked snow, speed slackened considerably. Louis now went ahead of
-the team, though track breaking was hardly necessary. Underneath an inch
-or more of dry, loose stuff, almost like sand, the snow was well packed
-and held up the dogs and sled. The line of hills had vanished, but the
-mirage did not entirely disappear and the landscape resume its natural
-appearance until the sun had been up nearly two hours.
-
-The day was cold, much colder than the lads realized at first, for, when
-the start was made and for some time thereafter, there was not a breath
-of wind. All three wore fur caps and mittens, woolen capotes, and thick
-knit stockings under their moccasins. Walter had possessed none of these
-things when he came to Pembina, but Mrs. Brabant had made him a capote
-from a Hudson Bay blanket and a cap and mittens from a rather well worn
-bearskin. She had knit warm, new stockings for both boys from yarn bought
-at the trading post. A prickling feeling in his nose was Walter's first
-warning that his flesh was freezing. Stooping for a handful of snow, he
-rubbed the prickly spot to restore circulation, and pulled the hood of
-his capote farther around his face.
-
-Their course at first lay to the north of the Pembina River, over flat
-prairie without an elevation high enough to be called a hill. On that
-January morning, the whole plain was a stretch of dazzling white. In the
-distance it appeared level, but it was actually made up of rolling snow
-waves. It was, Walter thought, like a great lake or sea, the waves of
-which had suddenly frozen while in motion and turned to snow instead of
-ice.
-
-
-
-
- XIX
- BLIZZARD
-
-
-As the sun rose higher the wind began to blow. The loose surface snow was
-set in motion, crawling and creeping up the frozen waves. The wind gained
-in strength, and everywhere the plain seemed to be moving. The glitter
-was less trying to the eyes now, for the sun had grown hazy. Louis
-glanced up at the sky, shouted to his dogs, sent his long whip flying
-through the air and flicked the leader with the lash.
-
-"A storm comes," he called to his companions. "We must make haste and
-reach the river where it bends to the north."
-
-With the increase of speed, Walter, less experienced in this sort of
-travel than his comrades, found keeping up difficult. Neither with nor
-without snowshoes was he the equal of the swift, tireless Louis. Neil too
-was his superior on snowshoes, though on bare ground Walter could outrun
-the Scotch boy. In spite of all his efforts he fell behind. Seeing his
-difficulty, Louis suggested that he ride for a while, standing on the
-rear of the sled. Glad though he was of a few minutes' rest, Walter did
-not ride long. The northwest wind soon chilled him through, and he was
-forced to run to warm himself.
-
-The dogs' pace was slackening. The course was due west, and the wind,
-striking them at an angle, slowed their progress. The surface snow,
-caught up by the gale, drove against and swirled about beasts and boys.
-
-Walter plodded after the others, head lowered, capote hood pulled down
-over his cap to his eyes. Suddenly he realized that the fine, driving,
-blinding stuff that struck against him with such force and stung wherever
-it touched his bare skin, was not merely the fallen snow whipped forward
-by the wind. Snow was falling,--or being lashed down upon him,--from
-above. The sunshine was gone. The distance, the sky were wholly blotted
-out. He and his comrades were in the grip of a hard northwest storm, a
-genuine prairie blizzard.
-
-Louis was having his hands full trying to keep a straight course. All
-landmarks blotted out, the wind was the only guide, and the dogs were
-continually edging away from the bitter blast. The French boy, of a
-naturally kind disposition and brought up by a good mother and a father
-who had no Indian blood, was far more humane than most dog drivers. He
-never abused his beasts, and he punished them only when discipline was
-necessary. Now, however, he was compelled to use the whip vigorously to
-keep them from swinging far to the south. Shouts and commands, drowned
-out by the roaring of the wind, were of little avail.
-
-Dogs and boys struggled on in the driving wind, the bitter cold, and the
-blinding snow; and the struggle saved them from freezing. The snow was
-coming so thick and fast they could see only a few feet in any direction.
-Following behind the toboggan, Walter could not make out Askime or the
-second dog. The third beast, next to the sled, was but a dim shape. Louis
-and Neil took turns going ahead of Askime. While one was breaking trail,
-the other wielded the whip and tried to keep the dogs in the track.
-
-Plodding on through a white, swirling world, fighting against wind and
-snow, his whole mind intent on keeping the shadowy, moving forms in
-sight, his feet feeling like clogs of wood, his ankles and calves aching
-with the unaccustomed exercise of snowshoeing, Walter lost all count of
-time. When the sled stopped, he kept on blindly and nearly fell over it.
-
-Louis seized him by the arm and shouted, "We can go no farther. We can't
-keep a straight course. We must camp here."
-
-Walter tried to look about him. He could see nothing but wind-driven
-snow, not a tree or hill or other sign of shelter. "We'll freeze to
-death," he protested huskily.
-
-"No, no, we will be safe and warm. Kick off your snowshoes and help Neil
-dig."
-
-Walter obeyed, slipping his feet from the thongs. Following the Scotch
-lad's example, he seized one of the shoes and, using it as a shovel,
-began to scoop up snow. Louis unharnessed the dogs and unlaced the hide
-cover, almost freezing his fingers in the process. Hastily dumping the
-supplies in a heap, he turned the sled on its side, and joined the
-diggers. In the lee of the toboggan, which kept the drifting snow from
-filling the hole as fast as they dug it out, the three boys worked for
-their lives. Down through the dry, loose surface, through the firm packed
-layer below, to the hard frozen ground, they dug. Scooping out the snow,
-they tried to make a wall, though the wind swept it away almost as
-rapidly as they piled it up.
-
-Working steadily at their best speed, they succeeded at last in
-excavating a hole large enough to hold all three. The heap of supplies
-had been converted into a mound, the toboggan into a drift. Burrowing
-into the mound, the boys pulled out robes and blankets, hastily spread
-them at the bottom of the hole, and threw in their supplies. A long pole,
-that Louis had added to the load just before starting, was laid across
-the hole, one end resting on the toboggan. Clinging to the hide cover to
-keep it from blowing away, they drew it over the pole and weighted down
-the corners with a keg of powder, a sack of bullets, and the steel traps.
-After the edges of this tent roof had been banked with snow to hold it
-more securely, the three lads crawled under it.
-
-When he had recovered his breath, Walter asked, "What has become of the
-dogs?" He had not noticed them since Louis took off their harness.
-
-"Do you think they are lost then?" said their master with a grin. "No,
-they have buried themselves in the snow to keep warm. They have earned a
-meal though, and they shall have it." Seizing three of the frozen fish he
-had brought for the dogs, Louis crawled out into the storm to find and
-feed them.
-
-He was back in a few minutes, huddling among the robes and blankets. The
-hole was none too large. When they sat up straight, their heads nearly
-touched the hide cover, and all three could not lie down at one time. But
-in the snug burrow, with the snow-banked sled to windward, they did not
-feel the wind at all.
-
-Knowing that they might have to camp where there was no fuel to be found,
-Louis had included a few small sticks among their supplies. Shaving one
-of the sticks into splinters, he struck his flint and steel and kindled a
-tiny fire on the bare ground in the center of the shelter. In the cover
-above he cut a little hole for the smoke to escape. Small though the
-blaze was, it sent out heat enough to thaw the boys' stiff fingers and
-feet, and its light was cheering in the dark burrow. Louis melted snow,
-made tea, and thawed out a chunk of frozen pemmican.
-
-By the time the meal was over, Walter found himself surprisingly warm and
-comfortable. He had not supposed he could be so comfortable in such a
-crude shelter. He was drowsy and wanted to take a nap, but one fear
-troubled him and made him reluctant to yield to his sleepiness.
-
-"If the snow covers us over, won't we smother in this hole?" he asked.
-
-Louis shook his head. "There is no danger, I think. Often men overtaken
-by storm camp in the snow like this, and I never heard of anyone being
-smothered. There is not much snow on our tent now. It banks up against
-the toboggan and blows off our roof. But even if we are buried in a
-drift, we can still breathe I think, and we won't freeze while we have
-food and a little wood to make hot tea."
-
-"And the dogs?"
-
-"They will sleep warm, covered by the snow."
-
-Reassured, Walter settled himself as comfortably as he could manage in
-the cramped quarters, and went to sleep. When he woke, he found the
-others both sleeping, Neil curled up in his thick plaid, and Louis in a
-sitting position with his head down on his knees. The fire had gone out,
-and in spite of the blanket in which he was wrapped and the buffalo robe
-spread over Neil and himself, Walter felt chilled through. It was too
-dark in the hole for him to see the figures on his watch. Trying to rub
-some warmth into his cramped legs, he roused Louis.
-
-"How long have I been asleep? Is it night?"
-
-"I think not yet," replied Louis, answering the second question. "It
-grows colder. I will make a fire and we will have some hot tea."
-
-To clear a space for the fire, Louis unceremoniously rolled Neil over and
-woke him. The Scotch lad growled and grumbled at being disturbed, but the
-prospect of hot tea restored his good humor. Looking at his watch in the
-light of the tiny blaze, Walter discovered that it was not yet five
-o'clock. The storm still raged over them.
-
-"Do we get something to eat with this?" Neil asked, as Louis poured the
-steaming tea into his tin cup.
-
-"Not now. We have only a little wood. We must not keep the fire burning.
-Warm your fingers and your feet well before it burns out."
-
-Louis was the leader of the expedition, and Neil did not question his
-decree. The three drew their blankets and robes closer about them, and
-made the most of the hot drink and the tiny fire. They were not sleepy
-now, so they talked, huddled together for warmth.
-
-After a time conversation lagged. They grew silent, then drowsy. Walter
-dropped off, and woke to find Louis kindling another little blaze. It was
-after nine, and the three made a scanty meal of thawed pemmican before
-going to sleep again.
-
-During the night Walter woke several times to rub his chilly body and
-limbs and snuggle closer to his companions. A buffalo robe and a blanket
-lay between him and the ground, his capote hood was drawn over his fur
-cap, he was wrapped in a blanket, and with his companions, covered with
-another robe, yet in his dreams he was conscious of the cold. He did not
-think of complaining. He had slept cold many a night since leaving Fort
-York. In the midst of this howling blizzard, he was thankful to be as
-comfortable as he was and in no immediate danger of freezing.
-
-
-
-
- XX
- A NIGHT ATTACK
-
-
-It must have been instinct that roused Louis and set him to shaving
-kindlings from the last stick of wood, for there was no change in the
-darkness of the hole to indicate that morning had come. The smoke no
-longer found a way out through the hide cover. Though the wood was dry
-and the blaze small, Walter was half choked and his eyes were smarting by
-the time the tea and pemmican were ready.
-
-"We are covered with snow," said Louis as, in changing his position, he
-struck his head against the sagging roof. "But I think the storm is
-over."
-
-He was right. When the three crawled out from under the hide and burrowed
-their way through the drift that covered all but the wind-swept peak of
-their shelter, they found that the flakes had ceased to fall. The wind
-still blew, though not so hard, and swept the dry, fallen snow up the
-wave-like drifts, but the sky was clear and flushed with the red of
-sunrise. It was a world of sky and snow, for the swirling clouds of fine,
-icy particles blotted out the distance.
-
-The boys did not stand gazing about them for long. The morning was too
-bitterly cold for inaction, and they wanted to be on their way.
-Floundering through the drifts, they found the dogs buried in the snow,
-and pulled them, whining piteously, out of their warm nests. Each animal
-bolted his frozen fish, then burrowed for another nap.
-
-Dismantling the almost buried shelter, digging out the toboggan and
-loading it took some time. To fasten the cover over the load, Neil had to
-take off his fur mittens to handle the stiffened lacings, and frosted
-four fingers. He was, as he said, "ready to howl" with the pain when the
-blood began to circulate in them. In the meantime Louis and Walter had
-dug out the whining dogs. Once in the harness, they ceased their
-protests. At the crack of the whip and their master's shout of "_Marche,
-marche_," they were off willingly enough.
-
-"I hope you know where we are and where we're going, Louis," said Neil as
-he fell into line. "I don't."
-
-"I think that must be the river over there where those trees are," Louis
-replied. "We cross it and go on to the west and cross it again. It makes
-a great bend to the north."
-
-The dogs were headed for the line of woods, dimly visible through the
-blowing snow. The trees proved to be on the bank of the Pembina, which
-was crossed without difficulty. The ice was thick and solid beneath its
-snow blanket. Beyond the river was open prairie again, a succession of
-snow waves, up and down, across and through which, boys and dogs made
-their way westward. Both Louis and Neil went ahead to break the track.
-Askime, the intelligent leader of the team, seemed to sense his
-responsibility and kept close behind the snowshoes.
-
-Walter brought up the rear. His ankles were lame, the muscles of his
-calves strained and sore from the snowshoeing of yesterday. He found the
-going quite hard enough, even in the trail made by two pairs of rackets,
-three dogs, and a loaded sled. The sky was clear blue overhead, the
-blowing snow particles glittered in the sunlight, but the sun seemed to
-give out no warmth. The north wind was piercingly cold. The strenuous
-exercise kept body and limbs warm, but in spite of his capote hood Walter
-had to rub and slap his face frequently. His hands grew numb in his fur
-mittens.
-
-Only one stop was made, about mid afternoon, when they reached an _ile
-des bois_, or wood island. The thick clump of leafless small trees and
-bushes, though broken and trampled by buffalo, furnished plenty of fuel
-and some protection from the wind. The boys kindled a fire, not a tiny
-flame but a big blaze that threw out real heat. Close around it they
-crouched to drink hot tea and eat a little pemmican.
-
-Heartened by food and drink, they smothered their fire with snow that
-there might be no danger of its destroying the little grove, and resumed
-their march. Higher land came into view through the blowing drift, and
-Louis scanned it eagerly. He admitted that he did not know just where he
-was.
-
-"We should have crossed the river again before this," he said. "Without
-knowing it we have edged away from the cold wind and gone too far south.
-I fear we cannot find the old cabin to-night."
-
-"We must find fuel and shelter," was Neil's emphatic reply.
-
-It was after sunset when the cold and tired travelers reached an abrupt
-rise of wooded ground. Skirting the base of this tree-clad cliff, they
-came to a steep-sided gully, where a small stream, now frozen over and
-snow covered, broke through. The narrow cut was lined with boulders, but
-trees and bushes bordered the stream and grew wherever they could find
-foothold on the abrupt sides among the stones. The gully was drifted with
-snow, but it would provide protection from the bitter wind.
-
-Leaving his comrades with the sled, Louis explored until he found a
-suitable spot, where the almost perpendicular north slope cut off the
-wind. A huge boulder, partly embedded in the bank, would serve as the
-east wall of the shelter. He shouted to his companions, who joined him
-with sled and dogs.
-
-"We will dig out the snow behind this big stone," he explained, "and pile
-it up to make a wall on the other two sides. When we have put the
-toboggan and the hide cover over the top, we shall have a good warm
-lodge."
-
-The three set to work at once, Walter almost forgetting his lameness and
-weariness in his eagerness to complete the queer hut. When it was all
-done but the roof, Neil left the others to unload the sled, while he took
-the ax and climbed the bank to cut firewood.
-
-Before the shelter was finished, darkness had come, and the howling of
-wolves echoed from the hills above. On the narrow strip of frozen, sandy
-ground that had been uncovered, a robe was spread. The fire was kindled
-against the big boulder, which reflected the heat. To the cold and tired
-boys, the hut seemed very snug. Wrapped in blankets, they huddled before
-the blaze, warm and comfortable, even though the heat did not carry far
-enough to make much impression on the two snow walls.
-
-By the time Walter had eaten his portion of melted pemmican and drunk two
-cups of hot tea, he was so sleepy he could not keep his eyes open. Neil
-too was nodding, and Louis was not much wider awake. They replenished the
-fire, and stretched out side by side, feet to the blaze, and heads
-wrapped in their capote hoods.
-
-An excited barking and howling waked Walter suddenly. How could three
-dogs make such an unearthly racket? With a sharp exclamation, Louis freed
-himself from his blanket. In a flash Walter realized that the dogs were
-not guilty of all that noise.
-
-Louis was gone, Neil was following. Walter sprang up, felt for his gun,
-and could not find it. The fire was still smouldering. Remembering that
-wild animals were supposed to be afraid of fire, he seized a stick that
-was alight at one end. As he crawled from the shelter, he knew from the
-sounds that the wolves were attacking the dogs.
-
-The loud report of a gun drowned out for an instant the snarls and
-growls. The dark forms of the beasts could be seen against the white
-snow, but the light was too dim down in the gully to show friends from
-foes. Louis had fired into the air.
-
-Before the echoes of the shot had died away, Walter flung his blazing
-firebrand, with sure aim. It landed among the dark shapes. There was a
-sharp snarl, a quick backward leap of a long, thin body. Neil risked a
-shot. The snarling creature made a convulsive plunge forward, and fell in
-a heap. Black figures, three or four of them, were moving swiftly up the
-gully.
-
-Louis fired again, then called commandingly, "Askime, back!"
-
-The brave husky had started in pursuit of the wolves. At his master's
-command, he paused, hesitated, turned. Louis ran forward to seize the
-dog.
-
-Askime had been hurt, but not seriously. One of the wolves had got him by
-the throat, but the Eskimo's heavy hair had protected him and the skin
-was only slightly torn. The other dogs were uninjured. The actual attack
-had but just begun, when Walter flung his firebrand. The blazing stick
-had struck Askime's attacker on the head, and had made him loose his
-hold. It had frightened the rest of the beasts. Then Neil's quick and
-lucky shot had killed the one wolf almost instantly. The dead animal
-proved,--as the voices of the pack had already betrayed,--that the
-attackers were not the small, cowardly prairie beasts, but big, gray
-timber wolves.
-
-"It was you, Walter, who saved Askime's life," Louis exclaimed
-gratefully. "I didn't dare take aim. I couldn't tell which was wolf and
-which dog. I fired over their heads, hoping to frighten the wicked
-brutes. But you saved Askime. Come, brave fellow," he said to the dog.
-"You shall sleep in the lodge with me the rest of the night."
-
-"Will the wolves come back, do you think?" asked Walter.
-
-"If they do, the dogs will warn us. But I think they will not trouble us
-again. They have lost their leader, and they are well frightened."
-
-The boys were so thoroughly aroused that it was some time before they
-could go to sleep again. But they heard no more of the wolves, and
-finally dropped off, first Neil, then Louis, and finally Walter. Between
-his two companions, Walter slept more warmly than on the night before,
-though he woke several times when the fire had to be replenished.
-
-
-
-
- XXI
- THE BURNED CABIN
-
-
-Before sunrise Louis was stirring and woke the others. When Walter tried
-to move, he found his ankles and calves so stiff and sore that he
-wondered if he could possibly go on with the march. Of course he must go
-on. Louis and Neil seemed as spry as ever. He would not hold them back.
-Pride helped him to set his teeth and bear the pain of getting to his
-feet and moving about. His first few minutes of snowshoeing were agony.
-As he went on, some of the stiffness wore off, but sharp darts of pain
-stabbed foot, ankle, or leg at every step. Doggedly he trudged behind the
-toboggan, thankful that trail breaking through the deep snow prevented
-speed.
-
-Keeping to open, level ground at the foot of the hills, Louis watched for
-familiar landmarks. The day was clear and cold. Going north and
-northwest, the party traveled against the piercing wind. The boys walked
-with heads lowered. The dogs, every now and then, veered to one side or
-stopped and turned about in their traces. Most drivers would have beaten
-and abused the poor beasts for such behavior, but Louis was not without
-sympathy for them. He himself had to turn his back to the wind
-occasionally. With a fellow feeling for the dogs, he encouraged rather
-than drove them. Askime did his best, and the others were usually ready
-to follow him.
-
-What he had seen so far of the Pembina Mountains was a disappointment to
-Walter. He could not understand why anyone should dignify mere low ridges
-and irregular, rolling hills with the name of mountains. Nevertheless,
-after weeks of open prairie, the rolling, partly wooded land looked good
-to him. He felt more at home in broken country.
-
-The wind-driven surface snow obscured the distance, so that landmarks
-were difficult to recognize. In a momentary lull, a line of woods,
-winding out across the plain, was revealed. Louis paused in his trail
-breaking, and turned to call to his comrades.
-
-"There is the river again," he cried. "We came too far to the south, as I
-thought."
-
-"Is the cabin on the river bank?" asked Walter, hoping that the long
-tramp was almost over.
-
-"No, it is in the hills about a mile beyond," was the rather discouraging
-reply.
-
-Walter's heart sank. He had been wondering at every step how long he
-could go on. Could he keep going to that line of trees and then on for
-another mile or more? He must of course, no matter how much it hurt.
-
-Louis, sure of the way now, led to and across the river, then turned to
-the northwest into the broken, hilly country. There they were less
-exposed to the sweep of the wind, but in other ways the going was harder.
-It seemed to Walter that they must have gone at least three miles beyond
-the river, when he heard Louis, who had rounded a clump of leafless
-trees, give a cry of dismay. Following their leader, Walter and Neil
-entered a snug, tree-protected hollow, backed by a steep, sandy slope.
-And all three stood staring at a roofless, blackened ruin.
-
-Louis was the first to recover himself. "This is bad, yes, but the walls
-still stand, and the chimney has not fallen."
-
-"We can rig up some sort of a roof," Neil responded. "It will be better
-than camping in the open."
-
-Walter said nothing. He had expected to find a cabin all ready for
-occupancy, where they could make themselves comfortable at once. Cold and
-suffering sharply with the pain in his feet and legs, his bitter
-disappointment quite overwhelmed his courage.
-
-"Someone has camped here since the blizzard. There are raquette and sled
-and dog tracks, but it is strange,"--Louis, turning towards Walter,
-forgot what he intended to say, seized a handful of snow, made a lunge at
-his friend, and clapped the snow on his face. "Your cheek is frozen. It
-is all white. Rub it,--not so hard, you will take the skin off. Let me do
-it. Neil, cut some wood, dry branches. We will make a fire the first
-thing we do, even if we have no roof over our heads."
-
-Neil took the ax from the sled, and started to obey Louis' order, while
-the latter skilfully rubbed and slapped Walter's stiff, white cheek,
-until it began to tingle.
-
-The log walls of the old cabin were intact. The door, of heavy, ax-hewn
-planks, was only charred. It stood ajar, and Louis pulled it wide open
-and went in, Walter following. There was no snow within, but the hard
-earth floor was strewn with the fallen remains of the roof. Had there
-been a plank floor to catch fire, the inside of the house would certainly
-have been burned out, and the walls would probably have gone too. As it
-was, the logs were merely blackened, the top ones charred a little. Two
-bed frames, a stool made of unbarked sticks, and the stone and clay
-fireplace and chimney were unharmed.
-
-"We will make a fire, warm ourselves and unload the _tabagane_. Then we
-must build a new roof."
-
-Louis was not satisfied with the appearance of Walter's frozen cheek. As
-soon as the fire was kindled, he melted some snow, removed the warm water
-from the blaze and added more snow until it was like ice water. He bade
-Walter bathe his cheek with the cold water and keep on bathing it until
-the frost was drawn out. Noticing the stiffness of his friend's movements
-and the signs of suffering in his face, Louis guessed his other trouble.
-
-"You have a pain in the legs?" he inquired. "It is the _mal de raquette_.
-Everyone not used to snowshoeing has it if he travels long. It is very
-painful. Take off your moccasins. Warm your feet and legs and rub them.
-That will help."
-
-Walter was glad to obey. He expected to do his share in unloading the
-sled and roofing the cabin, but when Louis saw how inflamed and swollen
-the Swiss boy's ankles and insteps were, he refused to let him help.
-Walter must remain quiet. His work would be to sit on a buffalo robe
-before the fire and keep the blaze going.
-
-The roof the others constructed was only a temporary affair. It was
-almost flat, slanting a little towards the rear, as the back wall was
-slightly lower than the front. Poles and bark were the materials,
-weighted with stones to keep them from blowing away. Such a covering
-would not stand a strong wind, but the cabin was well sheltered. In a
-hard rain the roof would probably leak, and heavy snow might sag it or
-break it. But it would serve for a while at least, and it was the best
-the boys could do in haste and with the materials at hand. By nightfall
-they had a cover over their heads, flimsy though it was.
-
-As they were eating their evening meal before a warm blaze, Neil said
-thoughtfully, "I wonder how this cabin caught fire. The fellows who
-camped here can't have been gone long, yet when we came the fire was out
-and everything cold."
-
-"Yes," agreed Louis. "Even the ashes on the hearth were cold."
-
-"Probably it broke out in the night," Neil suggested. "Sparks from the
-chimney started it. But how _could_ they, with the roof covered with
-snow?"
-
-"If there had been snow on it, it would not have burned so easily," Louis
-returned.
-
-"This place is too sheltered for the wind to blow the snow off the roof.
-Someone must have cleaned it off. Perhaps the weight was breaking it
-down."
-
-"Well, it burned anyway," Walter put in. "All we know is that there was a
-fire, and that some other party was here before we came. Do you remember
-those men we saw in the mirage, Louis?"
-
-"Yes, we thought they were coming to the mountain. Whoever it was who
-camped here, we owe him a grudge. He burned our roof and stole our beds.
-Antoine and I made those beds last winter." One of the first things Louis
-had noticed on entering the house was that the stretched hides, which had
-taken the place of springs and mattress, were gone from the rustic cots.
-The hides had been cut off with a knife.
-
-The bed frames being of no use, the boys lay down on the buffalo robe
-before the fire. Louis and Neil slept soundly, but the pain in Walter's
-feet and legs and frosted cheek made him wakeful and restless.
-
-His lameness and his sore face kept him at home the next day when the
-others went out to seek for game and signs of fur animals. That was a
-long day for Walter. Enough wood had been cut to last until evening, and
-he kept the fire going. He cleaned out the remains of the burned roof
-which cluttered the floor, arranged the scanty supplies and equipment
-more neatly, drove some wooden pegs between the logs to hang clothes and
-snowshoes on, mended a break in the dog harness, and did everything he
-could find to do. The cabin had one window covered with oiled deerskin
-that let in a little light, and the open fire helped to illuminate the
-dim interior.
-
-Dusk had come when the hunters returned, bringing two big white hares.
-Rabbit stew would be a welcome change from pemmican. They had set traps
-and snares, had seen elk tracks, and had found, among rocks at the base
-of a tree, a partly snow-blocked hole Louis thought might be a bear's
-winter den.
-
-
-
-
- XXII
- THE PAINTED BUFFALO SKULL
-
-
-The life of the three boys in their lonely cabin in the hills settled
-down to a regular routine. Louis and Neil were out every day hunting and
-visiting their traps, but it was nearly a week before Walter's lameness
-wore off so that he could tramp and climb with his comrades. The skin
-peeled from his frosted cheek, leaving it so tender that he had to keep
-it covered with his capote hood when out in the cold.
-
-The cabin was in need of furniture. Besides the bed frames, Louis and his
-companion of the winter before had made two rough stools, but one had
-been burned. Before he was able to hunt, the Swiss boy, who was handy at
-wood working, fashioned two more stools. His only tools were an ax, a
-small saw, and a knife, but the stools were strong and solid, if not
-ornamental. A table the lads did not miss. At meal times they sat before
-the fire, their plates on their knees, their cups on the earth floor
-beside them, the cooking utensils on the hearth.
-
-The first day that Walter went any distance from camp, he and Louis,
-entering a partly wooded hollow among the hills, came suddenly upon a
-herd of six or eight large, handsome deer. It was the first time Walter
-had ever seen wapiti or elk. He was surprised and excited, the trigger of
-his flintlock trade gun pulled hard, and his shot went wide. Louis,
-cooler and more experienced, fired just as the herd took fright at the
-report of Walter's gun. A yearling buck fell, and he was jubilant at his
-happy shot. The pemmican was almost gone, and the boys had been living on
-hares and squirrels. Frozen and hung in a tree out of reach of the dogs,
-the elk meat would keep until every eatable scrap had been consumed.
-
-It proved lucky for the lads that they had such a good supply of fresh
-meat. That night a storm commenced that lasted more than three days. It
-was worse than the blizzard they had encountered on their way to the
-hills. Even in the sheltered spot where the cabin stood the wind howled
-and shrieked through the trees, bending them low and beating and crashing
-the leafless limbs against one another. It threatened to blow the roof
-off, and whirled the snow in among the trees, to drift it high against
-the windward side of the house.
-
-Any attempt to reach the trap lines would have been the wildest folly.
-Neil tried once to go to the near-by creek for water, but the storm drove
-him back. He decided that snow water was quite good enough for him. When
-the supply of fuel ran low, a tree close to the lee side of the house was
-felled. Cutting it up was a troublesome and strenuous task even in the
-shelter of the cabin.
-
-While the wood pile was being replenished, the elk carcass was blown from
-the tree where it hung. It was brought inside. The corner farthest from
-the fire proved quite cold enough to keep the meat fresh. The dogs whined
-and scratched at the door, but Louis let in Askime only. He knew it would
-be almost impossible to prevent the beasts from getting at the venison,
-if all three were admitted. On the sheltered side of the house, buried
-deep in the snow, the thick-haired dogs would not freeze.
-
-Preparing the pelts occupied part of the boys' time. At this task Louis
-was expert and Neil not unskilled. The work did not appeal to Walter,
-though he was ready to lend a hand when necessary. He had not been
-brought up to the fur trade, and he had already concluded that he had no
-wish to be a trapper. He was willing enough to hunt, especially when food
-was needed, but traps seemed to him mere instruments of torture. He said
-nothing to his comrades of this feeling. Their training and way of
-looking at life were in many ways different from his. But he was resolved
-to find some other way of making a living in this new land. He was
-willing to do farming, tinkering, repair work, even to act as a voyageur
-for the Company.
-
-When time began to hang heavy on the boys' hands, Walter suggested that
-Neil give him some lessons in English. They had no paper, pens, or
-pencils. With a charred stick Neil wrote on the flat hearth stone such
-common English words as he knew, explaining the meaning. His father had
-taught him to read and write a little English,--as much as he knew
-himself,--but Neil's education was very limited, his spelling erratic,
-and his pronunciation that of the Highland Scot. Louis watched and
-listened with keen interest. He had even less education than the Scotch
-boy. Louis could read only enough to make out the markings on bales of
-goods and pelts. His writing consisted in copying those marks and signing
-his name.
-
-When Walter had written his letters to the Periers and had read theirs
-aloud, Louis had admired and envied his knowledge. Noticing the Canadian
-boy's interest in the lessons, Walter offered to teach him to read his
-native tongue, French. Among the Swiss lad's few possessions was a small
-Bible that had belonged to his mother, the only thing he owned that had
-been hers. He had always carried it about with him, and now he used it as
-a text-book. Louis entered into the new task with enthusiasm and
-surprised Walter by learning rapidly. In fact Louis proved quicker than
-Neil, whose restless nature disinclined him to study of any kind. In
-physical activity the Highland boy delighted, but working his mind bored
-and wearied him. Louis, however, grew so interested that even after the
-storm was over, he spent a part of every evening in a reading lesson by
-firelight.
-
-A period of clear, cold weather followed the blizzard. There was little
-wind, but more than once the stillness of the night was shattered by a
-sharp crack, almost like the report of a musket, when, in the intense
-cold, some near-by tree split from freezing. In hunting and visiting the
-traps the boys felt the cold far less than at a higher temperature with
-wind. Fingers and faces became frost-bitten quickly though, and Walter
-had to be careful of his frosted cheek.
-
-Following the trap lines necessitated long tramps, sometimes of twelve or
-fifteen miles, through the hills. Accompanying his comrades, Walter
-learned something of the lay of the land. He found that the cabin was
-located on what Louis called "the first mountain," a rough and partly
-wooded plateau that rises rather abruptly from the prairie of the Red
-River valley; which is really not a valley but a plain. This hilly
-plateau is about eight miles across its widest part, and reaches its
-greatest height a mile south of where the Pembina River cuts a deep
-valley through it. On the west of the plateau is the "second mountain,"
-an irregular ridge. Though the second mountain rises nowhere more than
-five hundred feet above the first, it is wild and rugged. Walter was
-forced to admit that in some places, especially where the streams that
-crossed it had eroded steep-walled ravines, three or four hundred feet
-deep, it was almost mountain-like on a small scale. To a mountain-bred
-boy this was mere hill country, but he felt more at home in it than he
-had felt anywhere since coming to the strange new world. Climbing was a
-real joy to him, and he loved to choose the steepest rather than the
-easiest routes.
-
-As game grew scarce in the vicinity of the cabin, the boys pushed their
-trap lines farther and farther into the hills, until whoever made the
-rounds was forced to be away at least two, and sometimes three, nights.
-They built two overnight shelters, one a lean-to against an abrupt cliff,
-the other a roof of poles over a snug hollow in the rocks. In one of
-these lodges Louis or Neil, sometimes alone, sometimes accompanied by
-Walter, would spend the night; with a blazing fire at the entrance to
-keep away wolves and wildcats.
-
-For several weeks a thievish wolverine annoyed the trappers. The clever,
-bloodthirsty beast followed the trails, broke into deadfalls, and
-skilfully extracted the catch from traps and snares. What it could not
-devour it carried away and hid, after mangling the creature until the
-pelt was ruined. Louis swore vengeance on the thief, and tried in every
-way to trap it. At last, by going out at night to follow the wolverine's
-fresh track against the wind, he came upon the greedy beast in the act of
-breaking into a deadfall from the rear. A quick and lucky shot, and Louis
-triumphantly carried home the robber. Walter had never seen a wolverine,
-and Neil knew it from its tracks and skin only. With its long body,
-short, strong legs, and big feet armed with sharp, curved claws, it
-looked a most formidable creature for its size.
-
-February was a stormy month, until near the close, when there came
-another period of clear, calm cold. In this fine weather Louis laid a new
-trap line extending seven miles or more north to _Tete de Boeuf_, Buffalo
-Head, one of the highest points in the range. After accompanying his
-friend over the new trail, Walter climbed Buffalo Head for the first time
-one bright, windless noonday. He found the view from the top impressive,
-but the name puzzled him.
-
-"Why do you call this hill Tete de Boeuf?" he asked his companion. "I
-can't see that it is shaped like a bull's head, looked at from below or
-from up here."
-
-"No," Louis replied. "I think the name does not come from the shape of
-the hill, but from a curious custom of the Indians. Do you see those red
-things over there?"
-
-He pointed to an irregular line of objects in an exposed, wind-blown spot
-at the very rim of an escarpment.
-
-"Those queer looking stones? They look as if someone had laid them there
-in a row, and then daubed them with red paint. Did the Indians put them
-there? What for?"
-
-"You think they are stones? Go and look at them," returned Louis with a
-smile.
-
-Walter walked to the edge of the bluff, looked down at the objects, and
-exclaimed in astonishment, "They're skulls; skulls of some big animal."
-
-"Buffalo," said Louis. "To the Assiniboins and the Sioux this mountain is
-sacred. They bring buffalo skulls, daub them with red earth, and place
-them as you see, noses pointing to the east. The skulls are offerings to
-some heathen god. There is another spot up here where the Indians burn
-tobacco as a sacrifice." He stooped to examine one of the skulls. "This
-one has not been here long. See how fresh the paint is. It is trader's
-vermilion mixed with grease."
-
-"That skull was put there since the last storm," Walter agreed. "There
-are little drifts of snow against the others, but hardly any around that
-one."
-
-Louis had turned his attention to a shallow, snow-filled hollow in the
-rock. "Here are tracks. Truly someone has been here since the last
-snowfall."
-
-Although the weather had been unusually calm for several days, every
-breath of breeze swept the exposed spot. The prints in the snow were
-partly obliterated. If the boys had not found the freshly painted skull,
-they would scarcely have guessed that the tracks were those of men. With
-some difficulty they traced the footprints to the edge of a steep, bare,
-rock slope. There they lost the trail. They were out after game and did
-not care to waste time tracing a couple of wandering Indians, so they
-gave up the search.
-
-Nevertheless the recent offering of a buffalo skull on _Tete de Boeuf_
-aroused the lads' curiosity, and set them wondering if there might be
-Indians camped somewhere in the neighborhood. In all their wanderings
-heretofore the three had seen no recent sign of human beings.
-
-"We must keep a better watch of our things," Louis decided, as he sat by
-the fire that evening preparing the pelt of a red fox. "The Assiniboins
-are great thieves. Stealing horses is a feat they are proud of. We have
-no horses, but we do not want to lose our dogs."
-
-"Or our sled and blankets and all our furs," Neil added. "One of us must
-stay home after this to look after things."
-
-"Yes." Louis was silent for a moment considering. "I think," he said at
-last, "that you and I, Walter, will try to follow that trail to-morrow.
-It may lead to some camp. Neil will stay here to guard the cabin."
-
-"Why not let Walter stay?" demanded the Scotch boy, who preferred a more
-active part.
-
-"Because he cannot talk to the savages or understand them, if any come
-this way. He knows no Assiniboin."
-
-"I don't know much myself," Neil protested.
-
-"But you know a little, and you have dealt with Indians. He has not. He
-does not even understand their sign language."
-
-Neil could find no answer to that argument. He was forced to consent to
-the arrangement, though he was far from pleased.
-
-
-
-
- XXIII
- UNWELCOME VISITORS
-
-
-The period of bright, calm weather seemed to be over. The next morning
-was dark and cloudy, with a raw wind. In accordance with Louis' plan, he
-and Walter climbed Buffalo Head again. At the foot of the bare rock
-slope, they succeeded in picking up the trail from the painted skull. Two
-men, Louis concluded, had come and gone that way. He traced the trail
-easily enough for a short distance, but in the woods it became confused
-with that of several wolves. Probably the beasts had followed the men at
-a safe distance. Where the snow lay deep the men had taken to snowshoes.
-
-By the time the lads had reached a puzzling spot, where the tracks seemed
-to branch into two trails, the threat of the morning had been fulfilled.
-Snow was falling. Selecting the more distinct trail, Louis led on, but
-the thick-falling flakes were rapidly obliterating the tracks. He grew
-more and more doubtful of them, until at last he was sure that he had
-lost the trail entirely. After circling about, attempting in vain to pick
-it up, he gave up the chase.
-
-"It is of no use to go on," he said to his companion. "If this snow had
-waited a few hours,--but no, it comes at just the wrong time." With a
-resigned shrug of his shoulders, he turned back.
-
-For a time the snow came thick and fast, but before the boys were
-half-way home, it had almost ceased. When they reached the cabin, the
-wind had changed and the sun was shining. The storm had lasted just long
-enough to defeat their purpose. Their hard tramp had been for nothing.
-The stay-at-home, however, had news; news he was impatient to tell.
-
-"I have had a visitor," he burst out the moment Louis opened the door.
-
-"A visitor!"
-
-"A visitor?" echoed Walter, entering close behind his comrade.
-
-"Yes, and I have found out about the new skull on Buffalo Head."
-
-"That is more than we have done," Louis admitted, shaking the snow from
-his capote. "There have been Indians here?"
-
-"No, a white man."
-
-Louis and Walter were too amazed even to exclaim. They stared
-unbelievingly at Neil.
-
-"A white man," the Scotch boy repeated. "He came a little while after you
-left. I didn't know he was anywhere around till he knocked on the door. I
-_was_ surprised, I can tell you, when I heard that knock. An Indian would
-have walked right in, so, even before I opened the door, I knew there
-must be a white man there. And there was,--a broad-shouldered fellow with
-a shaggy beard. He said '_Bo jou_' and I said '_Bo jou_, come in.' Then
-we stood and looked at each other. Just as I opened my mouth to ask him
-where he came from, he began asking me questions."
-
-"What kind of questions?" Louis interrupted.
-
-"Who I was, and what I was doing here, if I was trapping or trading with
-the Indians. He could see the pelts all around the room. He was so sharp
-about it, I thought he might be a Hudson Bay man out on the track of free
-traders. I told him we hadn't seen an Indian since we came and didn't
-expect to see one. Then he wanted to know what we were going to do with
-our furs. Of course I said we were going to take them to the Company at
-Pembina."
-
-"Did that satisfy him?"
-
-"It seemed to. He isn't a Company man, it appears."
-
-"A free trader?" questioned Louis.
-
-"He didn't say. He is on his way from _Portage la Prairie_ to Pembina."
-
-"_Portage la Prairie_ is on the Assiniboine. Why did he come this way?"
-
-"He said it was shorter and he wanted to make speed."
-
-Louis shook his head doubtfully. "Shorter? No, I think not. He must be
-off his course. How many are in his party?"
-
-"No one but himself. He didn't even have a sled, only a pack and his
-snowshoes."
-
-"But that is strange. You are sure he had no comrades?"
-
-"I asked him if he had come all the way alone," Neil explained, "and he
-said that at first he had traveled with two others. Yesterday or last
-night, he left them. He had quarreled with them I think. When he went
-away, he warned me to look out for them and not to trust them. I asked if
-they were coming this way. He didn't know where they were going, he said,
-but they were somewhere around here in the hills."
-
-"What about the painted skull?" inquired Walter.
-
-"I told him about our finding it and the tracks. He said the other
-fellows put the skull there. One of them is an Assiniboin."
-
-Walter was puzzled. "If that is true,--if those men really did that, they
-must have reached the hills two or three days ago. We found the skull
-yesterday."
-
-"That's so." Neil rubbed his red head thoughtfully. "That rather spoils
-his story of making speed straight through from _Portage la Prairie_,
-doesn't it?"
-
-"He lied," concluded Louis emphatically. "Somewhere he lied, either about
-himself or about the placing of the skull on the _Tete de Boeuf_. What
-was he like, that fellow, and who is he? What is his name? Where does he
-belong?"
-
-"He didn't tell me his name, but he is a DeMeuron from St. Boniface. He
-asked so many questions that I didn't think till afterwards that he
-hadn't mentioned his name. He asked mine and yours."
-
-"He knew you were not here alone then?"
-
-"Oh yes, I told him I expected you two back any moment. He kept looking
-at our furs, and I thought he had better know we were three to one."
-
-"Three to three perhaps," said Louis thoughtfully, "if the others are
-still near here. They may not have parted at all."
-
-"I'm sure they have quarreled. He was telling the truth about that. You
-should have seen his face when he spoke of those other fellows, and he
-warned me against them, you know."
-
-"That is true," Louis conceded, "but his stories do not agree and we had
-best not trust them too far."
-
-One of the trap lines had not been visited for two days, so Neil went out
-to examine the nearer traps while daylight lasted. Doubt of the white
-traveler's story made Louis decide to remain at the cabin. The boys had a
-fairly good catch of furs, and Louis knew that wandering trappers and
-free traders were not always above robbing weaker parties. If the
-stranger returned or his former companions happened along, Louis wanted
-to be at home.
-
-The sun was sinking behind the hills as Walter, accompanied by Askime,
-went down to the creek. He found the water hole frozen and was chopping
-it out when the dog began to growl uneasily. The boy paid little
-attention, thinking Askime had scented some wild animal. Suddenly Askime
-threw back his head and howled. His fellows replied from near the cabin.
-Then, as all three were silent for a moment, there came other answers
-from farther away; up the creek somewhere. In doubt whether the answering
-voices were those of dogs or wolves, Walter filled his kettle and
-hastened back to the cabin.
-
-Outside the house, Louis was trying to quiet his beasts. "We shall have
-visitors soon," he announced. "You heard?"
-
-"Yes, but I wasn't sure whether they were dogs or wolves."
-
-"Dogs," Louis asserted confidently. "Those men have heard ours. They will
-come this way."
-
-Louis and Walter tied their dogs at the rear of the cabin, and lingered
-outside, watching for the strangers. It was not long before a howl from
-the opposite direction, together with the voice of a man shouting, as he
-belabored some unfortunate beast, announced the arrival of the visitors.
-
-Through an opening in the woods, into the cleared space before the cabin,
-came a tall fellow in buckskin leggings and blue capote, the hood pulled
-low over his face. He was followed by two lean, shaggy dogs drawing a
-toboggan. It flashed into Walter's mind that these were the very men and
-sled he had seen upside down against the sky during the mirage.
-
-"_Bo jou_," called Louis in a friendly tone, as a second man appeared and
-the sled came to a halt.
-
-"_Bo jou_," returned the tall fellow in a deep voice.
-
-At the sound of that voice Walter started with surprise. The newcomer
-pushed back his hood, and the boy found himself gazing into the face of
-the half-breed voyageur Murray. The sun was down behind the mountain, but
-even in the waning light, there was no mistaking that face; that dark,
-aquiline, beardless, hard, cruel face, that he had seen day after day
-during the long journey from Fort York to Fort Douglas.
-
-If Murray recognized the two lads, and he must recognize them Walter
-knew, he made no sign. He merely stood impassive, looking at them, until
-Louis recovered his wits sufficiently to act the host. Under the
-circumstances he could do no less, even though the guest was an unwelcome
-one. After all there had been no open breach between Murray and the boys,
-and what had happened at Pembina was not their business. It would be
-better to show no knowledge of that affair.
-
-At Louis' invitation, the newcomers entered the cabin and were given the
-stools by the fire. They had unhitched their dogs from the sled and tied
-them to a tree to keep them from Louis' beasts, but Murray was hardly
-seated when the noise of battle sounded from without. Louis ran out and
-Murray followed to find that one of his dogs had broken or gnawed off his
-rawhide rope and was engaged in a fight with Askime who had broken his
-rope also. The beasts were separated, Murray's dog, after being well
-beaten by his far from merciful master, was tied more securely, and
-Askime was taken into the cabin.
-
-Walter was already getting the evening meal, which, as a matter of
-course, the visitors would share. The second man, it was evident, was not
-the one who had been with Murray at Pembina. This fellow was an Indian, a
-young man, slender, well built, but insignificant beside the Black
-Murray. He understood scarcely a word of French or English, and spoke
-only when addressed in his native Assiniboin. It seemed to Walter, as he
-covertly watched the two, that the young Indian was completely under
-Murray's domination, and stood in fear or awe of him.
-
-Before the meal was ready, Neil returned. He had heard unfamiliar dog
-voices, as he approached the cabin, and had seen the loaded sled before
-the door, so he was not surprised to find strangers sitting by the fire.
-He it was who first mentioned the visitor that had come earlier in the
-day.
-
-"I suppose," he said, "you two are the ones that fellow was traveling
-with."
-
-Murray grunted an assent. After a moment he asked, "How long ago he
-here?" He grunted again at Neil's reply.
-
-The warm meal, eaten for the most part in silence, seemed to thaw
-Murray's sullenness somewhat. Suddenly he began to talk; his usual
-mixture of bad English, worse French, Cree, and Dakota. Like the
-DeMeuron, he asked questions about the boys' trapping, and inquired if
-they had seen any Indians and had done any trading. Questioned in return,
-his replies were brief and evasive. He and Kolbach had been to the west.
-They had come back to the hills expecting to meet a band of Assiniboins.
-"We waited," he said, "but the Assiniboins not come."
-
-Walter and Louis were not surprised to learn that Murray's former
-companion was Fritz Kolbach. They had guessed that already.
-
-"It was here at the mountain you expected to meet the Assiniboins?" Louis
-inquired.
-
-Murray shot a keen glance at him, and nodded.
-
-"Then you camped near here for several days?" persisted Louis.
-
-"To the north, other side _Tete de Boeuf_."
-
-"You left the fresh buffalo skull on the mountain?" put in Neil.
-
-Murray silently pointed to his Assiniboin companion, who apparently
-understood nothing of the conversation. Then the half-breed asked
-abruptly, "Who told you that? Kolbach?"
-
-"We found the newly painted skull and your tracks," said Neil. "I spoke
-to him this morning about them and he said you put the skull there."
-
-_Le Murrai Noir's_ face had darkened at every mention of the DeMeuron. He
-demanded savagely, "What else he tell you?" And, before Neil could
-answer, added a string of violent abuse of his former companion.
-
-"Kolbach told me nothing," the boy hastened to reply, "nothing except
-that he had been traveling with you, but had left you and was going on
-alone. He seemed to be in a hurry."
-
-Murray's eyes were fastened on Neil's honest, freckled face. His only
-reply was an abrupt grunt, he turned to Louis. "You stay here long? I
-sell you bag pemmican, good pemmican, for furs."
-
-Louis ignored the question. "We thank you for your offer," he said, "but
-we have no need of pemmican. We have plenty of food." This was not
-strictly true, but he wanted no dealings with Murray.
-
-Murray cast a look about the cabin, dimly lighted by the fire on the
-hearth. "We go now," he said abruptly.
-
-"You're not going on to-night?" Neil asked in surprise.
-
-"You are welcome to spread your blankets here by the fire," Louis added,
-he would not break the rules of hospitality even though he felt the guest
-to be an enemy.
-
-Murray did not even thank him. "The moon is bright. We go on."
-
-The Indian had risen and moved towards the door. Murray pulled on his
-capote and looked up at the bark and pole roof. An evil smile showed his
-strong, yellow-white teeth. "It burn?" he inquired.
-
-"You set it on fire," accused Louis.
-
-Murray grinned mockingly. "Not me,--Kolbach."
-
-"But why did he want to burn the roof off?" cried Walter.
-
-"Why leave a cabin for other traders?" Murray spoke contemptuously.
-Undoubtedly he felt contempt for Walter's innocence. "Only the roof burn
-well," he added. His left hand on the door latch, he turned and held out
-the right to Walter.
-
-The Swiss boy, surprised at this courtesy from the man he had believed an
-enemy, could not refuse his own hand. Murray's sinewy fingers clasped it
-firmly for an instant. A scratch in the palm,--a deep scratch made by a
-rough splinter of wood when Walter was renewing the fire before
-supper,--tingled sharply with the pressure.
-
-"_Bo jou!_" said Murray, and opened the door and went out.
-
-The Assiniboin repeated the words and followed. In a moment both were
-arousing and harnessing their dogs. The men's shouts, the whines and
-howls of the tired beasts, lashed and beaten to force them to speed,
-could be heard long after men and sled had disappeared into the woods and
-the night.
-
-
-
-
- XXIV
- A SORE HAND
-
-
-"Now we know it was Murray and Kolbach who camped here the night before
-we came," said Louis, after the guests were gone. "Then they tried to
-burn this old cabin so no one else could use it. That is a trick of rival
-traders to make each other as much trouble as they can."
-
-"The Northwest Company used to destroy Hudson Bay houses whenever they
-got a chance," put in Neil.
-
-"Yes, and the Hudson Bay men did the same to the Northwesters."
-
-"That was a queer way to try to burn a house though," Neil remarked, "to
-begin at the top. Kolbach must have had to clean off the snow before he
-could set the fire."
-
-"Perhaps it was Kolbach who cleaned away the snow, but I think the plan
-to burn the cabin was as much _le Murrai's_ as Kolbach's," Louis
-asserted. "I believe they tried to start fire in other places as well as
-the roof. At the back there is a place where a fire has burned close to
-the wall. The logs are charred and black. They started several fires, I
-think, but they did not stay to watch them. As _le Murrai_ said, only the
-roof burned well. What do you think, Walter?"
-
-Walter had scarcely been listening. He was examining his right hand,
-which still smarted. Raising his head at the question, he replied
-carelessly, "About the fire? They set it, of course. Lucky for us it
-didn't burn better." He looked again at his stinging palm. "I wonder if
-Murray ever washes his hands. The dirt came off on mine. It makes this
-scratch sting."
-
-"Let me see." Louis seized his friend's hand, turned the palm to the
-firelight and bent over it. "That is no dirt," he exclaimed. "It is
-sticky, a gum of some sort. You say it was not there before Murray shook
-hands with you? And now it hurts?"
-
-"My hands were clean. I washed them before we began to get supper. That
-scratch certainly does hurt; much more than it did at first."
-
-"Put some water on the fire, Neil, just a little, to heat quickly. We
-must do something for this hand." Louis spoke anxiously. "_Le Murrai_ has
-tried to poison you, Walter. Perhaps I can suck it out like snake venom."
-
-Without hesitation he put his lips to the scratch and sucked. He spat in
-the fire, and wiped his mouth with the end of his neck handkerchief. "The
-gum is too sticky, and we have nothing to draw the poison out, no salt
-pork for a poultice."
-
-"Make the scratch bleed," suggested Neil. "Open it with your knife."
-
-"This black stuff must be cleaned off first," objected Walter.
-
-Cold water made no impression on the sticky substance that smeared
-Walter's palm. Louis tried to scrape away the gum, then he sucked the
-scratch again. But he had to wait for hot water to really dissolve the
-gummy stuff and cleanse the hand. When every trace of black had been
-washed off, Louis drew the sharp point of his knife along the scratch,
-making a clean cut, deep enough to bleed freely.
-
-In those days little was known about antiseptics. All three boys,
-however, were familiar enough with the treatment of snake bites to
-understand that poison must be drawn out as speedily as possible, either
-by sucking the wound or letting it bleed freely. They knew also that a
-clean wound was apt to heal more readily than a dirty one. Even the
-Indians recognized that fact, though their ideas of cleanliness were not
-much like ours. Louis would have torn a strip from his handkerchief to
-bandage the injury, but Walter felt that a colored and not too clean
-cloth was not the best dressing. He decided to leave his hand unbandaged,
-letting it bleed as much as it would and the blood clot naturally.
-
-At first Walter could scarcely believe that Murray had deliberately tried
-to poison his hand, but Louis had no doubts. "I have heard of such things
-among the Indians," he said, "and _le Murrai Noir_ is more Indian than
-white. He would not be above revenging himself that way or any other. If
-he is really friendly to us, why did he act as if he had never seen us
-before? He knew us certainly, though our names were not spoken. As he
-went towards the door, he put his fingers in his fire bag. I saw him do
-it, but thought nothing of it. He had seen you get that scratch. You know
-it is not like Murray to shake anyone by the hand."
-
-"That surprised me, I admit," conceded Walter.
-
-"Truly he had a reason. He hated you always after that affair of poor
-M'sieu Matthieu."
-
-"Do you suppose he has learned that we reported the loss of the pemmican
-and told about his bundle of trade goods?" Walter asked thoughtfully.
-
-"That may be. He did not go up the Assiniboin, he was at Pembina too
-soon. At Fort Douglas or at the Forks they may have asked him about that
-pemmican. Even if they did not say we told them, he might lay it to us.
-He never was fond of either of us. The Black Murray is an evil man. He
-likes to do evil I think. He takes pleasure in it."
-
-In spite of the prompt treatment, Walter's hand pained him all night and
-kept him restless. He was not the only one of the three that was wakeful.
-Louis and Neil, too, were uneasy. They were uncertain of Murray's
-intentions. He and his companion had gone away, with sled and dogs, but
-how far had they gone? Had they really set out for Pembina, or had they
-made camp as soon as they were out of sight and hearing? The Black
-Murray's keen eyes had not failed to take note of every pelt in the
-cabin. He had even offered to trade pemmican for the furs. Louis had
-declined, but did that settle the matter? Would Murray try in some other
-way to get possession of the catch? That he was not scrupulous in his
-methods was proved by his assault and robbery of the Ojibwa at the Red
-River.
-
-The boys were sure that Murray would not have hesitated to take
-everything, if they had been away from the cabin when he arrived. They
-did not doubt that he would have been ready to use violence against any
-one of them. But he had found Louis and Walter quite prepared for him.
-Numbers had been equal and the boys' guns within reach. Before Murray
-could discover an opening for strategy, Neil had arrived. With three
-alert lads watching him, the free trader had no chance. They were not at
-all sure, however, that he might not return and attempt a surprise. So
-Neil and Walter slept little, and Louis scarcely at all. Many times
-during the night, the Canadian boy slipped out to look and listen. Though
-he had turned the dogs loose, he did not dare to trust entirely to them.
-
-The night passed without an alarm, but the boys were far from sure that
-they had seen the last of the Black Murray. Before they dared go about
-their ordinary work, they had to be certain that he was not anywhere in
-the vicinity. Louis decided to follow his trail, while the others
-remained at the cabin, alert and prepared for a second visit.
-
-Walter's hand worried both himself and his comrades. It was inflamed,
-swollen, and very sore. No one knew what to do for it, except to open up
-the cut and make it bleed again, a painful operation which Walter bore
-without flinching.
-
-Louis was away early. He returned late in the day with the encouraging
-news that Murray had left the hills. His track, distinct and easy to
-follow, ran straight across the prairie in the direction of the Red
-River. "I followed several miles over the plain," said Louis, "and could
-see the trail going on in the distance. Yet I feared he might have turned
-farther on somewhere, so I went north a long way, looking for a return
-trail. Then I came back, crossed his track, and went on to the south. I
-found nothing. Certainly _le Murrai_ has gone, unless he made a very wide
-circle to return. I think he would not give himself the trouble to do
-that. He had no reason to think we would doubt his story. Yes, I am as
-sure he is gone as I can be without following him clear to the Red
-River."
-
-Reassured, the boys took up their daily tasks of visiting the traps and
-deadfalls, fishing through the ice, and hunting. One of them, however,
-always remained at home, his gun loaded and within reach.
-
-For several days Walter's hand was very sore and painful. He was more
-than a little anxious about it. He feared serious blood poisoning that
-might mean the loss of hand, arm, and even life. But the inflammation did
-not spread. The prompt sucking of the scratch, the cleansing and free
-bleeding, and the healthy condition of Walter's blood saved him. Within a
-week the soreness was almost gone and the cut healing properly.
-
-In the meantime another misfortune had befallen the boys. The dogs were
-taken sick. Askime was the first one to show the disease. One morning
-Louis found the husky with a badly swollen neck. He took the dog into the
-cabin and tended him anxiously, but the swelling increased until Askime
-could no longer eat. He was scarcely able to swallow a little water.
-Walter proposed piercing the lumps, and performed the operation with an
-awl used in sewing skins. The swellings discharged freely, and Askime,
-able to swallow, began to improve.
-
-The other dogs had already shown signs of the same trouble. Gray Wolf had
-only a slight attack, but the brown animal was very sick. Lancing the
-lumps on his neck did no lasting good, and in spite of the boys' efforts
-to save him, the poor beast died. Luckily Askime and Gray Wolf recovered
-completely. How the dogs got the disease was a mystery. Murray had had no
-opportunity to poison them. Possibly the wolf-like animal that had broken
-loose and attacked Askime had given the infection to him, or the husky
-and his fellows might have caught it from some wild beast they had killed
-and eaten.
-
-
-
-
- XXV
- THE TRAVELERS WITHOUT SNOWSHOES
-
-
-After the wolverine was killed trapping had improved for a time. Then the
-catches began to dwindle, growing smaller and smaller. Louis and Neil
-agreed that they must either change their hunting grounds or go back to
-Pembina. They had promised to return early in March. Now March had come,
-with a thaw that suggested an early spring. The ducks and geese would
-soon be flying north, spring fishing would begin, and food be plentiful
-again in the settlement. And perhaps both boys were a bit homesick.
-
-"We go back with less food than we came away with," said Louis, "but we
-have not been forced to eat wolf yet. Not once have we been near
-starving, and we have a good catch of pelts. We will make the rounds of
-our traps once more, spend the night in the hut near _Tete de Boeuf_, and
-start from there."
-
-The morning was fine and the sun already high, when the boys left the
-overnight shelter in the rolling hills below Buffalo Head. Neil went
-ahead to break trail. The two dogs, fresh and eager, pulled willingly.
-The sled was well loaded with a good store of skins: rabbit, squirrel,
-raccoon, red fox, and mink, a few otter and beaver, two wildcats, three
-wolves, a couple of marten, the elk hide, and a fine and valuable silver
-fox pelt.
-
-The weather was springlike, too springlike for good traveling. The soft,
-sticky snow clung in sodden masses to the snowshoes, making them heavy
-and unwieldy. It formed wet balls on the dogs' feet. Moccasins, warm and
-comfortable in colder weather, became soaked. The sun glare, reflected
-from the white expanse, was almost unbearable. Before noon, Walter's
-eyes, squinted and screwed nearly shut to keep out the excess of light,
-were smarting painfully. Neil's were even worse. He was so snow blind
-that he dropped behind, following his comrades by hearing instead of by
-sight. Louis, less troubled by the glare, had to do all the trail
-breaking.
-
-They had hoped to reach the Red River by night, but the usual four miles
-an hour were impossible in the sodden, soft snow. Having made a later
-start than they intended, they permitted themselves no stop at noon. At
-sundown they made a perilous crossing of a prairie stream on
-water-covered, spongy ice, that threatened at every step to go down under
-them, and reached a clump of willows.
-
-"We stop here and have a cup of tea and dry our moccasins," Louis
-announced.
-
-The others, tired, hungry, with chilled feet, aching legs, and smarting,
-swollen eyes, were only too glad of a halt. A fire was soon burning and
-the kettle steaming over it. The boys, seated on bales of furs, took off
-their moccasins and held their feet to the blaze. The tired dogs lay in
-the snow near by, tongues hanging out and eager eyes watching the supper
-preparations.
-
-The meal was a scanty one. For the boys there was tea and a very small
-chunk of pemmican, saved for the return trip. One little fish each
-remained for the dogs. Yet everyone felt better for the food, so much
-better that Louis proposed going on.
-
-"It will be easier by night," he asserted. "The snow will freeze over the
-top."
-
-"I'm for keeping on," Neil agreed, "if I can see to find the way." His
-reddened eyelids were swollen almost shut. "How about you, Walter?"
-
-When Walter had sunk down on the furs before the fire, he had not dreamed
-of traveling farther that day. If the question had been put to him then
-he would have answered no. But now that his feet were warm and he was
-fortified with food and hot tea, going on did not seem so impossible. He
-felt strangely anxious to reach Pembina. His thoughts, ever since
-morning, had been turning to the Periers. It was more than two months
-since he had heard from them. How had things been going with them? Surely
-there were letters awaiting him at the settlement. "Let's go on by all
-means," he replied to Neil's question, "as far as we can. It won't be so
-bad when the snow hardens and there isn't any sun glare."
-
-Louis nodded. "We will rest till darkness comes. The wind has changed. It
-will soon be much colder, I think."
-
-There was no doubt that the weather was turning colder. Thawing had
-ceased with the setting of the sun, and the wind came from the northwest.
-By the time the journey was resumed, a crust had formed on the snow. The
-going was much easier, but the dogs were tired and footsore. Gray Wolf
-showed strong disinclination to pull. Askime, however, did his best, and
-dragged his reluctant comrade along. The average half-breed driver would
-have lashed and beaten the weary beasts, but Louis used the whip
-sparingly. He pulled with them or encouraged them by running ahead.
-
-In spite of weariness the travelers made good progress. After midnight
-they paused in a willow clump for another cup of hot tea, and then went
-on again. The night had turned bitterly cold, and there was no sheltered
-spot nearer than the banks of the Red River. The river was now only a few
-miles away, so they forced themselves and the reluctant dogs forward.
-There was no lack of light, for the moon was at the full in a clear sky.
-The surface of the snow was frozen so hard that no obscuring drift was
-carried before the wind. The waves of the prairie were motionless. The
-three boys and two dogs might have been at the north pole so alone were
-they. Except for their own voices and the slight noises of sled and
-snowshoes, as they sped forward over the crust, there was not a sound of
-living creature in a world of star-strewn sky and endless snow.
-
-A brisk pace was necessary for warmth, and, in spite of their weariness,
-they kept it up. Reaching the woods bordering the river, they made their
-way among scattering, bare-limbed trees, creaking and clashing in the
-wind. In search of a sheltered camping ground, they descended a stretch
-of open slope to an almost level terrace about a third of the way down to
-the stream. And there they came upon the trail of human beings.
-
-Stooping to examine the tracks, Louis gave a low whistle of amazement.
-"_Ma foi_, but this is strange! Those men had no snowshoes. Why should
-anyone travel without them at this time of year?"
-
-"Do you see any sled marks?" queried Neil. His own eyes were hardly in
-condition to distinguish faint traces by moonlight.
-
-"I find none. Even on the crust a _tabagane_ would leave some marks.
-Those men without snowshoes broke through the crust."
-
-"Perhaps it is nothing but an animal trail," Walter suggested.
-
-"No, no. Men without snowshoes came this way." Louis followed the tracks
-a little distance, then returned to his companions and the dogs, who had
-stopped for a rest. "There were three people," he said positively, "two
-men; or a man and a boy,--and a woman."
-
-"How can you tell it was a woman?" demanded Neil sceptically.
-
-"Where she broke through into soft snow there are the marks of her
-skirt."
-
-"Maybe it was a man wrapped in a blanket. They were probably Indians,"
-the Scotch boy suggested.
-
-Louis shook his head. "Why should Indians travel without snowshoes?"
-
-"Well, it's no affair of ours how they traveled or why. What we want is a
-camping place. The wind strikes us here."
-
-"Yes," Louis agreed, "we will go on and look for a better place."
-
-Along the terrace the dogs needed no guidance. Nose lowered, Askime
-followed the human tracks. Where the terrace dipped down a little, the
-husky paused, raised his head, and howled. Louis ran forward and almost
-stumbled over something lying in the snow in the shadow of the slope. He
-uttered a sharp exclamation.
-
-"What's the matter?" called Neil.
-
-"Have you found a good place?" asked Walter.
-
-"I have found a man," came the surprising reply.
-
-"A man? Frozen?"
-
-Neil hurried to join Louis, who was on his knees trying to unroll the
-blanket that wrapped the motionless form lying in the snow. Neil stooped
-to help.
-
-"His heart beats. He still breathes," Louis exclaimed. "But he is cold,
-cold as ice. Make a fire, you and Walter. I will rub him and try to keep
-the life in."
-
-Neil snatched the ax from the sled. Walter kicked off his snowshoes and
-set to work digging and scraping away the snow. As soon as he had kindled
-some fine shavings and added larger wood to make a good blaze, he helped
-Louis to carry the unconscious man nearer the fire. As they laid him down
-where the firelight shone on his face, Walter gave a cry of surprise and
-horror.
-
-"Monsieur Perier! It is Monsieur Perier, Louis!"
-
-He recalled Louis' certainty that the tracks were those of a man, a boy,
-and a woman. "Where are the others?" he cried. "Where are Elise and Max?"
-
-Without waiting for an answer, he sprang up and began to search. In a
-hollow in the snow in the lee of a leafless bush, completely hidden in
-deep shadow, he found another huddled heap wrapped in blankets; Elise and
-Max clasped in each other's arms. Between them and the place where their
-father had lain were the ashes of a dead fire.
-
-
-
-
- XXVI
- ELISE'S STORY
-
-
-Both children were alive. When Walter and Neil tried to separate them,
-they aroused Max. The little fellow was stupid with cold and heavy sleep,
-but seemed otherwise to be all right. Walter carried Elise nearer, but
-not too near, to the fire. Kneeling beside her, he rubbed her ice-cold
-feet, legs, and arms to restore circulation. The rubbing brought her back
-to consciousness, dazed and wondering, to find her big brother--as she
-called Walter--bending over her. As soon as the daze of her first
-awakening passed, she asked for her father. Assuring her that Louis was
-looking after him, Walter made her stay near the fire and drink some of
-the strong, scalding tea.
-
-Restoring Mr. Perier to consciousness was more difficult. Louis'
-unceasing efforts aroused him at last, but his mind seemed confused and
-bewildered. He struggled with Louis as if he thought the boy was trying
-to do him some injury. He stared blankly at Walter and did not appear to
-recognize him.
-
-Throwing off the blanket Walter had wrapped around her, Elise went to her
-father and put her arms about his neck. "Father, Father, it is all
-right," she cried. "Walter found us, and we are all safe."
-
-The wild look left Mr. Perier's eyes and he ceased struggling. When
-Walter brought him a cup of strong tea, he drank it obediently. The hot
-drink seemed to clear his brain. After more rubbing, he was able to sit
-up, nearer the fire. Elise and Max wrapped him in most of the blankets.
-Attracted by the heat, the tired dogs snuggled close to the children and
-added their animal warmth.
-
-Louis was anxious to find a less exposed spot in which to spend the
-night. "Stay here and keep the fire going," he ordered his comrades. "I
-will find a better camping place."
-
-In a few minutes he was back with word that he had found a much better
-camping ground, a dry gully protected from the bitter wind. "You and I,
-Neil," he said, "will go over there and prepare a place, while Walter
-keeps the fire burning here. Then we will come back and move our camp."
-
-Elise and Max were now wide awake and ready to talk, but Mr. Perier
-seemed inert and drowsy. After Walter had cut more wood and fed the fire,
-he crouched at Elise's side and began to question her.
-
-"How did you come to be here all alone?" he asked. "Why did you leave
-Fort Douglas?"
-
-"We were on the way to Pembina," she replied. "A man with a sled was
-taking us. It was warm when we started. Max and I rode on the sled, but
-we didn't like riding because the man abused the dogs and we were sorry
-for them. Father tried to make him stop being so cruel, but he just
-laughed. When Father tried to reason with him, the man grew so angry and
-ugly that Father didn't dare say anything more. We stopped once and had
-pemmican and tea, then we came on again. It was hard for Father to keep
-up, he had no snowshoes. He dropped behind. At sunset we stopped again,
-and the man made a fire. Father caught up with us, and we had some more
-tea.
-
-"After that it turned cold. Max and I were very cold riding on the sled.
-We wanted to walk a while to warm up, but the man wouldn't let us. He
-said we were too slow. We got so cold we were afraid we should freeze,
-and Father told our guide we must stop and get warm. Father had promised
-him his watch----"
-
-"His watch?" interrupted Walter.
-
-"Yes. We have very little money left, and the man didn't want money
-anyway. He said he would take us to Pembina for the watch."
-
-Walter grunted wrathfully, and Elise went on. "When Father said we must
-stop and make a fire, we weren't far from the woods. Our guide said we
-could go down to the river bank and camp, but that would delay us. It
-would take longer to reach Pembina, and he would have to have more pay.
-He wanted the chain as well as the watch. Father agreed and we came into
-the woods and stopped. Max and I ran around and tried to get warm. Our
-eyes hurt and Father was almost blind. The man made Father give him the
-watch and chain at once. He put them in the pouch where he carried his
-tobacco and flint and steel. Then he whipped the dogs and jumped on the
-sled, and they ran away and left us."
-
-"The miserable brute!" cried Walter.
-
-"He ran away and left us," Elise repeated, "without any food or
-snowshoes. Everything we owned, except the blankets Max and I had been
-wrapped in when we were riding, was on the sled. It was a cruel way to
-treat us."
-
-"Cruel? Why even the meanest Indian----" Walter's wrath choked him.
-
-"He is an Indian. They call him a _bois brule_, but he looks just like an
-Indian. No one but a savage could be so cruel."
-
-"He's worse than a savage. He must be a fiend. Why did Kolbach let you
-come with such a fellow?"
-
-"Monsieur Kolbach didn't know we were coming," Elise explained. "The
-Indian said he was a friend of Monsieur Kolbach's brother."
-
-"Fritz? That's not much of a recommendation."
-
-"Do you know Monsieur Fritz? Has he been at Pembina? I have never seen
-him."
-
-"I think I have seen him, and I have heard about him. He and his brother
-aren't very friendly, are they?" Walter questioned. "I have been told
-that they weren't."
-
-Elise shook her head. "I know nothing about that. Monsieur Kolbach has
-never said. He is not a man who talks much anyway. Monsieur Fritz has
-been away from Fort Douglas most of the winter. He has been trading with
-the Indians."
-
-A sudden thought struck Walter, an unpleasant thought that made him
-shudder. "What was that fellow's name, the one who deserted you?" he
-demanded.
-
-"He has an English name," Elise replied. "I'm not sure I understood it
-right. Mauray or something like that."
-
-"Murray? Elise, he is the very man I wrote you about, the one who was
-steersman of our boat when we came from Fort York. It was the Black
-Murray himself, the fiend! If ever I----"
-
-The voice of little Max interrupted. "I'm cold," he complained.
-
-Walter had forgotten the fire. He sprang up to replenish it. He found Mr.
-Perier dozing, roused him, and warned him against dropping off to sleep.
-Then he heaped on fuel until the blaze was so hot the others were forced
-to move back from it. As for Walter himself, he was so boiling with anger
-against the inhuman Murray that he gave no heed to cold. He wielded the
-ax savagely, and sent the chips flying far and wide.
-
-In a surprisingly short time Louis returned to guide the rest of the
-party to the camping place. Mr. Perier was unable to walk, so he was
-placed on the sled, warmly wrapped. The dogs protested piteously at being
-aroused and harnessed. Even Askime refused to pull until Louis took hold
-also. Elise and Max bravely asserted that they were able to walk, and
-Walter knew it would be better for them to do so if they could. He gave
-his snowshoes to Elise,--she had learned during the winter to use
-snowshoes,--and helped Max when the little fellow broke through the
-crust.
-
-The gully was only a short distance away. They soon reached the camping
-place, to find Neil tending a blazing fire. Between the fire and a steep,
-bare, clay slope that reflected the heat, beds were made with bales of
-pelts, blankets, and robes. The toboggan, turned on its side, furnished
-additional shelter. There the Periers could sleep safely and comfortably.
-The boys had no intention of sleeping at all. Their task was to keep the
-fire going until daylight, which was not far away.
-
-There was a little tea left, but no food. At dawn Neil went down to the
-river, chopped a hole in the ice, and with a hook baited with a bit of
-rawhide, caught two small fish. The little fish made a scanty breakfast
-for Elise and Max. Mr. Perier and the boys refused to touch them. Their
-meal consisted of tea alone, and they used the last of that.
-
-Both of Mr. Perier's feet had been badly frozen and were swollen and very
-painful. He was placed on the sled again, and Elise and Max took turns
-riding with him. To make room for the passengers, part of the furs were
-taken off and made into packs, which the boys carried on their backs.
-Even then, the load on the sled was a heavy one for two tired, hungry
-dogs. One, and sometimes two, of the boys had to help pull.
-
-By way of the gully they left the river bank and went up to the prairie.
-There they found and followed a well defined trail, the usual route
-between Pembina and Fort Douglas. More than one dog train had traveled
-that way since the last fall of snow. The morning was cold and the crust
-firm, but the party had to make the best possible speed before the sun
-softened the surface. With one or the other of the children walking, it
-was not possible to go very fast. Cold though the wind was, even the
-beaten track grew soft under the direct rays of the sun, as the day
-advanced.
-
-With soaked moccasins, and red, swollen eyes, the tired, half-starved
-travelers reached Pembina some time after noon. Mr. Perier was the only
-one with dry feet. He was not suffering so much from snow blindness
-either as the others, for he had been able to keep his eyes covered. But
-his feet and right hand and arm were paining him severely.
-
-The arrival caused much excitement in the little settlement, but the boys
-did not linger to explain how it happened that they returned from their
-hunting trip bringing three strangers. They went at once to Louis' home.
-His mother received the Periers with almost as warm a welcome as she gave
-her own son. The little cabin would be crowded indeed, but that did not
-disturb her in the least. There was always room for travelers in
-distress, and Elise and Max, cold, weary, hungry, and motherless,
-appealed to her motherly heart.
-
-Mrs. Brabant and her younger children were thin, much thinner than when
-Walter had seen them last. Food had been scarce in Pembina for weeks, but
-they did not hesitate to share what little they had with the newcomers.
-Kinder, more generous people never lived, thought the Swiss boy, as he
-remembered all they had done for him and saw how eager they were to share
-their last bite with his friends. He could never do enough to repay their
-kindness. That they neither expected nor wanted repayment, he knew well.
-Their hospitality was a matter of course with them.
-
-
-
-
- XXVII
- WHY THE PERIERS CAME TO PEMBINA
-
-
-Before starting for the hills, Walter had written Elise that he expected
-to be back by the first of March. So when Mr. Perier decided to leave
-Fort Douglas, he felt very sure that he would find his apprentice at
-Pembina. "I was anxious to get away," he said when he told his story.
-"The weather was mild and favorable for the journey, and--well, I had
-other reasons. At St. Boniface I learned of a man with a dog team who was
-coming this way."
-
-Walter interrupted to ask if the man was really Murray.
-
-"Yes, that is his name," Mr. Perier replied. "He said he knew you and
-your friend Louis Brabant. Murray had not intended to leave for another
-day or two. He was waiting to see Sergeant Kolbach's brother, who had
-gone to Norway House."
-
-At first the half-breed had refused to take the Periers to Pembina. While
-he was arguing his case, Mr. Perier had taken out his watch and glanced
-at it; a nervous habit of his when worried or distressed. Murray pointed
-to the watch. He would go for that he said. As nothing else would satisfy
-him, Mr. Perier agreed. Murray furnished toboggan and dogs, and they
-started early the next morning.
-
-Before they had been out an hour, the Swiss began to regret his bargain.
-Murray's brutality and his insolent, overbearing manner filled the quiet,
-gentle-natured apothecary with apprehension. The trip proved far from
-pleasant, but, knowing that the wild _bois brules_ were apt to appear
-more savage than they really were, he did not think his children and
-himself in any real danger. What really happened Elise had already told.
-Before the journey was over, Murray demanded his pay. Mr. Perier had been
-forced to hand over his watch and chain. As soon as the coveted articles
-were in the half-breed's possession, he had whipped up his dogs, jumped
-on the sled, and left the Periers to freeze or starve.
-
-Mr. Perier knew that if they followed the river it would lead them to
-Pembina. They tried to keep going but they had no snowshoes and were
-continually breaking through the crust. All three were very cold and
-tired. When they came to a spot a little sheltered from the wind, they
-camped, intending to go on in the morning. With his pocket knife, the
-father hacked off a few dead branches. He kindled a fire, and Elise and
-Max lay down beside it, wrapped in one of the blankets. They insisted
-that their father should use the other.
-
-"I didn't intend to go to sleep," he confessed. "I was utterly exhausted
-and had to rest a little. I lay down, meaning to get up in a few minutes
-and cut more wood. What happened was all my fault. I should have kept
-awake and moving.
-
-"Even now I am at a loss to understand," he concluded, "how Murray dared
-to desert us. To have taken us on, as he promised, would have delayed him
-but little. He must have known that, whether we ever reached here alive
-or not, he was responsible for us. He would be charged with the crime of
-deserting us and stealing our belongings. Surely the Company cannot
-overlook such a crime. He must suffer for it."
-
-Louis shrugged. "It is not at all certain that he will suffer for it,
-though Walter and I will do our best to see that he does. This is not _le
-Murrai Noir's_ first crime, and always, so far, he seems to have escaped
-punishment. He thinks he will always escape. He stole the Company's
-property, he and Fritz Kolbach attacked and robbed one of the Company's
-hunters, yet he has not been punished, it seems, for either of those
-crimes. He was bold to go to St. Boniface and stay there, after that last
-affair."
-
-"Perhaps he lay low and did not let the Company at Fort Douglas know he
-was there," suggested Walter.
-
-"Or he lied himself free of the charge," Louis added, "with witnesses
-bribed to say he spoke the truth. But this last crime is more serious."
-The boy rose from the hearth, where he had been sitting cross legged.
-There were not stools enough to go around. "I go now," he announced, "to
-learn whether _le Murrai_ really came to Pembina, and if he is still
-here."
-
-"I'll go with you," cried Walter springing up, tired though he was. "The
-sooner we lay charges against Murray the better. Already he has had time
-to take warning from our coming, and be gone."
-
-A little questioning of the people of Pembina brought the information
-that Murray had arrived at the settlement before daybreak, had rested a
-few hours, and had gone on, with a fresh team for which he had exchanged
-his exhausted dogs. His only answer to the question whither he was bound
-had been "Up river."
-
-At Fort Daer and Pembina House the boys learned that Murray had avoided
-the posts. The clerks in charge did not even know that the half-breed had
-been in the neighborhood until the lads brought the news. The man at the
-Company post listened gravely to the story, but was inclined to blame Mr.
-Perier for leaving Fort Douglas.
-
-"Why didn't the Swiss stay where he was?" he asked impatiently. "He was
-better off there than he will be here. What did he want to come to
-Pembina now for? He will only have to go back again with the rest of the
-colonists in a few weeks. It will soon be time to break ground and sow
-crops."
-
-To this Walter had no good answer, for he himself did not understand just
-why Mr. Perier had decided so suddenly to make the change. Not until
-night, after Madame Brabant and the girls were in bed in the main room
-and Walter lay beside his master on a skin cot in the lean-to, did the
-boy learn the real reason for the journey to Pembina.
-
-"Sergeant Kolbach turned us out," said Mr. Perier.
-
-"What?" exclaimed Walter. "I thought he had been so kind to you."
-
-"He was until recently, but he and I had a disagreement. He asked me for
-Elise's hand in marriage."
-
-"Why she is a mere child!" Walter was both surprised and distressed.
-
-"So I told him. I said she was far too young to marry. He replied that
-she was old enough to cook his meals and keep his house, and that was
-what he wanted a wife for."
-
-Walter grunted angrily.
-
-"It is true," Mr. Perier went on, "that some of our girls not much older
-have married since coming to the Colony. You know the Company encouraged
-young women to come over because wives were needed in the settlement,
-especially by the DeMeurons. But Elise came to be with me, and I have
-other plans for her. She shall not marry Kolbach or any other, now or ten
-years from now, unless he is the right kind of a man and she wants him."
-
-"I hope she'll never want a DeMeuron." The thought of his little sister
-married to one of that wild crew horrified Walter.
-
-"I hope not indeed," agreed the father. "I would prefer one of our own
-people for her; when she is several years older of course." He paused a
-moment then went on. "Elise never liked Kolbach. Even though he was kind
-to us and she felt she ought to be grateful, she disliked him and was a
-little afraid of him. I could see it. If I had dreamed that he had any
-such idea in his head, I would not have stayed in his house a day."
-
-"Does she know he wants to marry her?" Walter inquired.
-
-"I think not. I told him I would not consent to his speaking to her. He
-declared he would do as he thought best about that, but he has had no
-chance. We left his house that very day."
-
-"Did he really turn you out?"
-
-"It amounted to that. He was angry at my refusal to consider his suit. He
-said he was willing to wait a year, if, at Easter, Elise was formally
-betrothed to him. When I would consent to no betrothal, he said that we
-could not stay in his house longer unless she was promised to him. I have
-been working at the buffalo cloth mill, and have been paying him what I
-could for our lodging, and Elise has done all the housework. Yet he spoke
-as if we were beggars. I answered that we had no wish to remain in his
-house. We went to a neighbor,--Marianne Scheidecker she was before she
-married. I told her, as I told Elise, that Kolbach and I had quarreled.
-The next day I found Murray and hired him to bring us here."
-
-"Do you suppose Kolbach could have put him up to deserting you?" Walter
-questioned suspiciously.
-
-"Oh no. I doubt if Kolbach knew we were going. The Sergeant would not do
-such a thing, however angry he might be. He is a rough, domineering man,
-but not bad at heart. No, no, he wouldn't be capable of anything like
-that. In his way he is really fond of Elise. I think he would be as kind
-to her as he knows how to be, but he is not good enough for her, and she
-is far too young."
-
-"She certainly is," Walter agreed emphatically.
-
-It would be years yet before little Elise need think of such things, the
-boy decided. Then perhaps he would have something to say about the
-matter. The idea had never occurred to him before, but why should he not
-marry Elise himself some day? What other girl was there in the new land
-or the old to equal her? Of course it would be years from now, but in the
-meantime he must keep guard over her and see that no DeMeuron, or
-Scotchman, or French _bois brule_ tried to take her away. None of them
-should bother Elise if he could help it, and he thought he could. It was
-with a new and not unpleasing sense of responsibility that, the boy fell
-asleep that night.
-
-
-
-
- XXVIII
- THE LAND TO THE SOUTH
-
-
-Pembina seethed with indignation when the Periers' story was told. The
-Swiss, who were all undergoing their share of suffering, sympathized
-warmly with their country folk. Though still prejudiced against the new
-colonists, the Scotch and Irish settlers had nothing but condemnation for
-the rascally half-breed Murray. Many of the _bois brules_ of Pembina had
-bitterly opposed the Selkirk settlement, and some had joined with the
-Northwesters in driving out the colonists. Since the union of the two
-companies, however, most of the enmity had evaporated. Walter had
-received only the kindest treatment from the French mixed bloods. Now
-there was not one to defend Murray in his heartless desertion of helpless
-travelers. So strong was the feeling against the treacherous voyageur
-that if he had been in Pembina when the Periers arrived, he would
-scarcely have escaped with his life. Though he had been gone several
-hours, a party of armed men went out to search for him. Uncertain whether
-he had told the truth when he had said he was going up river, they
-scoured the country for miles to the east and west as well as to the
-south. They did not overtake him. He had too long a start.
-
-Murray was not well known in Pembina. He had never lived there nor at St.
-Boniface. No one in either settlement knew much about him. The spring
-after the killing of Governor Semple, the tall voyageur had come down the
-Assiniboine from the west with a brigade transporting furs to York
-Factory, and had remained in Hudson Bay service. It was said at that time
-that he was the son of a free trader of mixed Scotch and Cree blood. The
-elder Murray had wandered far,--so it was said,--and had taken a wife
-from among the western Sioux. If this story was true, Murray could not be
-more than one quarter white and was at least half Sioux. The Indian blood
-in the Pembina half-breeds was chiefly Ojibwa and Cree. The Sioux were
-the traditional enemies of the Ojibwas and the Crees. To the people of
-Pembina Murray's Sioux blood did not endear him. There was not a man to
-find excuse for behavior of which few full-blooded Sioux would have been
-guilty.
-
-It was some time before the Perier family recovered from their terrible
-experience. The frost bites Elise and Max had suffered were so severe
-that the outer skin of their cheeks, noses, hands, and feet peeled off in
-patches, leaving sore, tender spots. Their father was in a far worse
-condition. His feet and ankles, his right hand and arm, were badly
-swollen and inflamed and very painful. It was weeks before he was able to
-walk or to use his right hand. Had the boys failed to give him prompt
-treatment when they first found him he would have frozen to death.
-Realizing what might have happened if they had camped on the prairie that
-night, instead of pushing on to the river, Walter felt that he and his
-companions had indeed been guided to the rescue.
-
-The little settlement had passed through hard days while the three boys
-were in the hills. Food had been very scanty. The buffalo had been far
-away, and following them in the deep snow next to impossible. Other game
-had been exceedingly scarce. Even the nets set under the ice of the two
-rivers had yielded little. The _bois brules_ and the older settlers had
-fared better than the Swiss. Though the rations had been slender, neither
-the Brabants nor the MacKays had been entirely without food. The Swiss
-had suffered severely. Johan Scheidecker told Walter that at one time his
-family had not had a morsel to eat for three days. At Fort Douglas
-conditions had been even worse than at Pembina. By February most of the
-settlers were on an allowance of a pint of wheat or barley a day, which
-they ground in hand mills or mortars. Soup made from the grain and an
-occasional fish were all they had for weeks at a time. Though their fare
-had been meager enough, the Periers, in Sergeant Kolbach's care, had
-fared better than many of their country folk. They had never been quite
-without food.
-
-With the coming of spring matters improved at Pembina. When the ice in
-the rivers began to break up, wild fowl arrived in great flocks. Almost
-every night they could be heard passing over. By day they alighted to
-feed along the rivers and in the marshes. Every man able to walk, every
-boy large enough to carry a gun, shoot an arrow, or set a snare, and many
-of the women and girls, hunted from daylight till dark for ducks, geese,
-swans, pelicans, cranes, pigeons, any and every bird, large or small,
-that could be eaten. The buffalo also were drawing nearer the settlement.
-Following the herds over the wet, sodden prairie was difficult, even on
-horseback, but a skilful hunter brought down a cow or calf now and then.
-The lucky men shared generously with their neighbors.
-
-Louis and Walter had no time for long hunting trips. Both had obtained
-temporary employment at the Company post. Indian and half-breed hunters
-were bringing in the winter's catch, and the two boys were engaged to
-help with the cleaning, sorting, and packing of the pelts.
-
-The post was a busy and a merry place those spring days. The men worked
-rapidly and well, but found plenty of time for joking, laughing, singing,
-and challenging one another to feats of strength and agility. After the
-cold and hardships of the winter, the spring fur-packing was a season of
-jollity for the voyageurs. Walter and Louis enjoyed the bustle and
-merriment, while they worked with a will.
-
-The skins were thoroughly shaken and beaten to free them from dust and
-dried mud. Then they were sorted, folded to convenient size, and pressed
-into packs by means of a wooden lever press that stood in the post
-courtyard. Each bundle,--about ninety pounds weight,--of assorted furs
-was wrapped in a strong hide. In every package was a slip of paper with a
-list of the contents. To the outside was attached a wooden stave, with
-the number and weight of the pack, and the name of the post. The numbers
-and lettering were burned into the wood. Because he wrote a good hand,
-Walter was able to help the overworked clerk with these invoices and
-labels. He did a share of the harder physical work as well.
-
-The Swiss boy was heartily glad of employment. His wages, in Hudson Bay
-Company paper money, were exchanged for food and ammunition, and clothes
-for Elise, Max and himself. The Periers needed his help sorely. They had
-reached Pembina destitute. When they had left Switzerland, they had been
-well supplied with clothing. They had also brought with them the
-apothecary's herbs and powders and such household goods as they were
-permitted to take aboard ship. In the crowded open boat in which they had
-come from Fort York, there had not been room for all their belongings, so
-some had been left behind. Nearly everything else had been lost in the
-wreck on Lake Winnipeg. The little that remained had been on the toboggan
-that Murray had run away with. Every cent of Mr. Perier's money, as well
-as the Hudson Bay paper he had received for his work at the buffalo wool
-factory, had gone for food and other expenses during the winter. Even his
-silver watch and chain he had turned over to Murray. Father and children
-had nothing left but the worn clothes they were wearing, two blankets,
-and the few packets of medicinal plant seeds the apothecary carried in
-his pockets. He must begin all over again, and on credit at that.
-
-Mrs. Brabant's sympathy for the unfortunate family was genuine and warm.
-They crowded her house to overflowing, but she would not hear of their
-going elsewhere. Indeed there was no other place for them to go but Fort
-Daer, and the fort was too well filled for comfort. It was hardly worth
-while to attempt building a new cabin, if they were to return to the
-Selkirk settlement in a few weeks.
-
-Were they going to return to the settlement? That was the question that
-troubled Mr. Perier and Walter. It led to many debates, as the two
-families sat around the fire after the evening meal. There was that
-hundred acres of land to be considered. A vast estate it seemed to the
-Swiss apothecary. The promise of that great tract of land had dazzled him
-when he first talked with Captain Mai in Geneva. Since his coming to the
-new country, however, the hundred acres of unbroken prairie had grown
-less alluring. He had learned that not one of the older colonists had
-been able to cultivate more than a few acres. He had no farming tools and
-he could obtain nothing but hoe and spade at the Colony store. There was
-not a plough to be bought for credit or cash. Breaking tough prairie sod
-with hoe and spade would be slow and painful toil for Walter and himself.
-
-Because of the depredations of the locusts, seed grain was very scarce.
-The little Mr. Perier might buy would be high in price. From his first
-crop he would have to pay for seed as well as rent for the land. If he
-did not succeed in raising a crop, if the grasshoppers came again and
-destroyed it, he would be far in debt to the Colony, with no immediate
-hope of getting out. Already he had learned to his cost that prices were
-high at the Colony store, and that bills were sometimes rendered for
-things that had not been bought. In the end he might easily lose his land
-and have nothing to show for his labor. The prospect was not bright.
-Hopeful though he was by nature, he doubted his ability to make a success
-of farming under such discouraging conditions.
-
-Walter was strongly against returning to Fort Douglas. It would be better
-to remain where they were, he argued, and trust to making a living, as
-the _bois brules_ did, by hunting, fishing, and planting a small garden.
-Perhaps the Company would let Mr. Perier have his hundred acres in the
-neighborhood of Pembina. Both Louis and Jean Lajimoniere,--who was
-consulted,--shook their heads at the latter suggestion. Pembina was
-included in Lord Selkirk's grant, but the real Colony was established at
-and near Fort Douglas. It was there that the land was allotted. They
-thought it unlikely that Mr. Perier could obtain his anywhere else. In
-any case there would be the same difficulty about tools, seed, supplies,
-and rent. And so the argument went on.
-
-In the meantime spring had come in earnest. The ice was gone from the
-rivers. Birds were nesting in the woods, in the marshes, and on the
-prairie, according to their habit. As the rivers subsided from flood
-stage, fishing was resumed and yielded good results. The snow had melted
-from the prairie, though it still lingered in shaded places in the woods
-and along the river banks. The burned stretches showed new green. The sun
-was drying up the excess of moisture that had turned the prairie into
-ponds and spongy expanses and had converted the rambling paths and cart
-tracks of Pembina into sticky mud.
-
-In May the old colonists and most of the new began to prepare for the
-return to Fort Douglas. Still Mr. Perier and Walter were undecided. At
-last they came to a decision suddenly and almost by accident. Through
-Lajimoniere, Mr. Perier met a man named St. Antoine who had traveled more
-widely than most of the Pembina mixed bloods. Two years before, he had
-been far to the south and east with Laidlaw, the Colony superintendent of
-farming, when the latter had gone to Prairie du Chien on the Mississippi
-River for seed grain. St. Antoine had many tales to tell of the country
-along the Mississippi and the St. Peter rivers.
-
-"That is a fine land," he told Mr. Perier, "a land with hills and
-forests,--not flat and bare like this, though there is open country there
-too, good land for farming. At Prairie du Chien now, there the soil is
-rich and the crops grow well and ripen. It is not so cold as here. The
-spring comes earlier and the frost later."
-
-"Are there grasshoppers there?" Mr. Perier inquired.
-
-"The kind that eat up everything? No, no. Those grasshoppers have never
-been seen in that country, the people say. And where the two rivers come
-together, where the Americans are building a fort, it is beautiful there,
-with high hills and bluffs like mountains, and woods and waterfalls."
-
-Mr. Perier's brown eyes were wistful. St. Antoine's description sounded
-good to a Swiss homesick for his mountains. "How does one go to that
-country?" he asked. "Can land be bought or rented?"
-
-"Oh," replied St. Antoine confidently, "you do not have to buy or rent
-it, that land. There is no Hudson Bay Company to say where you shall live
-and where you shall not, and to charge you so many bushels of wheat a
-year. You find a place that you like and you build a house and plant your
-crops and it is yours. That is the way folk do on the east side of the
-Riviere Mississippi. On the west side the American government does not
-want people to settle. That is Indian country. You may live there if you
-are a trader. But there is plenty of land on the east side, fine land
-too. Some time I am going back there to stay,--when I get old and want to
-settle down."
-
-St. Antoine's tales took hold of Mr. Perier's imagination. The more he
-thought of that country to the south and east, the more he wanted to go
-there, and the less he wanted to return to Fort Douglas. He told Walter
-and Louis, and they too talked to St. Antoine, who fired their
-imaginations as he had fired the older man's. It did not take Walter long
-to decide what he wanted to do. The question was how were they to get to
-the Mississippi. It would be a long journey, hundreds of miles, by cart
-and horseback through the country of the Sioux. But it could be done of
-course. It had been done a number of times. The previous summer's threats
-of trouble with the Sioux had come to nothing. Yet the trip might be a
-dangerous one for a small party. At this point Louis had a suggestion to
-offer.
-
-"The summer buffalo hunt will start in June," he said. "It will go far to
-the south, perhaps near to the Lake Traverse. We can travel with the
-hunters at first. When we are near Lake Traverse,--or if the hunters go
-too far to the west,--we can leave them and make haste to the lake. There
-is a trading post there, so St. Antoine says, and another at the Lake Big
-Stone. Traders go back and forth along the Riviere St. Pierre to the
-Mississippi. There will surely be some party we can travel with."
-
-"You will go too, Louis?" Walter asked eagerly.
-
-"But _certainment_. Do you think I would let you and M'sieu Perier and
-Ma'amselle Elise and the little Max go alone? No, no, I want to see that
-country too. And I think Neil MacKay will go also."
-
-"His people would never let him."
-
-"I am not so sure of that. M'sieu MacKay is not well pleased with the
-Selkirk Colony. He says if the grasshoppers come again, he will go
-somewhere else. I think he would not object to Neil's going to see that
-country to the south."
-
-So, gradually, the plan took shape. It was Mrs. Brabant who made the
-strongest objections at first. But when Mr. Perier and Walter finally
-decided to go, and Louis insisted on going with them, she suddenly made
-up her mind, much to Raoul's delight, that she and the children would go
-along. "And if we like that country, Louis," she said, "we will stay. It
-may be there will be a better chance for you there. If we do not like it,
-we can come back when some party comes this way."
-
-Neil proved eager to go. After some argument, he got his father's
-consent, with the provision that he was to return to the Red River colony
-at the first opportunity, before winter if possible. He must learn all he
-could about that Mississippi country, his father said. If the crops
-should fail again, it might be that the MacKay family would have to leave
-the Red River for good. The Northwesters could not drive the stubborn
-Scot to give up his land, but against the locusts he could not contend
-forever.
-
-
-
-
- XXIX
- THE COMING OF THE SIOUX
-
-
-Early in May the Perier family said good-bye to their countryfolk who
-were returning to Fort Douglas. Some of the Swiss tried to dissuade Mr.
-Perier from going farther into the interior. Others talked of following
-later if things did not turn out well in the Colony.
-
-A short time after the Swiss left, something happened that threatened to
-upset all Mr. Perier's plans. A party of men returning from a buffalo
-hunt brought disquieting news. They had met an Ojibwa scout who had told
-them that a large body of Sioux were on the march towards the settlement.
-Remembering the unfortunate affair at Fort Douglas the summer before, the
-people of Pembina feared the worst. Scouts were sent out to watch for the
-Sioux, guns were overhauled, and bullets moulded.
-
-In the midst of the preparations for defence, two boats arrived from down
-river, bringing reenforcements. Rumors of the approach of the Sioux had
-reached the Governor, and he had sent a detachment of DeMeurons and
-voyageurs to meet the Indians and prevent them from going on to Fort
-Douglas. The Sioux were to be stopped by diplomatic methods if possible.
-Force was to be used only in case of necessity. With the party were
-Sergeant Kolbach and the Rev. Mr. West, the man who had befriended the
-Periers when their boat was wrecked on Lake Winnipeg. The clergyman
-greeted Mr. Perier cordially, but Kolbach favored his former guest with
-the stiffest and slightest of nods. Walter looked in vain for the
-red-faced DeMeuron with the sandy beard. Inquiry brought the information
-that Fritz Kolbach was not among the soldiers. Fritz was not in favor
-with the Company just then, having been accused of free trading with the
-Assiniboins, one DeMeuron told Walter.
-
-The relief force arrived on Friday, and Saturday passed without alarm.
-Sunday morning Mr. West held service at Fort Daer, and the Periers and
-Walter attended. Just at the close of the service scouts came hurrying in
-with word that the Sioux were approaching. Armed men began to gather at
-the fort, the plan being to make so strong a showing that the Indians
-would not dare attack. The women and children were to stay north of the
-Pembina, where carts and boats were in readiness to carry them to Fort
-Douglas if there should be trouble.
-
-Walter took Elise and Max across the river to join Mrs. Brabant. Then he
-returned to Fort Daer where he found Louis just arrived. The MacKays had
-gone to Kildonan with other colonists who had wintered at Pembina. In
-June Neil was to return to go south with his friends.
-
-"They are in sight," shouted a man who was watching from the roof of one
-of the buildings.
-
-The fort gates stood open, for the Company officers intended to maintain
-a friendly attitude as long as possible. With others, Louis and Walter
-ran out to watch the coming of the Indians. There they were, a band of
-mounted men approaching across the prairie from the south. Walter's heart
-beat fast, but he was surprised to find that he was excited and eager
-rather than frightened.
-
-"There are no _travois_, only mounted men, no women," St. Antoine
-remarked. "That looks bad. Yet they come openly, in the daytime. They
-raise no war cry. But we cannot tell. The Dakota are treacherous." He
-used the name by which the Indians of the prairies called
-themselves--Dakota. It was their enemies, the Ojibwa, who named them
-Sioux.
-
-The Indians came on at an easy pace until they were a few hundred yards
-from the fort. There they halted, as if waiting to see how they were to
-be received. A small group of white men, among them Mr. West, went out on
-foot to meet the strangers. Suddenly, out from the fort gate darted a
-slender, bronze figure, a young Indian stripped naked and without
-weapons. Straight towards the Sioux he ran full speed.
-
-"He has gone crazy," gasped Walter. "They will kill him." He knew the
-fellow, an Ojibwa hunter who had recently brought his furs to the post.
-
-"He does it to prove his courage, to show that he is not afraid of the
-Sioux," explained Louis. "But what use is it to a man to be called brave,
-after he is dead?"
-
-As the young Indian drew near the enemies of his people, Walter held his
-breath, expecting every moment that a shower of musket balls or a cloud
-of arrows would put an end to the rash Ojibwa. But nothing happened.
-Whether from admiration for his reckless bravery or because they scorned
-to kill an enemy so easily, the Sioux let him come on uninjured. When he
-was almost up to them he paused, stood still for a moment, then turned
-and walked back towards the white men.
-
-How would the party from Fort Daer be received? Was it to be peace or
-war? In silence, every nerve tense, the watchers waited to learn. The
-white men drew closer and closer, without pause or hesitation. The
-Indians were dismounting. The two parties were mingling. They were coming
-towards the fort, together. Only a few of the Sioux remained behind to
-watch the horses. Walter drew a long breath.
-
-The Sioux were conducted straight to the open gates. They were to be
-treated as guests. This was Walter's first glimpse of Sioux. He looked on
-with keen interest as they were ushered into the fort. They were manly
-looking fellows, these Dakotas. Most of them were rather tall, taller
-than the majority of the _bois brules_. They were straight and slender,
-lithe and wiry rather than muscular in appearance. Their faces were
-intelligent for the most part, strong featured, and with a look of pride
-and fierceness very different from the stupid expression of the Crees he
-had seen at Fort York. All wore fringed leggings and moccasins. The
-bodies of some were bare to the waist, while others were clothed in
-shirts of deerskin or calico, or wrapped in blankets or buffalo robes.
-Their black hair, adorned with feathers, hung in braids over their
-shoulders. Every face and bare body was hideous with paint, in streaks,
-patches, spots, circles, and zigzags, the favorite colors being red,
-yellow, and black. They were all tricked out in their best finery,
-beadwork, quill embroidery, necklaces of animals' teeth or birds' claws,
-and trinkets bought from the traders.
-
-The Sioux proved restless and uncomfortable visitors. They pried into
-every corner of the fort. They appeared to be suspicious and acted as if
-they were looking for trouble. The Company officers fed them and treated
-them to tea, tobacco, and some liquor. That was a dangerous thing to do,
-Walter thought, to give them liquor, for all were armed with guns, bows,
-knives, or tomahawks. But the refusal to give them drink might have been
-taken as an insult. The Chief insisted on crossing the river to the
-Company fort, and the trader in charge thought it best to let him go. But
-he managed things so that only a few of Chief Waneta's followers
-accompanied him. As soon as possible they were conducted back to Fort
-Daer.
-
-All the rest of that day the Sioux lingered at Fort Daer. When night came
-they showed no intention of leaving. They had brought nothing to trade,
-but they expected all sorts of gifts. Most of the _bois brules_ had gone
-back to their families, but Mr. Perier and Walter were allowed to remain
-at the fort with Mr. West. It was a night of anxiety and alarms. Drink
-had made the savage guests touchy and quarrelsome. Several times shots
-were fired in threat or sport, but luckily no one was hurt. The arrival
-of three Assiniboins, who said they had come to smoke the peace pipe with
-their ancient enemies, did not help matters any.
-
-About eleven o'clock shouts and war whoops from outside the walls roused
-everyone. Thinking that the attack had begun, Mr. Perier and Walter
-rushed out of the house where they had withdrawn to keep out of the way
-of quarrelsome Indians. They found that the Sioux, instead of attacking,
-were leaving the fort in haste. There had been a fight between a Dakota
-and an Assiniboin. The Dakota had shot the Assiniboin and scalped him,
-the fallen man's two companions had fled, and some of the Sioux had
-started in pursuit.
-
-Chief Waneta had been overbearing and truculent enough himself, but he
-apparently did not want a general fight. Waneta was no fool. He probably
-realized that the white men and _bois brules_ of Pembina were too strong
-for him in numbers and too well prepared for trouble. With unexpected
-promptness he gathered his followers together, and started for home.
-Before midnight the whole band had disappeared in the darkness, riding
-south.
-
-
-
-
- XXX
- WITH THE BUFFALO HUNTERS
-
-
-If the visit of the Sioux had resulted in hostilities, Mr. Perier would
-have been forced to give up the trip to the Mississippi. As it was, the
-fact that the only hostile act committed had been against the
-Assiniboins, and that Waneta and his braves had departed at peace with
-the white men, went far to convince the Swiss that his little party would
-have no trouble with the Indians unless they sought it. Louis did not
-wholly agree with that idea, but he was young, eager for travel and
-adventure, and willing to take what seemed a rather remote risk. His
-mother was more doubtful, but if the others were going, she did not
-intend to stay behind. At first Elise had dreaded a new journey into
-strange country, but when Mrs. Brabant decided to go, she no longer felt
-afraid. She did not want to return to Fort Douglas, and she had grown
-very fond of Mrs. Brabant.
-
-Already the _bois brules_ of Pembina were growing restless. The coming of
-spring had stirred the wild blood in them. They were eager to be up and
-away. Those who had not taken service with the Company to go as voyageurs
-to Fort York, neglected their primitive gardening to prepare for the
-great buffalo hunt. They mended harness, repaired old carts by binding
-the broken parts with rawhide, patched hide and canvas tents, cleaned
-guns, moulded bullets, made stout new moccasins, packed their wooden
-chests, and overhauled gear of all kinds. The ground around every cabin
-was strewn with odds and ends.
-
-On the first day of June Neil arrived full of enthusiasm, and the little
-party was complete. A spot on the open prairie to the southwest of the
-junction of the two rivers had been chosen as a gathering place for the
-hunters. Early in the morning of the appointed day, the people began to
-leave the settlement. Most of the hunters were taking their entire
-families along. The clumsy, squeaking, two-wheeled carts, drawn by wiry
-ponies, were crowded with black-haired, dark-skinned women and children
-or piled high with household gear and equipment. Louis' one horse and
-cart were not enough for the Brabant-Perier party, so he and Walter had
-built another vehicle. Neil furnished two ponies, and Louis had traded
-his toboggan and Gray Wolf for a fourth. Askime was to go with him. He
-would not part with the husky dog.
-
-At the women's suggestion, the Brabant, Perier, and Lajimoniere families
-selected a spot a little distance from the main camp. There they
-unhitched their ponies, and stretched their tent covers from cart to
-cart.
-
-"There will be much drinking in the camp to-night," Louis explained to
-Mr. Perier, "to celebrate the beginning of the hunt, and much noise and
-gaming, and probably fighting. Since we do not wish to take part in all
-that, we will camp by ourselves. This is a better place for the women and
-children."
-
-The wisdom of this plan soon became evident. Long before midnight the big
-camp had grown uproarious. When an unusually loud outburst of noise was
-followed by the sound of shots and frantic yelling, Mr. Perier raised
-himself on his elbow to listen. He was sleeping on the ground underneath
-one of the carts.
-
-"I'm afraid we have made a mistake," he said anxiously to Walter lying
-next him. "We cannot travel with that wild crew. It will not be safe for
-the children."
-
-Louis, on the other side, overheard the words, and hastened to reassure
-the Swiss. "You need not fear, M'sieu Perier. They will be all right
-after the liquor is gone. I think they will finish it to-night. They
-cannot get more till they return. Our people are seldom quarrelsome
-except when they have liquor. Once the hunt makes a start, the leaders
-will keep good order. The rules are very strict. They are rough and wild,
-my people, but they are not unkind. Ma'amselle Elise and my little
-sisters will be quite safe."
-
-The hilarity continued through most of the night, but before sunrise
-quiet had descended on the circle of carts and tents. Flasks and kegs
-were empty, and most of the roisterers were sleeping. They remained in
-camp all that day. By the time the caravan was in motion the following
-morning, all were sober and more than ordinarily quiet. Some had good
-reason to be morose, having gambled away their guns, horses, and carts
-while under the influence of liquor. Several had received knife or
-gunshot wounds in the quarrels that resulted.
-
-"It is always so that the hunt begins," said the Canadian Lajimoniere,
-with a shake of his head. "Liquor and gambling, they are the twin curses
-of the _bois brule_. Those two things are the cause of most of his
-troubles."
-
-It was surprising how quickly camp was broken and the long train got
-under way at the cries of "_Marche donc!_" The guide rode ahead. His
-household cart, following close behind, bore a flag made of a red
-handkerchief attached to a pole. The lowering of that flag was the signal
-to stop and make camp.
-
-In single file the long line of creaking, jouncing carts stretched far
-across the prairie. Where a man had to drive two or more vehicles, he
-tied one horse to the tail of the cart ahead. Loose ponies for buffalo
-hunting or to replace those in the shafts, ran alongside. Most of the men
-and some of the women rode horseback or went afoot, while the children
-were now in, now out of the carts, according to their inclination. The
-bright colors of the _bois brules'_ dress, and the red and yellow ochre
-with which many of the carts were painted, gave a gay appearance to the
-cavalcade, but the screeching and groaning of the ungreased axles was
-anything but a merry sound. The discordant rasping and squawking tortured
-Elise's ears and set her teeth on edge.
-
-Because they had camped separately, the Brabant-Perier party was at the
-very end of the train. Mr. Perier was mounted on one of the four horses,
-while Walter, Neil, and the two Brabant boys took turns riding another.
-Most of the time Louis walked beside the front cart or sat on the shafts,
-one of the other boys accompanying the second. Mrs. Brabant, her two
-daughters, Elise, and Max rode in the carts, getting down now and then to
-walk for a while. The rate of travel was slow, less than twelve miles
-being made the first day. Thereafter the day's march averaged nearly
-twenty.
-
-It was with some apprehension that Mr. Perier watched Louis and Neil
-wheel the two carts into the place assigned them in the circle that
-night. Walter, who had lived longer among the _bois brules_, was less
-troubled. Louis had assured him that everything would be all right, and
-Walter did not doubt his friend's judgment. Everything, but the
-mosquitoes, was all right, that night and every night that the Brabants
-and Periers camped with the hunt. Rough and noisy the hunters and their
-families were, but good natured and kindly enough. They shouted, laughed,
-and sang, fiddled and danced, told stories, played cards and other games
-by the light of their fires, but there was little quarreling and no
-fighting. Within two hours after sunset, all had settled down for the
-night, and the camp lay quiet and sleeping.
-
-The sun rose early those June mornings, but before it appeared above the
-horizon, the camp was astir. In an astonishingly short time the train was
-in motion again. The route was to the west of the Red River in what is
-now North Dakota. There were swampy stretches to cross, still wet enough
-to make traveling difficult, then drier ground and better going. On every
-side lay flat, open country, broken here and there by small groves or
-thin lines of trees along the streams. The prairie was green with new
-grass, and dotted everywhere with the pink and white and yellow and blue
-of wild flowers growing singly or in masses. Elise and the Brabant and
-Lajimoniere girls delighted in picking the sweet, pale pink wild roses
-and decorating themselves and the carts. Mrs. Brabant warned them to look
-out for snakes and Louis armed each with a stout stick. At the warning
-rattle, Marie Brabant and Reine Lajimoniere would search for the snake
-and kill it. But little Jeanne and Elise, who had not grown used to
-prairie rattlesnakes, ran back to the carts in fright.
-
-Snakes were not plentiful, however. Far more troublesome were the
-mosquitoes that rose in clouds after the sun went down. On still nights
-the buzzing, stinging insects were a continual torment. Smudges were
-kindled everywhere within the circle of carts, but Elise and Max could
-find little choice between the stinging pests and the choking smoke.
-
-Mr. Perier and Walter marveled at the control the leaders of the hunt
-exercised over the wild crew. The hunters had chosen a chief and several
-captains, who formed a governing council, and each captain had a number
-of men under him to act as guards and police. When the guide lowered his
-flag, every cart took the place assigned it in the circle, shafts
-outward. The captain and men on duty were responsible for the order and
-good behavior, as well as the safety, of the camp.
-
-The rules adopted by the council were much the same on all the hunts.
-Scouts were sent out each day to look for buffalo, but must not frighten
-them. No one was allowed to separate from, or lag behind the main party
-without permission, or to hunt buffalo independently. The most serious
-offences were thievery and fighting with guns or knives. Punishments
-ranged from cutting up a man's bridle or saddle, if he had one, to
-driving the guilty person from camp. Knowing that the penalty would be
-swift and severe, even the boldest seldom ventured to break the laws.
-
-For several days no buffalo but a few scattered individuals were seen.
-When the beasts caught scent or sound of the caravan, they were off at an
-awkward gallop. They seemed to move slowly, but really made good speed.
-It was Elise's first sight of live buffalo, and she thought them very
-ugly creatures, with their great shaggy heads and clumsy movements.
-
-Late one afternoon the line of carts wound down the bank of the Turtle
-River to a ford. Long before the rear of the caravan reached the stream,
-exciting news had been carried back from mouth to mouth.
-
-"There are buffalo ahead," one of the Lajimoniere boys called to Neil,
-who was driving the first of the Brabant-Perier carts. "A great band has
-been across the ford, and not long ago, they say."
-
-A great band it must have been. The hunting party had left a plain and
-well-trodden trail down the bank, and roiled, muddy water at the
-crossing. But no cart-train running wild could have so ravaged the
-country. Far on either side of the ford, the willows and bushes were torn
-and trampled. From many of the trees the bark was rubbed off or hanging
-in shreds. The grass was worn away. The mud along the margin was trodden
-hard by thousands of hoofs. The devastation was fresh.
-
-Would the hunters chase the buffalo that night? Walter hoped so, though
-the sun was setting when the last cart crossed the ford. The chief of the
-hunt said no, however. Any attempt to pursue buffalo in the darkness
-would probably result merely in frightening them away. Moreover the
-horses, even those that had been running loose, were weary from a
-twenty-mile march. Real buffalo country had been reached. If the hunters
-missed this particular band, there would be others.
-
-So camp was made as usual, but the horses were picketed within the
-circle, instead of being hobbled and turned loose to feed. Time would be
-saved by having the mounts handy in the morning. There was another reason
-for keeping close watch of the ponies that night. Where there were
-buffalo there were likely to be Indians. South of the Turtle River was
-debatable ground between Sioux and Ojibwa, and the Sioux were notorious
-horse thieves.
-
-It was plain that the buffalo were not many miles away. All that night
-their lowing and bellowing could be heard almost continuously.
-
-"The country must be full of them," Walter whispered to Neil, as they lay
-side by side.
-
-"Aye, it's a big band. There'll be grand sport in the morning," was the
-sleepy reply.
-
-
-
-
- XXXI
- THE CHARGING BUFFALO
-
-
-Scouts went out at dawn, and were back again before the camp had finished
-breakfasting. Their report made the hunters hasten preparations. Already
-the question as to which ones of the Brabant-Perier party should take
-part in the hunt had been settled. Only two horses were available. Louis'
-new one had gone lame, and one of Neil's was not a good buffalo pony,
-being gun shy and easily frightened. Neither Mr. Perier nor Walter had
-ever hunted buffalo, while Louis and Neil were skilled in the sport. So
-it was right that the latter two should go. Walter was disappointed of
-course. He would have liked to take part in the hunt. But he comforted
-himself with the thought that there would be other opportunities.
-
-The caravan was just south of the Turtle River, a tributary of the Red,
-and a number of miles west of the latter stream, in slightly rolling,
-though open country. A low, irregular ridge shut off the view to the
-south and hid the buffalo. After the hunters got away, the women,
-children, and few men who had remained behind, started on, with the
-carts. They wanted to be in readiness to collect the meat before the hot
-sun spoiled it, and they were eager to watch the sport. This time the
-carts did not move single file, but jounced over the prairie in any order
-their drivers saw fit.
-
-Walter and Raoul were as anxious as anyone for a view of the hunt. They
-hitched up Neil's pony and got away as quickly as possible, leaving Mr.
-Perier and Mrs. Brabant to follow slowly with the other cart and lame
-horse. Elise, Marie, and Max went with the two boys, while Jeanne
-remained with her mother.
-
-The boys' cart was among the first to top the rise. The sight revealed
-almost took Walter's breath away. The prairie beyond the ridge was
-covered with buffalo in a dense, dark mass. They were feeding peacefully,
-moving slowly along towards the southeast.
-
-"Where are the hunters?" asked Walter.
-
-Raoul pointed to the southwest. "Behind those little hills," he said
-confidently. "The wind is east. They have gone around to approach from
-that way, so the beasts will not get their scent. There they come!"
-
-Figures of horsemen were appearing over the top of one of the low hills.
-On they came, a long, irregular line, riding easily down hill at a lope.
-As they reached level ground they broke into a gallop. The buffalo
-nearest the hunters were taking alarm. They were crowding forward, the
-bulls on the outskirts of the herd pawing the ground and tossing their
-great heads. The horsemen broke into a run. They charged recklessly
-across the prairie, regardless of gopher holes. Those _bois brules_ could
-certainly ride, thought Walter in admiration. He wondered whether Louis
-and Neil were among the foremost. At that distance he could not tell.
-
-Suddenly the buffalo everywhere took fright. At a clumsy, galloping gait
-they were away. They crowded, wheeled, milled, stampeded, hoofs flying,
-shaggy heads tossing. In a few moments the foremost of the hunters were
-among them, shouting, yelling, firing, horses plunging and shying. The
-whole mass was in wild commotion, sweeping on towards the low ridge where
-the carts waited and the excited spectators looked on. With the
-thundering of hoofs, the bellowing of the beasts, the shouts and yells of
-the hunters, the continuous popping of guns, the clouds of smoke and dust
-lit up by the flashes of firing, the prairie had become pandemonium.
-
-Never had Walter dreamed of such a sight. His blood was tingling. He
-breathed fast and excitedly. Elise stood beside him, her hands clasped
-tightly together, frightened yet fascinated. Marie and Raoul danced up
-and down, and little Max sat on the edge of the cart and shrieked at the
-top of his voice in his excitement.
-
-The great band was breaking up into smaller droves and groups. In every
-direction they wheeled and fled. The hunters, riding recklessly, swaying
-in their saddles, loading and firing at full speed, pursued them.
-
-One group of six or eight frightened beasts was close by, just at the
-foot of the low ridge. A horseman dashed towards them. Walter had just
-time to recognize that blue-bonneted red head, and then, as Neil fired,
-the little band broke and scattered. One big bull was pounding up the
-slope, straight towards the cart.
-
-Walter was standing on one side, Raoul on the other of the nervous,
-excited pony, which was pawing, snorting, twisting about in the shafts,
-alarmed and uneasy at the sight below. It had not occurred to either boy
-that he would have a chance to do any shooting. Both of the guns were in
-the cart.
-
-When the buffalo charged up the slope, Walter sprang back. As he seized
-his gun, the panic-stricken pony jumped to one side, sending Raoul
-sprawling, wheeled, overturned the cart, and was off. Walter saw Max
-hurtle through the air, and land right in the path of the oncoming
-buffalo. As the child struck the ground, Elise darted towards him.
-
-With shaking fingers Walter slipped a charge of powder and ball into the
-muzzle of his gun and primed it. His whole body was trembling. He must
-not miss. A story Lajimoniere had told of a fight with an infuriated
-buffalo flashed through his mind. "I aimed behind the ear," the Canadian
-had said. Where was the ear in that shaggy mass of hair?
-
-The bull, at the crest of the ridge, paused for an instant to paw the
-ground, shake its huge, ugly head, and bellow defiance at the little
-group in its pathway. Forcing himself to be steady, deliberate, Walter
-pulled the trigger. It pulled hard. The flint struck the steel. Sparks
-flew in every direction. There was a flash, a roar, a bellow. The buffalo
-plunged forward, and went down.
-
-When Walter recovered from the shock of firing--his primitive, flintlock
-musket kicked like a mule--the great, dark, hairy bulk lay almost at his
-feet. Had he hit behind the ear? He would take no chances. The muscles of
-the big body were twitching. Hurriedly reloading, he fired again, the gun
-muzzle almost against the buffalo's head. An instant later there came
-another report. Raoul had picked himself up, seized his gun, that had
-been thrown out of the cart, and fired at the fallen beast. He missed it
-in his excitement, by a wider margin than he missed Walter.
-
-Walter took no heed of the wild shot. His only thought was of Elise and
-Max. He turned to find Elise stooped over her little brother, her arms
-around him. When she realized that the danger was over, she sank down in
-a heap in the grass. Max wriggled from her arms and sat up.
-
-"Elise," cried Walter, "what were you trying to do?"
-
-"Drag Max out of the way," she answered simply. "Didn't you see? That
-terrible beast was coming straight towards him!"
-
-"And straight towards you, too. Didn't you think of that?"
-
-"She is the bravest girl I ever saw," exclaimed Marie Brabant. Marie, who
-had been on the other side of Raoul, had fled to safety, and had not
-returned until the danger was over.
-
-"No, no," Elise protested. "I was terribly frightened when I saw that
-huge, ugly beast coming up the hill. But when Max fell out of the cart, I
-thought he was going to be killed. I have looked after him ever since
-Mother died you know, Walter," she added, as if in excuse for her own
-bravery.
-
-"You are the bravest girl I ever knew," Marie repeated emphatically,
-"even if you are afraid of snakes."
-
-But Elise had turned to her little brother. "You aren't hurt, are you,
-Max?" she asked anxiously.
-
-"Just my shoulder where I fell on it," the lad replied bravely. "I
-think----"
-
-He was interrupted by Neil's shout. Unnoticed by the others, the Scotch
-boy had ridden up the hill. He dismounted beside the dead buffalo.
-
-"It was all my fault," he said contritely. "I ought not to have driven
-the beasts this way. I saw you, but I was after a cow and didn't notice
-that bull turning towards you. I never thought of his charging up hill. I
-didn't know you were in any danger, till I heard the shot and looked up
-here. You've made a good kill, Walter. He's a big fellow. And you
-certainly kept your head. I'm not sure I wouldn't have lost mine, if I
-had been in your place." This was a generous admission from anyone as
-proud of his courage and prowess as Neil MacKay was. At that moment,
-however, Neil was not in the least proud of himself. His carelessness had
-brought peril to his friends.
-
-
-
-
- XXXII
- TO THE SHEYENNE RIVER
-
-
-When Neil went in pursuit of the frightened pony, he found it feeding on
-the prairie grass on the other side of the ridge. Hindered by the cart,
-it had not run far. He had righted the badly wrecked vehicle, and was
-examining the breaks, when the rest of his party, with the other cart and
-the lame pony, came up. Mr. Perier was appalled when he heard of his
-children's peril, and Mrs. Brabant was warm in her praise of the courage
-and coolness of Elise and Walter.
-
-The hunt had swept away towards the Red River, leaving the trampled
-prairie dotted with the dark bodies of the fallen buffalo. Here and there
-a wounded beast struggled to its feet and made off painfully. The sight
-of the injured and slain was not a pleasant one for the tender-hearted
-Elise, and she turned her back upon it.
-
-"I wish," she confided to Mrs. Brabant, "people didn't have to kill
-things for food. I hate buffalo. They are ugly beasts. But I don't like
-to see them killed, except the one that would have killed Max. Of course
-Walter had to shoot that one."
-
-The Canadian woman put an arm around her and comforted her. "It is
-necessary, my dear, for people to have meat to live, especially in this
-wild country where we raise so little from the ground. I have always told
-my boys not to be wasteful in their hunting, not to kill for the sake of
-killing. If no one killed more than could be eaten or kept for food,
-there would always be plenty of animals in the world."
-
-As the carts descended the slope to the hunting ground, the hunters began
-to straggle back from the chase. By the place where the animal lay, the
-spot where the bullet had entered, and sometimes by the bullet itself,
-they identified the game they had slain. Many of the hunters had marked
-their bullets so they would know them.
-
-Neil had killed two buffalo and Louis four. Their party was well supplied
-with meat. The bull Walter had shot was too old and tough for food. At
-that season of the year the skin was not fit for a robe. The summer coat
-of hair was short, and in many places ragged and rubbed off. But Louis
-said that the tough hide was just the thing for new harness. With
-Walter's permission the Canadian boy set to work. With sure and skilful
-strokes of his sharp knife, he marked out the harness on the body of the
-buffalo, and stripped off the pieces. When dry,--with a thong or two in
-place of buckles,--the harness would be ready for use.
-
-One by one the carts returned to camp loaded with meat and hides. Though
-of no use for robes, the short haired summer skins were in the very best
-condition for tanning. Buffalo leather was used by the _bois brules_ for
-tents, cart covers, and other purposes.
-
-The choicest cuts were soon broiling over the coals. At the same time the
-rest of the meat was being prepared for pemmican making. It was cut into
-large lumps, then into thin slices, which were hung on lines in the hot
-sun or placed on scaffolds over slow fires. For the meat drying and
-pemmican making, the hunters prepared to remain in camp three days. It
-was a very busy time, yet a rest from traveling.
-
-The Brabant family and Neil knew just how to go about the work, but the
-Periers and Walter, though willing and ready to help, had to be taught.
-After the buffalo strips were well dried, they were placed on hides and
-pounded with wooden flails or stones until the meat was a thick, flaky
-pulp. In the meantime the fat and suet were melting to liquid in huge
-kettles. Hide bags were half filled with the flaked meat, the melted fat
-poured in, the whole stirred with a long stick until thoroughly mixed,
-and the bags sewed up tight while still hot. So prepared, the pemmican
-would keep for months, even years, if not subjected to dampness or too
-high a temperature.
-
-The skins selected for tanning were stretched and staked down, and the
-flesh scraped off with an iron scraper or a piece of sharp-edged bone.
-When the hides had been well cleaned and partially cured by the sun, they
-were folded and packed away in the carts to receive a final dressing
-later.
-
-On the second day in camp a small body of Indians passed about a mile
-away in pursuit of a herd of buffalo. A half dozen of the hunters, who
-were out scouting, encountered some of the band. They reported that the
-Indians were Sioux, Yankton Dakota from farther west. They appeared
-friendly enough. The hunting party felt no concern about them, except as
-possible horse thieves. The men were especially careful that night to see
-that every pony was safe within the circle of carts. The camp guards were
-even more alert than usual.
-
-There was feasting and jollity, as well as busy work, in the hunting
-camp. The _bois brules_ always had time to fiddle and dance, to play
-games and race their ponies over the prairie. Their capacity for fresh
-meat was enormous. Walter marveled at the quantity of buffalo tongues,
-humps, and ribs consumed. From dawn to dark, it seemed to him, there was
-never a moment when cooking and eating were not going on somewhere in the
-camp. Even the lean dogs grew fat on what was thrown away and what they
-managed to steal. The wild creatures profited, too. The scene of the hunt
-beyond the low ridge was frequented, night and day, by birds of prey and
-wolves.
-
-With high expectations of further sport, the hunters resumed their march
-to the south. They were not disappointed, for they were in true buffalo
-country. The first time Walter joined in the chase, he was so excited and
-confused by the wild ride across the prairie and the charge into the band
-of stampeding beasts, that he could do nothing but cling to his horse and
-try to avoid being thrown or trampled. It was not until the herd had
-scattered and the worst of the wild confusion was over, that he managed
-to get a shot at one of the animals, and missed it. Mortified by his
-failure, he tried a different plan next time. He kept to the outskirts of
-the herd, singled out a young bull, pursued it, and brought it down.
-
-Though some of the hunters, like Louis, killed only what they could use
-and saved as much of the meat as possible, the majority of the _bois
-brules_ were wasteful and improvident. They ran buffalo for the mere
-excitement of the chase, killed for sport, and frequently took nothing
-but the tongue, leaving the rest for the wolves and crows. Like white
-hunters of a later period, they believed the herds of buffalo
-inexhaustible. Yet it did not take many years of unwise slaughter almost
-to exterminate the animals that, during the first half of the nineteenth
-century, roamed the prairies in hundreds of thousands.
-
-Sometimes the hunters had accidents. Men thrown from their horses
-suffered severe sprains and broken bones. Occasionally too heavy a charge
-of powder burst a gun. Raoul's old musket was ruined in this manner. He
-carried his left hand bandaged for weeks, and was lucky to lose no more
-than the tip of his forefinger. There were many maimed hands among the
-hunters. Fortunately none of the injuries was fatal, though one man was
-so badly hurt when he was thrown and trampled that he would never hunt
-again. The _bois brules_ were skilled in the rough and ready treatment of
-wounds, sprains, and broken bones, but not over particular about
-cleanliness. Their open air life, however, helped most of the hurts to
-heal rapidly.
-
-Day after day the caravan made its slow and creaking way to the south.
-Now and then bands of Sioux, out on the summer hunt, were seen. Sometimes
-Indians visited the camp, with no apparent unfriendly intentions. The
-savage blood in the Pembina half-breeds was mostly Cree and Ojibwa. But
-the hunting party was too large and well armed to fear hostility from
-small, wandering bands of Sioux.
-
-Nevertheless the Pembina men had no intention of penetrating too far into
-Sioux country. They did not wish to provoke the tribes to unite against
-them. When camp was made one night on the bank of the Sheyenne River, the
-chief of the hunt announced that they would go south no farther. July had
-come. They had been out nearly four weeks. The carts were well loaded
-with fresh and dried meat, fat, pemmican, and hides. On the morrow they
-would turn, circling to the west a little, and, hunting as they went,
-make their way back to Pembina. They should reach the settlement early in
-August.
-
-This decision meant that if the Brabants and Periers were to go on to the
-St. Peter and Mississippi rivers, they must part company with the
-hunters. That night Mr. Perier and the boys consulted with Lajimoniere,
-St. Antoine, and others who knew something of the country to the south
-and east. Lake Traverse, they were told, was only three or four days'
-march away. At the lake were traders who would doubtless help them on
-their journey.
-
-Some of the hunters shook their heads at the idea of such a small party
-traveling alone sixty or seventy miles across Dakota country. There would
-be grave danger in the attempt, they said, and advised against it. But
-Mr. Perier, Walter, and Louis had not come so far merely to turn back to
-Pembina. They were bound for the Mississippi and intended to reach it
-somehow. They might have hesitated to travel alone farther to the
-southwest, but everyone said that the route to the southeast was less
-dangerous. The Indians who visited Lake Traverse were in the habit of
-dealing with traders.
-
-In truth the hunters had neither seen nor heard sign of trouble anywhere.
-The Indians they had encountered had seemed inoffensive enough. The boys
-had rather lost their awe of the dread Sioux. They were beginning to
-believe that the tales of the fierceness and cruelty of those savages
-were greatly exaggerated. As Neil expressed it, "Most of that sort of
-talk is just an excuse for Saulteur and half-breed cowardice. They have
-made bogies of the Sioux. I can't see that they are different from any
-other Indians. I don't believe they dare molest white men."
-
-The always hopeful Mr. Perier was quite sure there would be no difficulty
-in reaching Traverse. "We are not enemy Indians raiding the Sioux
-country," he argued. "We are peaceable white settlers going about our own
-affairs. Probably we shall meet no Indians at all. If we do, we will
-treat them in a polite and friendly manner. They are reasonable human
-beings just like ourselves. They have no reason to harm us and I don't
-believe they will try to."
-
-"We will take care to avoid them anyway," added Louis, not quite so sure
-of Sioux reasonableness, but eager to go on.
-
-Louis had hoped to persuade some of the hunters to go to Lake Traverse
-with the little party. In fact St. Antoine and another man had half
-promised. But both suddenly changed their minds. The boys could find no
-one else willing to leave the hunt for the trip to the trading post.
-There was nothing to do but go on alone. Before they rolled themselves in
-their blankets, they had decided to part with the hunters on the
-following day.
-
-
-
-
- XXXIII
- A LONELY CAMP
-
-
-The Sheyenne River, where the night's camp was pitched, should not be
-confused with the Cheyenne, which is a tributary of the Missouri. Both
-were named after the same tribe of Indians, who once lived along their
-banks. To distinguish the two, different spellings of the name have been
-adopted. The Sheyenne is a much smaller stream than the Cheyenne, and one
-of the principal rivers that go to form the Red. After a general course
-to the east, the Sheyenne turns north, and runs almost parallel with the
-Red, to fall into it at last. The spot where the hunters were camped was
-only about ten miles from the Red, but another stream, the Wild Rice, lay
-between.
-
-St. Antoine advised against going directly east. "If you go east," he
-said, "you will reach the Riviere Rouge many miles below the Lac
-Traverse. It is more difficult to cross there. I cannot tell you whether
-there is a ford or not. But if you keep to the southeast, reaching the
-river where it is narrow and shallow, you can cross easily. There it is
-not called Riviere Rouge, but Bois des Sioux. A few miles above where the
-Bois des Sioux joins the Ottertail, which comes from the east to form the
-real Riviere Rouge, there is a good crossing place. When you are across,
-turn south and follow the river to the Lac Traverse."
-
-The caravan was slow in getting away that morning. The good-natured _bois
-brules_ lingered to help the Brabant-Perier party across the Sheyenne. At
-some time hunters or traders had built a rude log bridge over the deep,
-muddy stream. Part of the old bridge had been carried away by flood
-waters, but skilled axmen soon repaired it, so that the two carts could
-be taken across.
-
-By the time good-byes were said, last words of advice and warning spoken,
-the river crossed, and the steep bank climbed, the sun had passed its
-highest point. St. Antoine, Lajimoniere, and several others rode with the
-little party through the thick woods that fringed the stream bank. The
-woods passed, St. Antoine carefully pointed out the route. The day was
-clear, and the travelers could see far across the flat, open country.
-
-"You see that _ile des bois_?" questioned St. Antoine, pointing to a tiny
-dark dot far away on the prairie. "That is the only _ile des bois_ for
-many miles around. Make straight for it. You can camp there to-night.
-There is a spring, and wood to boil your kettle. To-morrow go on in the
-same direction, and you will come to the river the Sioux call _Pse_, the
-white men _Folle Avoine_, from the wild rice that grows in its marshes.
-If you keep a straight course you will reach that river near a fording
-place. From there the Bois des Sioux is less than a day's journey. But do
-not try to take your carts across either river until you are sure that
-the water is not too deep or the current too strong. The Bois des Sioux
-is a small stream and has many shallow places. Go then, and the good God
-go with you."
-
-The hunters turned back, waved a last farewell, and disappeared among the
-trees. Louis set his face towards the dark dot far across the prairie.
-"_Marche donc!_" he cried, and slapped his pony's flank, he was riding
-ahead as guide, while Neil and Walter walked beside the carts.
-
-The stretch of flat prairie between the Sheyenne and the Wild Rice looked
-easy to cross. The party expected to make good time, but the very
-flatness of the land proved a hindrance. The poorly drained plain was
-marshy. The grass grew tall and coarse, the soil it sprang from was
-spongy and frequently soft and wet. Stretches of standing water or very
-soft ground, grown thick with marsh grass and cattails, had to be
-skirted. In spite of the travelers' care in picking their way, the cart
-wheels often sank far into the mud and water, and the faithful ponies had
-to pull hard to haul them through. In such places Mrs. Brabant and the
-children got out and walked or rode the two saddle ponies. Most of the
-time Louis or Neil rode ahead to select the route.
-
-The difficult going lengthened the ten or twelve miles to that dark spot
-of woods. Sunset found the party still a mile or more from the _ile des
-bois_. It would be better to go on, they decided, than to camp on the
-wet, open ground, with no wood for a fire, and only stagnant marsh water
-to drink.
-
-Louis and Mr. Perier, with Max in front of him on the saddle, were riding
-in advance. Then came the carts with Mrs. Brabant and the girls, Neil
-beside the first cart, Raoul accompanying the second. Walter plodded
-along in the rear. Turning to look back at the sunset sky, where the reds
-and golds were already fading away, he noticed several dark forms loping
-along the trail through the tall grass. They were prairie wolves.
-
-Walter had often seen wolves following the cart train, cleverly keeping
-just out of musket range, but ready to close in on the remains of any
-game that might be killed. He did not fear the cowardly scavengers. Yet
-now they gave him a strange feeling he had never had when with the long
-caravan. The sight of those wild creatures, shadowy in the twilight,
-following so boldly in the wake of the tiny party, brought to him a
-sudden sense of loneliness and peril such as he had not known before. He
-shivered, though the evening was warm. Then he raised his gun, intending
-to frighten the beasts, even if he could not hit them.
-
-Before he had time to fire, an exclamation from Mrs. Brabant caused him
-to lower his gun and turn towards the cart. Both carts had stopped. A
-hundred feet ahead Louis and Mr. Perier had reined in. Louis jumped from
-his horse and stooped to examine the ground.
-
-"What is it? Why are we stopping?" Walter asked Raoul.
-
-"Louis signaled for a halt. I don't know why."
-
-Moved by curiosity, Walter followed Neil and Raoul to the spot where the
-horsemen had reined in. It did not need the Scotch boy's exclamation or
-Louis' sober face to make Walter understand the seriousness of what they
-had found. They had come upon a trail, a clear, distinct trail. It was
-not the wide, trampled track of a buffalo herd, but the clearly defined,
-narrow trail of horses single file.
-
-"Indians?" asked Walter, though he knew well enough that the question was
-unnecessary.
-
-Neil answered with a grunt of assent. Louis, leading his horse, had gone
-on a little farther. In a moment he turned and summoned the others. He
-had come upon a parallel trail, somewhat wider and more irregular than
-the first and marked with lines resembling wheel tracks, but not so wide
-as those made by the broad-rimmed cart wheels.
-
-"_Travois_," he said briefly. "Heavily loaded."
-
-Walter had heard the word _travois_ before in the sense in which Louis
-used it. It was the name the French Canadians had given to a primitive
-Indian conveyance, two poles lashed to the sides of a horse or dog, the
-front ends resting on the animal's shoulders, the rear ends trailing on
-the ground. Cross pieces were tied on, and a hide or blanket stretched
-between the poles. Travois were loaded with household goods, or carried
-women too old and children too young to walk or ride horseback. The crude
-vehicles were used everywhere by the prairie Indians.
-
-A little farther on was another similar trail, and beyond it a fourth, a
-narrow horse track like the first.
-
-"A whole band," Louis concluded, "women and children and all. When I saw
-that first trail I feared it was a war party of mounted men only."
-
-"They are traveling as if in enemy country," Neil commented, "in four
-lines, instead of single file."
-
-"With the travois and women in the middle, and the braves on the
-outside," added Louis. "Yes, they must be uneasy about something."
-
-"How long ago do you think they passed?" asked Mr. Perier.
-
-"Not many hours. Since last night. It must have been before noon though.
-We could have seen them a long way across the prairie."
-
-"They are far away by now."
-
-"Yes. It is good that we did not make an earlier start."
-
-"And that our trail crosses theirs instead of going the same way," said
-Neil. "We'd better go on as fast as we can to that clump of trees. Our
-camp will be hidden there." Somehow he did not feel quite so sure now
-that Dakotas would not dare to attack white men, especially when the
-white men had horses to be stolen.
-
-Louis climbed on his pony again, and the other boys turned back to bring
-up the carts. They made the best speed they could through the tall grass
-and over the marshy ground, but darkness had settled down before they
-reached the _ile des bois_.
-
-Finding a camping place among the trees, Louis and Walter unhitched and
-unsaddled the horses. Instead of hobbling them and turning them loose to
-feed, they tied the four ponies to trees close to the camp fire, where
-they could browse on tufts of grass, leaves, and twigs. Louis was taking
-no risk of losing them. In the meantime Neil was cutting wood, Raoul had
-kindled a fire, Mr. Perier had brought water from a rather brackish pool,
-and Mrs. Brabant and the girls were preparing supper.
-
-To Walter the seclusion and shelter of the grove came as a relief from
-the open prairie. The cheerful flames of the camp fire lighting up the
-surrounding tree trunks and the cottonwood leaves overhead, the
-appetizing smell of pemmican heating in an iron pan, raised his spirits.
-He forgot the following wolves and the Indian trail. The rest of the
-party also seemed to have forgotten the unpleasant things of the day's
-journey. Elise hummed to herself as she helped Mrs. Brabant with the
-simple meal. Max ran about to find sticks for the fire. Raoul teased
-Marie, as he often did, and she retorted in her usual lively manner.
-Little Jeanne, with the dog Askime beside her, had fallen sound asleep on
-a blanket bed between the carts. She had to be waked when supper was
-ready.
-
-The meal was as cheerful as if the little group had still been part of
-the big hunting party. Yet the loneliness of their situation had its
-effect upon them. Unconsciously they lowered their voices. At the
-slightest sound from beyond the circle of firelight, the stirring of a
-horse, the breaking of a twig, the rustling of a bush, the cry of a night
-bird, everyone glanced quickly around. When a screech owl in a near-by
-tree wailed, they were all startled, then, shamefaced, laughed at
-themselves.
-
-After supper Mr. Perier drew Louis aside. "Do you think we ought to stand
-guard to-night?" he asked in a low voice.
-
-"I think it most wise," Louis replied promptly. "We do not wish our
-horses stolen, if any Indians have seen the smoke of our fire."
-
-Including Raoul, who was quite old enough to do guard duty and would have
-been insulted if anyone had suggested that he was not, there were five
-men in the party. To make up an even number, Mrs. Brabant insisted on
-taking her turn. It was arranged that Walter and Raoul should keep first
-watch, Mr. Perier and Neil second, and Louis and his mother the hours
-just before dawn. Both the latter knew, though they said nothing about
-it, that before dawn was the time danger was most likely to come, if it
-came at all. Mrs. Brabant confessed to Louis that she would not be
-sleeping then anyway, and might just as well be standing guard.
-
-Though they had seen no sign of Indians except the track across the
-prairie, and seemed to be in no real danger, everyone but the two younger
-children slept lightly and uneasily. The beasts seemed to catch their
-masters' uneasiness. Askime, as if personally responsible for the safety
-of the camp, padded back and forth and round about through the grove,
-growling low in his throat sometimes, but never making a loud sound. The
-night was windy, and the mosquitoes were not troublesome, but the ponies
-were restless. They crowded as close to the carts as their lariats would
-permit. Now and then one or another would jump and snort as if in terror.
-Yet the guards could find nothing wrong, no cause of disturbance except
-the howling of a wolf on the prairie or the hooting of a hunting owl.
-
-
-
-
- XXIV
- DANGER
-
-
-The camp was stirring early, and the sheltering grove was soon left
-behind. On every side the prairie, empty and peaceful, stretched away
-into misty distance. The fears and alarms of the night had been
-imaginary.
-
-As on the day before, the route lay over flat, poorly drained, often
-marshy country, where the grass grew tall and rank. By going directly
-east, the travelers might have reached the Wild Rice River in a few
-hours, but far from the place where St. Antoine had advised them to
-cross. Even if they succeeded in crossing, they knew they would lose
-rather than gain time by going that way. If they went straight east they
-would come to the Red River a number of miles below the Ottertail, where
-the Red was much larger and more difficult to ford. St. Antoine had
-explained all that, showing them how, by going southeast, instead of east
-and then south, they would find better fording places as well as save
-actual distance. So they continued to the southeast.
-
-By the position of the sun and the little grove behind him, Louis strove
-to keep a straight course, a difficult feat for anyone less experienced
-in prairie travel. Louis himself found it far from easy, especially when
-he had to make detours around impassable ground. Many times that day he
-wished for St. Antoine or some other older and more prairie-wise man.
-
-As the sun rose higher, the day grew very hot. Even the ponies felt the
-effect of the heat, as they plodded steadily on. At noon the party halted
-for an hour on the open prairie, to let the horses rest and feed. There
-was not a stick of fuel anywhere, so the pemmican was eaten cold, and
-washed down with a sip of the warm, brackish water they had brought from
-the _ile des bois_.
-
-In mid afternoon, hot and tired, the little caravan reached the bank of a
-stream Louis knew must be the Wild Rice. A narrow, crooked, muddy stream
-it proved to be, like a deep ditch between high and scantily wooded
-banks. At the top of the bank the carts halted, while Louis and Neil
-scrambled down, leading their horses, to look for a ford. After a half
-hour's search for a place that appeared safe, the two boys came upon a
-trail. The slope was a little less steep in this spot, and, winding down
-to the water's edge, was the well-worn track of men and animals. There
-was no mistaking it.
-
-"Here is a ford," Louis announced confidently. "It is here that the
-Indians cross."
-
-"It looks like it," Neil agreed. "We might as well go back for the carts.
-This is the easiest place we've seen to bring them down."
-
-Louis shook his head. "Wait a bit," he commanded. "I must see if the
-crossing is safe. The trail is old. There are no signs that anyone has
-crossed recently, and the river is yet far from its lowest point. You
-stay here, and I will try to trace the ford and make sure it is not too
-deep."
-
-"All right," consented Neil. "I'll keep an eye on you. If you get into
-trouble, I'll go to your help."
-
-The water was so thick and muddy, Louis could scarcely see whether it was
-deep or shallow. His pony was sure footed, and picked its way carefully.
-So he left the finding of the ford to the animal's instinct and
-intelligence. Slowly they made their way across. The water rose to the
-horse's sides, but did not carry it off its feet, as the current was
-sluggish. There was one deep place, however, where the pony was forced to
-swim a few yards.
-
-Neil, mounted and ready to go to the rescue, watched anxiously. His help
-was not needed. The pony found foothold, and was soon scrambling up the
-farther bank to dry land. Dismounting, Louis patted the animal and rubbed
-its nose. Unlike the _bois brules_, he treated his beasts kindly. He had
-brought this horse up from colthood, and it had no fear of him. After
-resting a few minutes, boy and pony made their way back again.
-
-"Can we get the carts across?" asked Neil, as Louis, wet to the waist,
-reached shore.
-
-"Yes, if we pull them over with ropes. We can take my mother and the
-children on the horses. There is only the one deep place, and the current
-is not strong. Cesar knew the way. He took me out where the trail goes up
-from the water. This is an old fording place."
-
-"St. Antoine said nothing about a trail."
-
-"No, I think this is not the place where he crossed. We may be miles from
-that spot."
-
-"If we can get across here, that is all we care about," returned Neil.
-
-The old trail was steep but not impossible for vehicles. With the boys
-acting as brakes by hanging on to the rear, the carts made their
-screeching, groaning way down. The horses were unhitched, and rawhide
-ropes attached to one of the carts. Then Louis and Walter rode over the
-ford, wound the ropes around a willow tree for greater security, and
-began to pull. The others steadied the cart into the water. Neil,
-mounting hastily, rode behind it to prevent disaster.
-
-Part way across, the wheels stuck in the muddy bottom and would not turn.
-Neil jumped off his horse, and Raoul waded out to help him. They pushed
-and heaved vigorously, while Louis and Walter pulled, and got the cart
-moving again. In the deep place the box body floated, and the boys
-succeeded in pulling it to shore before it took in much water. Knowing
-that the dry box would leak more or less, they had lined it with hides.
-The load came through uninjured.
-
-The same process was repeated with the second cart, which was not so
-lucky and took in more water. Then Mrs. Brabant and the girls, their
-skirts gathered up under them on the horses' backs, were brought across,
-wetting no more than their feet and ankles. Max, sitting cross legged in
-front of his father, did not even get his feet wet. The older boys and
-Mr. Perier were well soaked. The day was so warm they did not mind a
-wetting.
-
-The search for the ford and the crossing had taken a long time. The sun
-was low when the weary little party started up the old trail to seek a
-camping place. It happened that Walter, leading one of the horses along
-the steep track, was ahead. As he reached the top, picking his way, he
-turned to look back at the pony. After the horse was up, he continued to
-stand looking down, watching the carts making their slow way up, the
-ponies pulling steadily, the boys pushing. He ought to be down there
-helping, he thought.
-
-The neighing of a horse startled him. He swung around, gave one gasp, and
-fairly tumbled down the bank, dragging the surprised pony after him.
-
-"Indians!" he gasped.
-
-"Where?" Louis let go his hold on the first cart, and scrambled up to
-join Walter.
-
-"Coming across the prairie. A whole band of them."
-
-"How far away? Did they see you?"
-
-"They must have seen me. There are no trees. I stood right in the open."
-
-Louis dropped flat and wormed his way up the slope. He raised his head
-cautiously, lowered it quickly, and slid back.
-
-"They certainly saw you. They are too close to have missed you. We can't
-avoid them. They come straight to the ford. We have no time to get out of
-the way. There is not enough cover to hide in. And they must have seen
-you and the horse. We must put on a bold front and not act afraid. That
-is the only thing we can do."
-
-The rest of the party, alarmed by the two boys' actions, had stopped in
-their tracks. Not many seconds were spent in telling them what was
-happening. All realized that Louis was right when he said there was
-nothing to do but put on a bold front. In a few moments the tiny caravan
-was moving again. Raoul held Askime by the collar to keep him from
-running ahead.
-
-Louis and Walter went first, side by side, leading their horses. When he
-came in view of the prairie, Walter's heart beat fast. He struggled to
-control his trembling knees, and to appear cool and unconcerned.
-
-A very short distance away, coming straight towards the two lads, was a
-little group of mounted men, with bare, black heads and feathers in their
-hair. Some wore loose buckskin shirts. The bronze bodies of others were
-bare. Beyond them more mounted men, men, women, and children on foot,
-pack animals, and travois covered the prairie in a wide, irregular,
-disorderly procession.
-
-"A whole band out on the hunt," said Louis. "Well, that is less to be
-feared than a war party of braves only."
-
-The advance group let out a yell, a wild, menacing sound it seemed to the
-Swiss boy, hammered their horses' sides with their heels, and came on at
-a gallop. Louis swung himself into the saddle, and advanced to meet them,
-one arm raised in the friendship sign. Walter mounted and followed,
-imitating the gesture.
-
-The leading Indian responded with upraised arm, and the group came on.
-Surrounding the lads, they reined in their ponies. Walter's heart was
-thumping against his ribs, but the trembling had passed. He sat straight
-and steady in the saddle, and kept a calm exterior.
-
-"_Bo jou_," said Louis pleasantly.
-
-"How," stolidly returned the leader of the advance party. He was a
-well-built, broad-shouldered fellow in the prime of life. A piece of
-buffalo robe was his only saddle. He guided his horse with a cord of
-twisted hair around the jaw, and rode with free and easy grace.
-
-As Louis knew only four or five words of Dakota, communication had to be
-carried on principally in sign language. Recognizing the word for trader
-when the Indian spoke again, Louis replied with a shake of his head, then
-pointed to the carts just appearing over the top of the bank. He
-interpreted the Indian's next gesture as a question about the size of the
-party, and held up ten fingers in answer. Wishing to convey the idea that
-the ten were only part of a much larger party, he pointed across the
-river, and spread out his fingers, closing and opening them several
-times.
-
-The Indian nodded, stared fixedly at the carts, and inquired,
-"_Minnewakan?_"
-
-That was one of the few words Louis knew. "No _minnewakan_, no liquor,"
-he replied. His questioner looked disappointed, so Louis hastened to add,
-"We can give you a little tobacco. _Tabac_," he repeated with emphasis.
-
-Evidently the Indian had heard the word _tabac_ in intercourse with the
-traders. He repeated it with a nod and held out his hand.
-
-Louis pointed towards the carts, and said quickly to Walter, "Go get some
-tobacco. It will be all right. We're safe enough for the present."
-
-The Indians made no move to hinder Walter's return to the carts. He was
-back in a few moments with the tobacco, which Louis divided among the
-group of braves, taking care to give the largest portion to the leader.
-
-The first of the main body of Indians had come on almost to the river
-bank, a little way beyond where the carts were standing, and had halted
-there. The boys' new acquaintance pointed to the spot, then brought the
-tips of his forefingers together to indicate the pointed shape of a tipi.
-Walter guessed the man's meaning to be that the band would camp there for
-the night. His heart sank. He had been hoping that the Indians would go
-on across the river.
-
-If Louis was troubled, he did not show it. He pointed the other way,--up
-river,--and made the same sign. Then he said "_Bo jou_" again and turned
-his horse in that direction.
-
-The Indian gave a little grunt which might have meant either assent or
-protest. Neither he nor his companions showed any wish to hinder the
-boys' freedom of movement. They remained motionless for a few moments,
-then turned towards the camping place of their own band.
-
-"What are we going to do?" asked Walter, when he and Louis had put a few
-yards between themselves and the Indians.
-
-"We will have to make camp," Louis replied slowly. "We will not be any
-safer if we go on. If they wish to steal our horses or interfere with us
-in any way, they will only follow. They can overtake us easily. Those
-fellows' horses are fresher than ours. I saw that at once. We will camp
-farther up the river, as far as we can without seeming to run away. I
-tried to make them believe that we are an advance party. If we camp here
-it will look as if we waited for the others to join us. It is a bad
-situation, but I do not see what else we can do."
-
-"If they want to take our horses, though, and everything else we have, we
-are helpless. We are too few to fight a whole band. I suppose you are
-right about going on now. If they wished to harm us, some of them would
-follow. But when they think we are all settled for the night, can't we
-steal away in the darkness?"
-
-"I have thought of that," Louis returned quietly. "That is one reason I
-want to camp as far away as we can, without making them suspicious. If
-they seem perfectly friendly, it may be best to remain in camp till
-morning. We can decide that later. The important thing now is to keep our
-heads and act as if we had no fear."
-
-
-
-
- XXXV
- IN THE CHIEF'S TIPI
-
-
-The others of the party realized that Louis knew more than they about
-Indians, so his view of what was best to do prevailed. He chose a spot
-back from the river bank on the brink of a narrow, steep sided ravine. A
-_coulee_ such a rift in the prairie was commonly called. There, in the
-open, nearly a half mile up river from the Indian encampment, camp was
-pitched.
-
-The dangers of the situation were carefully concealed from the younger
-children. Elise and Marie were old enough to realize the peril, but they
-understood as well as their elders that they must not appear afraid. Both
-girls were frightened, but they tried pluckily not to give way to their
-fears. Mrs. Brabant set them a good example, going about the camp work in
-a cheerful, matter-of-fact way. Not even Louis guessed how she was
-suffering with anxiety and dread. While her lips smiled bravely, she was
-repeating over and over in her mind passionate prayers for her children's
-safety. Though he understood less of the danger, and was by nature always
-hopeful that things would turn out all right, Mr. Perier too was far from
-easy in his mind. He regretted sincerely that he had brought Elise and
-Max on this dangerous journey. Still, as always, he hoped for the best.
-Of the four older boys, Raoul, the youngest and most reckless, was the
-least frightened and the most thrilled by the adventure. The feelings of
-the others were of mingled fear, excitement, and manly pride in the
-responsibility laid upon them. The red-headed Highland lad, cleaning his
-gun carefully, was almost hoping for a fight. Louis and Walter, though
-determined to protect their camp at any cost to themselves if that should
-be necessary, were racking their brains for ways to avoid conflict of any
-kind. They must avoid it or their little party would be wiped out.
-
-At first the Indians left the white men to themselves. Before the evening
-meal was over, however, visitors arrived, announced by a warning growl
-from Askime. Into the firelight stalked the sturdy, strong-faced brave
-who had led the advance party. He was followed by two younger men. Both
-were slender, wiry fellows, and one was distinctly handsome in a
-Roman-nosed, high-cheeked, hawk-eyed style. The other was disfigured by a
-broken and crooked nose.
-
-The young men stood impassive, while the elder made a sign of greeting
-and said "How" in his deep voice.
-
-Louis, who had risen, returned the "How" and motioned the visitors to
-seats by the fire, the others moving closer together to make room.
-Foreseeing that there might be guests, Mrs. Brabant had made more tea and
-heated more pemmican than usual. She helped the guests liberally, and
-they ate in silence. When each was satisfied, he carefully placed his cup
-and plate upside down on the ground.
-
-"_Minnewakan?_" the elder warrior inquired, as if he had not asked the
-question before.
-
-Louis shook his head and passed out some tobacco. There was silence,
-while each Indian gravely smelled of his portion, and stowed it away in
-his beaded buckskin fire bag.
-
-Then the man with the crooked nose pointed to Askime, who lay at Louis'
-feet, keeping a watchful eye on the strangers. "_Nitshunka?_" he asked,
-looking at Louis.
-
-The boy had never heard the word before. He did not know whether the
-fellow was inquiring if the dog was his, or offering to buy it. In answer
-he laid one hand on Askime's head, and touched his own breast with the
-other. The young Indian promptly took off the necklace of beasts' and
-birds' claws he wore, and held it out. But Louis shook his head
-emphatically, saying "_Non, non_."
-
-The broken-nosed man nodded gravely, and replaced the necklace, but he
-continued to gaze at the dog. It was plain that he was anxious to get
-Askime by some means or other.
-
-The elder brave soon brought the call to a close. Rising to his feet, he
-pointed first in the direction of the Indian camp, and then to Louis and
-Walter in turn. He said something in his own language, drew his
-forefinger across his forehead, and pointed again towards the camp. The
-drawing of the forefinger across the forehead was the common sign for a
-hat-wearer or white man.
-
-Louis' curiosity was aroused. He drew his finger across his own head,
-then pointed to his breast.
-
-The Indian shook his head. It was some other white man he meant. Again he
-made the sign, with his left hand, while he pointed towards the camp with
-his right. At the same time he spoke the word for trader.
-
-Louis nodded to show that he understood.
-
-The Indian gave a little grunt, and once more pointed to the boys in
-turn, then to the camp. He repeated the hat-wearer sign and the word
-trader.
-
-Louis turned to Walter. "There is a white man with that band, a trader. I
-am sure that is what this fellow means. And he wishes us to go to the
-camp and see the man. Perhaps the white man has sent for us."
-
-"Shall we go?" asked Walter. "Do you think it is safe?"
-
-"I do not know if it is safe," was the thoughtful reply, "but _I_ must go
-I think. If I do not he will think I am afraid. And I want to discover if
-there really is a white trader there, and talk with him. He may be our
-one chance of safety. Sometimes the traders have great influence. Yes, I
-must go."
-
-Louis indicated his willingness to accompany the Indians, but the elder
-man was still unsatisfied. He kept pointing at Walter.
-
-"I am going too, Louis," the latter decided. He glanced around the little
-circle. "Do you suppose the others will be all right while we are away?"
-
-"There is risk to all of us, all the time, whatever we do," Louis
-returned gravely. "It is not good for our party to be separated. Yet I do
-not think they try to separate us. Why should they, when we are so few,
-and they are so many? No, I think that white trader has sent for us, and
-we had best go." He turned to Neil and Raoul. "Keep close watch," he
-warned, "and you, Raoul, make a big pile of dry grass and wood. If
-anything happens to alarm you, light it, and we shall see the flames, and
-come at once."
-
-"If we can," Walter added to himself. He did not voice his doubt. He knew
-they must take the risk; he saw that quite clearly.
-
-There was a frightened look in Elise's eyes. She laid her hand on
-Walter's arm. "Don't go," she whispered.
-
-"I must, little sister. I can't let Louis go alone. We will be back
-soon."
-
-Mrs. Brabant's face had turned pale, but she made no protest. As for Mr.
-Perier, the news that there was a white man with the Indians had gone far
-to reassure him of their friendliness and good intentions.
-
-The three braves had come unarmed, so courtesy required that Louis and
-Walter should not take their guns, reluctant though they were to leave
-them behind. The Indians were on foot, and all went back in the same
-manner. The long twilight was deepening, as the five took their silent
-way towards the firelit group of tipis that had sprung up from the
-prairie like some strange mushroom growth. The air was hot, still, and
-oppressive. Dark clouds lay low on the western and southern horizon.
-
-The Indian camp was a noisy place. As the party approached, their ears
-were assailed by a variety of sounds; the neighing and squealing of
-ponies, the howling and yelping of dogs, the shouting of children, the
-voices of the women, the tones of the old squaws cracked and shrill,
-calling, laughing, and scolding, the toneless thumping of a drum and the
-clacking of rattles accompanying the harsh monotone of some medicine
-man's chant, and a hundred other noises. Hobbled horses fed on the
-prairie grass around the circle of lodges. A whole pack of snarling,
-wolfish dogs rushed out as if to devour the newcomers, but did not dare
-to approach very close for fear of a beating. The buffalo skin tipis were
-lit up with cooking fires without and within. The mingled odors of wood
-smoke, boiling and roasting meat, tobacco and _kinnikinnick_,--osier
-dogwood or red willow bark shredded and added to tobacco to form the
-Indian smoking mixture,--filled the air.
-
-The little party were close to the tipis, when a man came out to meet
-them. He spoke to the older brave, and an argument followed. Unable to
-understand the conversation, the boys stood waiting, and wondering what
-was going on. Evidently the two Indians were disagreeing, but the only
-words Louis recognized were _minnewakan_ and the term for trader.
-
-It was the lads' conductor who yielded at last. He gave a grunt of sullen
-assent, gestured to the boys to follow the other, turned on his heel, and
-stalked off. The stranger led the way among the lodges.
-
-Walter had never visited an Indian camp, and curiosity was getting the
-better of his fears. The squaws and children were quite as curious about
-the white men. The women left their various occupations, and ceased their
-gossiping and scolding, the children stopped their play and quarreling,
-to stare at the strangers. Their inquisitiveness was open and frank, but
-did not seem unfriendly. The men, lounging about at their ease, eating,
-smoking, polishing their weapons, or doing nothing whatever, disdained to
-show interest in the newcomers. Their casual glances were indifferent
-rather than hostile. Walter noted that these people were in the habit of
-dealing with traders. Many of the loose, shapeless garments the women
-wore were of bright colored cotton, instead of deerskin. Some of the men
-had shirts or leggings of scarlet cloth. The boy's courage rose. So far
-there was nothing to fear.
-
-The lodges were arranged in two irregular circles, one within the other.
-In the center of the inner open space, stood a solitary tipi of unusual
-size. From it, apparently, came the sounds of drum, rattles, and chant.
-Walter wondered if it was there that he and Louis were being led. Surely
-a white man would not---- But the guide had turned to the right, and was
-pulling aside the skin curtain that covered the entrance to one of the
-lodges in the circle. He motioned to the boys to enter.
-
-Walter followed Louis in, and looked about him. The fire on the ground in
-the center of the tipi was smouldering smokily, and the forms of the men
-beyond were but dimly visible. Louis went forward unhesitatingly. At the
-right of the fire, he paused, and Walter stepped to his side.
-
-Someone threw a piece of buffalo fat on the fire. The flames leaped up,
-casting a strong light on the bronze bodies of six or seven seated men.
-All were nearly naked, except the slender young man in the center. He
-wore scarlet leggings and a blue coat with scarlet facings; an old
-uniform coat that must once have belonged to some white officer. The
-young Indian's chest was bare and adorned with paint. A necklace of elk
-teeth, with a silver coin as a pendant, was his principal ornament. There
-were eagle feathers in his scarlet head band, and his coarse, black hair,
-which hung in two braids over his shoulders, glistened with grease. The
-swarthy face of the young chief, as the firelight revealed it, struck
-Walter with instant distrust and dislike. The wide mouth was loose
-lipped. The dark eyes--large for an Indian--that he fastened on the boys
-were bloodshot and fierce.
-
-Louis stood straight and motionless, steadily returning the young chief's
-gaze. Drawing himself up to his full height, Walter tried to imitate his
-comrade's bold bearing. After a few minutes of this silent duel of
-glances, during which the fire died down again, the chief deigned to
-speak.
-
-His first words were apparently an inquiry as to whether the white men
-were traders. Louis shook his head. Then came a request,--it sounded more
-like a demand,--for _minnewakan_.
-
-Again Louis shook his head. Stepping forward, he offered the chief the
-gifts he had brought him, a twist of tobacco, a paper of coarse pins, and
-a piece of scarlet cloth. Though the boys had expected to be led directly
-to the white trader, Louis had thought it best to go provided with a few
-courtesy presents for the head man of the band. The chief accepted the
-things in silence.
-
-On the chance that the fellow or someone of his companions might know a
-little French, Louis proceeded to explain that he and his party were
-peaceful travelers from the Selkirk Colony on their way to the trading
-post at Lake Traverse. Whether anyone understood what he said the boy
-could not tell.
-
-When Louis had finished, the chief made a speech, a long speech,
-delivered in an impressive, even pompous manner, with frequent pauses for
-effect. At each pause, his companions in chorus uttered an approving
-"Uho, uho!" That was the way the exclamation sounded to Walter. He could
-understand nothing of the chief's oration, of course, but he got the idea
-that the young man liked to listen to his own voice.
-
-Among the voices that cried out "Uho," there was one deep pitched one
-that affected the Swiss boy in a peculiar manner. It sent a sudden chill
-of fear over him. And there was something familiar about it. He glanced
-around the group to see to which man that voice belonged. The fire had
-nearly burned out, and the lodge was so dark he could distinguish the
-figures but dimly. At the third exclamation of approval, he made up his
-mind that the voice that affected him so strangely came from the man on
-the chief's right. During the few moments when the firelight had been
-bright enough to reveal the Indians, Walter had noticed nothing about
-that man except his size. He was a big fellow, broad shouldered and tall,
-overtopping the chief by several inches, though the latter was not short.
-The big man's features the boy had not seen, for they were in the shadow
-of the scarlet blanket the fellow held up, apparently to shield his face
-from the heat.
-
-The speaker brought his oration to a sonorous close. There was a chorus
-of loud "uhos." As if for dramatic effect, another chunk of fat was
-thrown upon the fire. The flames shot up again, and cast their light upon
-the chief and his courtiers.
-
-Walter gasped. He felt Louis' fingers close upon his arm and grip it
-tight in warning. The blanket no longer concealed the face of the big
-brave on the chief's right. The amazed boys were staring straight at the
-glittering, bright eyes and thin-lipped, cruel mouth of the Black Murray.
-It seemed incredible, impossible, but it was so.
-
-The big warrior, a Sioux Indian in every detail; braided hair and
-feathers, big-muscled, bronze body naked except for the breech cloth and
-the handsome scarlet blanket about his shoulders, chest and arms adorned
-with streaks and circles of red and black paint, was the former Hudson
-Bay voyageur, Murray. If it had been possible to mistake that regular
-featured, sinister face, with its glittering eyes and scornful smile, the
-silver chain around his neck, with Mr. Perier's watch hanging upon his
-chest, must have removed all doubts. He was the Black Murray beyond
-question.
-
-
-
-
- XXXVI
- THE WHITE TRADER
-
-
-While Louis and Walter stared, amazed and apprehensive, the Black Murray
-rose to his feet and turned to the chief. He said a few words in Dakota;
-his all too familiar voice sending another chill up Walter's spine,
-gathered his blanket about him, gave the boys one scornful glance, and
-strode around the fire and out of the tipi.
-
-Louis drew a long breath to steady himself, and spoke to the chief again.
-Still uncertain whether the Indians understood any French, the boy
-thanked the young chief for receiving his comrade and himself. They had
-enjoyed the visit to the village, he said, but must return to their own
-camp now, as the hour was growing late. They hoped to see more of the
-chief and his people in the morning. At the close of this speech, Louis
-bowed slightly, and began to step backward around the fire.
-
-Walter imitated his friend, carefully keeping his face turned towards the
-chief. That young man waved his hand in a gesture of dismissal. Not one
-of the Indians made a move to hinder the two from leaving.
-
-It was an enormous relief to be out of that tipi, yet both boys knew they
-were far from being out of danger. From the illuminated lodge in the
-center of the camp, the thumping of the drum and the clacking of rattles
-went on tirelessly. Fires had been kindled in a circle around the big
-tipi, and about them men and women were gathering.
-
-"There is to be some kind of a dance," Louis whispered. "Look!" he
-exclaimed suddenly. He gripped Walter's arm and drew him back into the
-shadow of an unlighted lodge.
-
-Crossing the open space, in the full light of the blazing fires, was the
-tall, stately form of Murray. A great, hairy buffalo robe fell loosely
-from his broad shoulders. His head was adorned with the strangest of
-headdresses, the shaggy head of a buffalo bull, horns and nose painted
-red. That stuffed buffalo head must have been exceedingly heavy, but
-under its weight Murray held his own head and neck proudly erect. Looking
-neither to right nor left, he strode between the fires, men and women
-making way for him. He stooped only to enter the big tipi.
-
-The two boys, in the protecting shadow of the dark lodge, had stood
-apparently unnoticed through this show. After Murray disappeared Louis
-led Walter around to the side of the unlighted dwelling farthest from the
-fire.
-
-"We must be away," he whispered. "This is no place for us."
-
-Silently, cautiously, they made their way among the tipis. The whole band
-seemed to have gathered in the central space, yet the boys were not to
-escape notice. They were passing through the outer circle of dwellings,
-when a man suddenly appeared in front of them. It was the
-broad-shouldered warrior who had brought them to the camp. He spoke
-urgently, pointing again and again towards the inner circle of lodges,
-and making the hat-wearer sign.
-
-Louis shook his head. "_Non, non_," he replied emphatically. "We have
-seen enough of your white trader. A fine white man he is. Go on, Walter,"
-he ordered, and Walter obeyed.
-
-If the Dakota did not understand the words, he could not mistake the
-boys' actions. He tried to seize Louis by the arm. Louis dodged, jumping
-to one side nimbly, eluded the Indian, and ran after Walter, who also
-broke into a run. To their surprise, the man did not attempt to follow
-them. Perhaps the middle-aged, rather heavily built brave despaired of
-catching the light-footed lads. At any rate he let them go. There was no
-one else near by to stop them.
-
-As soon as the boys were sure they were not being followed, they slowed
-to a walk.
-
-"We are well out of that," said Louis, drawing a long breath of relief.
-
-"Yes. I can't understand why Murray let us go so easily."
-
-"I fear we have not seen the last of _le Murrai Noir_ yet," was the sober
-reply. "If he had abused us, cursed us, threatened us, I should have less
-fear. I do not like his silence, the way he allowed us to go without
-raising a hand against us."
-
-"The Indians seem friendly. Perhaps they won't let him touch us."
-
-"That may be. They may be afraid that any trouble with white men will
-bring vengeance upon them. Yet I do not like the looks of that young
-chief. And he did not offer us food. That is a bad sign, Walter. If he
-had invited us to eat, to smoke the calumet, but he did not." Louis shook
-his head doubtfully.
-
-"I can't imagine," Walter pondered, "why Murray went out and left us, and
-then sent that man after us again."
-
-Louis was equally puzzled. "It is all very strange. _Le Murrai_ sent him
-for us. Surely that was what he meant. Then, when we reached the camp,
-another man came and took us away from him. And when we were leaving, the
-first fellow came again and wished us to go back."
-
-"Perhaps Murray wanted to see us alone, and the chief interfered," Walter
-suggested.
-
-"So he sent for us again? But we saw _le Murrai_ going to join in the
-dance. The dance will take a long time, all night perhaps, and he is the
-chief figure in it I think."
-
-"He certainly looked as if he was. Louis, is there really any white blood
-in Murray at all?"
-
-"That is another strange thing," returned the troubled Louis. "It is
-strange that those Indians should speak of him as a hat-wearer, a white
-man. Rather he seems one of themselves."
-
-Discussing and pondering the bewildering events of the past few hours,
-the boys made their way across the prairie towards their own camp. The
-moon had risen and lighted their way. The camp fire, a flickering point
-of light, guided them and assured them that all was well with their
-companions. Had there been no spark of fire at all, or had a great column
-of flame sprung up, the two would have been running at full speed. Their
-puzzlings led to no solution of their strange treatment at the hands of
-Murray and the chief.
-
-"I am certain of but one thing," Louis asserted finally. He spoke
-emphatically and in a louder tone than he had been using. "There is
-mischief brewing in that camp to-night, and _le Murrai Noir_ is the
-center of it."
-
-"Aye, you are right there."
-
-The words, in a strange voice, came from behind them. With one impulse
-the boys sprang apart, and turned. Louis' hand was on the hilt of his
-hunting knife.
-
-Close to them, leading a horse, was a tall form, a very tall form. Taller
-he seemed than Murray himself, though perhaps that was because he was so
-gaunt and thin. In the moonlight the boys could see that his buckskin
-clothes hung loosely upon his long frame. He wore a cap, and had a bushy
-beard.
-
-"You were too busy with your talk," the strange man went on rebukingly.
-"The whole band might have stolen up on you." He spoke easy, fluent
-Canadian French, but with a peculiar accent that reminded Walter of
-Neil's manner of speech.
-
-"Who are you?" demanded Louis, his hand still on his knife.
-
-"I'm the hat-wearer that sent for you."
-
-"You are the white trader? Then it wasn't _le Murrai_?"
-
-"It was not. But you're right in thinking he's the center of the mischief
-over there. I sent Shahaka to your camp. He was to bring you straight to
-my lodge, but someone, Murray or Tatanka Wechacheta, interfered. Then I
-told Shahaka to wait for you at the edge of the village, but you wouldn't
-go back with him. I wanted to warn you of what was going on. I thought it
-wiser not to go to your camp myself. My influence with that young fool of
-a chief is not so strong as it was before the big medicine man Murray
-came along."
-
-"He claims to be a medicine man?" asked Louis.
-
-"Aye, a mighty one, with all sorts of _wakan_. He is teaching a picked
-few rascals of them a new medicine dance. They will dance and powwow till
-near the dawn, then Murray will feast them and fill them full of rum."
-
-"But why?"
-
-"Why? He's a free trader, that Murray, a clever one and not particular
-about his methods, his boasts that he got his start by stealing pemmican
-from the Hudson Bay Company and then selling it back to them, through a
-friend, for trade goods. If he can make those foolish savages look up to
-him and fear him as a great _witan wishasha_, he can do anything he likes
-with them in the way of trade. He has sold them a lot of medicines
-already, charms against evil spirits and injury in battle, charms to give
-them power over their enemies and the beasts they hunt." The tall man
-changed the subject abruptly. "You have horses and carts and goods with
-you?" he demanded.
-
-"No trade goods, except a few little things for presents. But we have two
-carts loaded with our personal things, and four good horses, and an
-Eskimo dog."
-
-"You will have none of them by sunrise," was the grim response, "if you
-stay here. Murray is not the man to let all that slip through his
-fingers."
-
-"Then why did he let us leave the camp?"
-
-"And why not? He can put his hand on you whenever he likes. In a few
-hours he will have plenty of drunken savages to do his will."
-
-Walter shivered. He was thinking, not of himself, but of Elise and Mrs.
-Brabant and the children.
-
-As they drew near the camp, Neil, gun in hand, sprang up from the ground,
-where he had been lying, watching their approach. He had been worried
-because, instead of two only, he could make out three men and a horse.
-
-Entering the circle around the fire, Louis introduced the stranger. "This
-is the man who sent for us, the trader."
-
-The tall man pulled off his fur cap and ducked his head to Mrs. Brabant.
-"I'm Duncan McNab, at your service, Madame," he said. He caught sight of
-Neil's freckled face and blue bonnet. "Ye're a Scot," he said accusingly
-in English.
-
-"I am that, and sa are you," Neil retorted promptly.
-
-"Aye. Ye'll be fra Kildonan na doot, but there's na time ta be talkin'
-aboot that." He turned to Louis and spoke in French again. "You are
-camped on the edge of a coulee. Did you pick this spot on purpose?"
-
-The boy nodded.
-
-"Then you know what to do. The coulee leads towards the Bois des Sioux.
-Leave your fire burning. The savages will think you're still here."
-
-"Our carts make so much noise," interposed Walter. "If any of their
-scouts or camp guards should hear that squeaking----"
-
-"Leave the carts behind," McNab interrupted. "I doubt if you could take
-them up the coulee."
-
-"We can go faster without them anyway," Louis agreed, "and get more out
-of our horses."
-
-"Travel light, a little pemmican, your weapons and ammunition, nothing
-else. It is hard to lose all your things, Madame," the trader said
-bluntly to Mrs. Brabant, "but better than to run the risk of your
-children falling into the hands of Tatanka Wechacheta and the Black
-Murray."
-
-"Murray?" cried Mr. Perier.
-
-"You know him?"
-
-"We all know him. We have good cause to," said Walter.
-
-"That makes it all the worse, if he has anything against you. No, don't
-tell me the story now. We have no time to exchange tales."
-
-"If we must leave the carts behind," Neil suggested, "why not hide them
-in the coulee? Then the Indians may think we have taken them along. Later
-we can come back from Lake Traverse and get them."
-
-"It micht work oot that wa'," returned McNab, falling into Scots' English
-again, "but I'm thinkin' they'll find the cairts easy eneuch."
-
-"We'll tak them _doon_ the coulee a bit," Neil insisted, in the same
-tongue. "If Murray finds the tracks he'll maybe think we've gane doon ta
-the Wild Rice and back across."
-
-The trader shook his head. "He'll be findin' your trail all richt, but ye
-can maybe delay him for a bit. Weel, do what you're goin' ta do quick,
-an' be awa' wi' ye. I maun be gettin' back or they'll miss me."
-
-"You're na comin' wi' us?" cried Neil.
-
-"Na, na, I'm not rinnin' awa' yet." He switched to French and took his
-leave of the others. "Cross the Bois des Sioux and make speed for Lake
-Traverse," he advised. "Tell Renville I'll be back there in a few days.
-It was Renville sent me to find out what that rascal Murray was up to.
-Good speed and God go with you."
-
-
-
-
- XXXVII
- FLIGHT
-
-
-Louis and Walter decided that Neil's plan was worth trying. They muffled
-the axles of the two carts with strips torn from a ragged blanket, and
-carefully cased the vehicles over the edge of the coulee. The moon,
-shining into the rift, lighted them down the steep slope. Along the bed
-of the shallow brook that ran through the coulee to join the Wild Rice
-River, they pushed and pulled the carts, and left them well hidden among
-willows and cottonwoods where the ravine widened.
-
-"There," said Neil when the job was done, "if those Indians follow
-straight up the coulee after us, they won't find the carts at all. If
-they come down here and find them, they may think we have gone back
-across the river."
-
-"Probably," Louis returned, "they will divide into two parties, one to go
-up, the other down the coulee. But if they get all our things they may be
-content to let us go."
-
-Hiding the carts had taken less than a half hour. In the meantime Mrs.
-Brabant and the children had gone down into the coulee, Jeanne and Max
-stumbling along, scarcely awake enough to realize what was happening.
-While the horses were being led down, Walter remained behind as rear
-guard. As he threw a last armful of fuel on the fire, a burst of hideous
-noise came across the prairie from the Indian camp. Howls and yells, to
-the thumping of many drums, proved that Murray's medicine dance was in
-full swing. A picture flashed through the boy's mind; a picture of that
-central space within the circle of tipis as it must look now, with scores
-of naked, painted, befeathered savages, stamping, leaping, yelling around
-the blazing fires. There was no time to lose.
-
-Mrs. Brabant was impatient and anxious to be away. She had made no
-protest at leaving the carts behind. All her household belongings were in
-them, but what were blankets and copper kettles, and the precious wooden
-chest of clothing and little things, compared with the safety of her
-children? She and little Jeanne had been placed on one of the ponies.
-There were only four horses for ten people. Mr. Perier took Max with him
-on another, and the remaining two were given to Elise and Marie. Marie
-could ride almost as well as her brothers, and Elise had learned since
-leaving Pembina.
-
-It was very dark at the bottom of the coulee among the willows that
-fringed the stream. Speed was not possible, and the foot travelers could
-easily keep up with the ponies. Yet there was no doubt in anyone's mind
-that this was the only route to take. On the open prairie, in the
-moonlight, they would be plainly visible from every direction. Here they
-were completely hidden. They hoped to be miles away before the Indians
-discovered that they had gone.
-
-Progress seemed heart-breakingly slow, however, as the little party
-picked their way up the bed of the brook in the darkness. Louis, on foot,
-went ahead as guide. Walter, Neil and Raoul brought up the rear. The
-stream was not much over a foot deep at its deepest, with a sticky mud
-bottom. Luckily the ponies were sure-footed and almost cat-eyed. One or
-another slipped or stumbled now and then, but recovered quickly without
-unseating the rider. The night remained oppressively warm. Not a breath
-of breeze stirred the willows down below the level of the prairie. Pale
-flashes lit up the narrow strip of sky overhead, and distant thunder
-rumbled.
-
-The coulee grew narrower and shallower. The brook dwindled to a rivulet,
-the fringing willows were smaller and met above the stream. It was
-difficult to push a way through. At last Louis called a halt.
-
-"Wait a little," he said. "I will go on and find a way."
-
-Strung out along the narrow streamlet, which scarcely covered the hoofs
-of the horses, the rest waited for his return. The mosquitoes were bad,
-and the tormented horses twisted, turned, pawed the mud, and slapped
-their tails about. Walter made his way among the willows to Elise's side
-to be at hand if her mount should become unmanageable. But they exchanged
-only a word or two. The oppression of the night and the danger lay too
-heavy upon them both.
-
-After what seemed a long time, Louis returned. "The coulee ends a little
-way ahead," he reported. "The stream comes from a wet marsh that we must
-go around. I have found a place where we can climb the right bank."
-
-Without further words, he took hold of the bridle of his mother's horse
-and led it through the willows and up a dry gully. The gully was one of
-the channels by which the marsh waters, during spring floods and rainy
-periods, found their way into the coulee. The prairie at the head of the
-gully was dry in July, the marsh being shrunken to dry weather
-proportions.
-
-There was a certain relief in being up on the open plain again. For one
-thing there was more light. The western sky was banked with clouds. Over
-there lightning flashed and thunder rumbled, but the moon remained
-uncovered. Looking back to the northwest across the flat prairie, Walter
-could see, against the dark clouds, the glow of the fires in the Indian
-camp. A flash of lightning showed the pointed tips of the tipis black
-against the white light.
-
-It seemed a long time since the fugitives had gone down into the coulee.
-The boy was disappointed and alarmed to find that they had not come
-farther. Had the Indians discovered their absence yet? He scanned the
-prairie for moving figures. To his great relief he could see not one. Not
-even a buffalo or a wolf appeared to be abroad on that wide, moonlit
-expanse. Only an occasional puff of breeze stirred the tall grass.
-
-The party were gathered together at the head of the gully. Louis was
-speaking, and Walter turned to listen.
-
-"We can go faster now, but one must go ahead to keep the course and----"
-
-"You must do that, Louis," Neil interrupted. "You are guide. It is your
-place. The two girls will have to ride one horse."
-
-Louis hesitated. "It is not right for me to ride away and leave you three
-to follow on foot."
-
-"It is the only way," put in Walter. "The ponies can't carry us all. The
-others can't go on without a guide. You will have to do it, Louis. We
-won't be far behind."
-
-"Neil can guide as well as I can," Louis began.
-
-"I can't and I won't," retorted the Scotch boy stubbornly. "You have your
-mother and sisters to take care of, and you are going on ahead."
-
-"One of you boys can take my horse," Mr. Perier proposed. "I am the least
-experienced and the least useful of all." He started to dismount.
-
-"No, no," cried Louis. "You will be too slow with your crippled foot. You
-will hold the others back. You must ride."
-
-"There are the children to think of," Walter added earnestly. "You must
-go with them. Neil and Raoul and I can go much faster on foot than you
-could."
-
-"Stop talking and get away," exclaimed Raoul impatiently. "Marie, come
-off that horse."
-
-For once in her life Marie obeyed her next older brother. She took his
-hand and slipped quickly to the ground. Raoul helped her up in front of
-Elise. Louis, without further argument, mounted and took the lead. He
-knew as well as anyone that they had already wasted too much time in
-argument.
-
-As Raoul drew back from helping Marie up, his mother bent down from her
-horse to throw her left arm about his neck. "God guard you, my son," she
-said softly.
-
-"And you," muttered Raoul huskily.
-
-At first the lads on foot kept almost at the heels of the ponies. The
-prairie grass grew high and rank, and there was no beaten path. The
-animals could not go fast, and all three boys were good runners. But
-running through tall grass is not like running on an open road or even on
-a well-trodden cart track. They soon tired, and had to slow their pace
-and fall behind. The ponies were double burdened and far from fresh, but
-they were tough, wiry beasts, capable of extraordinary endurance. When
-they struck firmer ground beyond the marsh, they made better speed. The
-rear guard fell still farther behind. They tried to keep in the track
-made by the horses, but it was not always easy to do so, especially when
-flying clouds covered the moon and left them in darkness.
-
-No rain fell, however. The storm that had been threatening for so long
-was working around to the north. The rumblings of thunder grew fainter,
-the lightning flashes less bright. Before dawn they had ceased
-altogether. A fresh, cool breeze sprang up, billowing the grass and
-putting new life into the tired boys, as they plodded on, carrying their
-heavy muskets. They no longer tried to run, but they kept up a steady
-walking pace.
-
-Dawn showed a line of trees ahead that did not appear to be much over a
-half mile away. Those trees, the boys felt sure, must mark the course of
-the Bois des Sioux. It was from one of the groves on its bank that the
-stream took its name. The foot travelers had lost the horse track some
-time before, but Neil and Raoul had managed, with the aid of the stars,
-to keep a general course towards the east. The rest of the party were
-nowhere in sight. Probably they had crossed the river long ago.
-
-Though the trees seemed such a short distance away, the sun was rising
-above them before the lads reached the river. Wet, marshy ground had
-forced a detour. The stream, where they came out upon it, proved larger
-and wider than they had expected.
-
-"If we cross here we will have to swim," said Neil, as he looked down at
-the muddy water. "I think we are too far down. See there." He pointed to
-the opposite shore up stream. "Either the river makes a sharp bend there,
-or another one comes in."
-
-"It is the Ottertail," suggested Raoul. "That must be where the two come
-together to make the Red."
-
-"It looks like it," Walter agreed. "Anyway this doesn't seem to be a good
-place to cross. We know nothing about the current. We had better go on up
-and look for a ford."
-
-The boys did not have to go far along the west bank of the united rivers
-to convince themselves that the stream coming in from the east was indeed
-the Ottertail. They could see plainly enough that it was larger than the
-branch from the south. Single file, with Walter in the lead, they were
-making their way along the bank opposite the mouth of the Ottertail, when
-from the willows directly in front of them an Indian appeared.
-
-"_Bo jou_," he said, and added a few words in his own language.
-
-Walter, startled, had half raised his musket, but Raoul, who was close
-behind him, seized his arm.
-
-"That's a Saulteur, not a Sioux," the younger boy whispered, then
-answered the man in his own tongue.
-
-Neil pushed forward to join in the conversation. He also knew a little of
-the Saulteur or Ojibwa language, though he did not speak it so readily as
-Raoul, who had played with Indian and half-breed lads since babyhood.
-Walter, unable to understand more than an occasional word or two--picked
-up at Pembina and among the hunters--stood back and looked on.
-
-The sudden appearance of this lone Saulteur near the southern limits of
-the debatable ground surprised him greatly. What puzzled him most,
-however, was the man's familiar face. Surely he had seen that scarred
-cheek, where the skin drew tight over the bone, before, but where? On the
-way from York Factory, at Fort Douglas, at Pembina, at the Company post
-when the hunters were bringing in their winter's catch? Then he
-remembered. It was at the post he had seen the Ojibwa; not in the spring,
-but in the autumn. This was the hunter who had been beaten and robbed, as
-he was loading his canoe to return to his hunting grounds at Red Lake.
-What was he doing here?
-
-The Indian was speaking rapidly, in a low voice. Walter caught two words
-he knew, "_Murrai Noir_." Neil swung around, excitement in his eyes.
-
-"Walter," he exclaimed, "this fellow says Murray is his enemy. He is
-after Murray to get revenge. Is he----"
-
-"Yes." Walter did not wait for Neil to finish the question. "He is the
-man Murray and Fritz Kolbach attacked. I know that scar on his cheek. At
-the post they said a grizzly bear once clawed him in the face. How did he
-learn that Murray was in this part of the country? Ask him."
-
-Raoul put the question and translated the answer. "He was at Pembina just
-after the hunt left. Fritz Kolbach and two other DeMeurons were there at
-the same time. Scar Face attacked Kolbach, but the other fellows
-separated them. Then Kolbach declared it was Murray who hit Scar Face
-over the head, and offered to put him on Murray's trail. He told Scar
-Face that Murray was near Lake Traverse trading with the Dakotas and
-pretending to be a medicine man. Some men going from Traverse to Pembina
-with carts had seen him. So Scar Face is trailing him."
-
-"Alone?" queried Walter.
-
-"No, he has some young braves with him who want to get a reputation by
-raiding enemy country. They came down the Ottertail River."
-
-"Where are they?"
-
-"Near here somewhere. I don't know how he learned that Murray was with
-Tatanka Wechacheta's band, but he knew it before I told him."
-
-"Did you tell him that we are running away from them?"
-
-"Yes. Wait a minute."
-
-The Indian was speaking. He pointed up the river and his manner was
-earnest and emphatic. When Scar Face paused, Raoul turned to the others
-again.
-
-"He says he has heard that there is a good ford a little way up the
-river. That is probably where our people crossed. He thinks that Murray
-and the Sioux will follow the horse tracks to the ford. If Scar Face and
-his braves lie in wait there, they can get a shot at Murray when he tries
-to cross. They will take us to the ford in their canoes."
-
-Before Raoul had finished this explanation, the Indian was showing signs
-of impatience. He turned now and led the way in among the willows. There,
-where the river current had taken a crescent-shaped bite out of the mud
-bank, two birch canoes were pulled up. Five young braves, arrayed in
-feathers and war paint, came out from hiding places among the bushes,
-where they had been waiting for their leader, who had been for a look
-across the prairie west of the river.
-
-They were a wild and fearsome looking little band. Had the boys not known
-that they were, for the time being at least, on the Saulteur side of the
-quarrel, they might have hesitated to trust themselves with the war
-party. But they had given Scar Face and his comrades information of
-value, and had nothing to fear from them.
-
-
-
-
- XXXVIII
- THE FIGHT AT THE BOIS DES SIOUX
-
-
-The Indians wasted few words and little time. Walter and Raoul were
-assigned to one canoe, Neil to the other. Riding as passengers, they took
-the opportunity to munch the chunks of pemmican they had brought with
-them, but had not paused to eat.
-
-The Bois des Sioux, above the Ottertail, proved to be an insignificant
-stream. It had no valley, but meandered crookedly through a mere trench
-in the flat prairie. Willows and other bushes fringed its muddy waters.
-Its banks were sometimes open, sometimes wooded with groves or thin lines
-of cottonwood, poplar, wild cherry, and other trees. It would be possible
-to ford the stream almost anywhere, Walter thought, if one did not stick
-fast in the mud. He watched the shores anxiously for signs that horses
-had recently been across.
-
-The Indians had been paddling for not more than a half hour, when Scar
-Face, who was in the bow of the canoe that carried Walter and Raoul, gave
-a little grunt, and pointed with his paddle blade to the low west bank.
-Undoubtedly animals had gone up or down there. The willows were broken,
-the mud trampled. The Indians swerved the canoe close in. The broken
-bushes were still fresh.
-
-"_Mistatim_," said Scar Face, his keen eyes on the tracks.
-
-"That's the Cree word for horse," Raoul explained to Walter, "but we
-can't be sure. They may have been buffalo."
-
-"If they were, there were only a few of them," Walter returned. "A big
-band would have done more damage."
-
-"Yes. I believe myself our own people crossed here."
-
-The canoe was brought to the bank, and Scar Face stepped lightly out.
-Walter and Raoul followed. The Saulteur examined the trampled ground
-carefully. He gave a low grunt of satisfaction. He had found the print of
-a moccasined foot, where a rider had dismounted. But he was not satisfied
-yet. He followed the trail through the willows, examining it intently.
-Presently he straightened up and spoke to Raoul who was close behind.
-
-"They came to the river," he said.
-
-"You mean," the boy questioned, "that they came from there,"--he nodded
-towards the west,--"and went"--he pointed east across the stream.
-
-Scar Face grunted assent.
-
-"It must have been our people," Raoul said to Walter. "They are safe
-across the river."
-
-"That is where we had better be, as soon as we can get there," was
-Walter's reply.
-
-But the Saulteur was not quite ready to cross. He went on through the
-belt of small trees beyond the willows. Walter and Raoul hesitated an
-instant, then followed. They too wanted a view of the open ground.
-
-Their first glance across the prairie was reassuring. Except for a few
-birds on the wing, the only living creature in sight was one lone animal;
-a buffalo from its size and humped shape.
-
-"No Sioux yet," exclaimed Raoul. "I don't believe they are coming after
-us at all. Nothing to be seen, except that one old buffalo."
-
-Scar Face knew the French word _boeuf_, commonly used by the Canadians
-for buffalo. "Not buffalo," he said, pointing to the creature moving
-through the tall grass. "Man on horse."
-
-"What?" cried Raoul.
-
-"Man on horse, buffalo skin over him," the Indian insisted. "See," he
-added, pointing to the northwest. "More come."
-
-Walter had understood the dialogue and gestures well enough to guess that
-Scar Face found something wrong with the distant buffalo and that he saw
-or thought he saw something else beyond. Following the Indian's pointing
-finger, the boy strained his eyes. He believed he could make out
-something,--moving objects.
-
-"More buffalo," said Raoul.
-
-Scar Face shook his head doubtfully. The three stood gazing across the
-prairie. The lone buffalo was drawing nearer. There was something queer
-about it, Walter concluded. Its head was too small. Its shape was wrong.
-
-"He is right," exclaimed Raoul. "That is a man on horseback, stooped
-over, a buffalo hide thrown over him."
-
-Walter recalled Murray's queer costume of the night before. What about
-those far-away figures? Were _they_ buffalo?
-
-The day was bright and clear. There was not a trace of haze in the air,
-now that the sun was climbing higher. And the land was so flat one could
-see for miles. There was no longer any doubt in Walter's mind that there
-was something else coming from the northwest, far away still, far beyond
-the lone buffalo or horseman, but drawing nearer. Whether that something
-was a band of buffalo or of mounted men he could not tell, though he
-strained his eyes to make out.
-
-Scar Face had made up his mind that this was no place for him to stay
-longer. Abruptly he turned back among the trees. Neil and Raoul asked no
-questions. With Walter they heeded the silent warning and followed the
-Indian back to the river.
-
-With scarcely a word spoken, the Ojibwas paddled across the stream to the
-spot where the party that had taken the ford had left the water. Scar
-Face motioned to the boys to get out. He spoke earnestly to Raoul and
-Neil, and the latter translated to Walter.
-
-"He wants us to go on, out of the way. He and his braves are going back
-to that little island." Neil pointed to a low, willow-covered islet that
-parted the current just above where they had crossed and nearer to the
-west bank. "If it is Murray coming they will have a good chance at him
-from there."
-
-Taking for granted that there could be no objection to this manoeuvre,
-Neil started along the trail, his comrades after him. The Indians stepped
-back into their canoes. Walter felt surprised that the hot-headed Neil
-should be so willing to run away from a fight. In a moment, however, he
-found that Neil had no intention of running away. Instead of seeking the
-open, the Scotch boy turned aside among the bushes. After searching a
-little, he found a spot that suited him.
-
-"This will do," he said, crouching down behind a spreading osier dogwood.
-
-Joining Neil and looking between the red stems of the bush, Walter had an
-almost clear view of the river. He could see the lower end of the tiny
-islet and the spot on the opposite shore where the trail came to the
-water.
-
-"You're going to stay and see what happens?" he asked.
-
-"Of course. We may have to take a hand in the fight. Murray and his
-Dakotas must not cross the river, Walter. We must see to that."
-
-Walter nodded. Even if the Periers and Brabants had passed the Bois des
-Sioux before daybreak, they could not have reached Lake Traverse yet.
-They had a long way to go with tired horses. It was not impossible for
-the Indians, riding hard on fresh ponies, to overtake them. Murray and
-his savages must not cross.
-
-The Ojibwas were concealed among the willows of the low island. The lads
-could get no glimpse of them. The canoes were visible in part from where
-the boys were, but must be completely hidden from the opposite shore.
-Crouched among the bushes, the three waited, silent and almost
-motionless. Walter had about made up his mind that the horseman with the
-buffalo robe,--if it actually was a horseman,--was not coming to the
-ford, when Neil laid a hand on his arm and pointed across the river.
-
-The willows were stirring,--not with wind. An animal of some kind was
-coming through. It was a horse. Walter could see its head, as it pushed
-through the growth. Then the rider came into view; a tall man with a
-buffalo hide wrapped about him. He was no longer trying to conceal
-himself under the robe. He had let it slip down as he straightened up in
-the saddle.
-
-Neil uttered a low exclamation, and Walter started up from his hiding
-place. The whole width of the Bois des Sioux at this place was not fifty
-yards. The man on the opposite shore was in full sunlight at the edge of
-the water. He was tall, like Murray, but he was fully clothed and he wore
-a beard.
-
-Raoul pulled Walter down again. "Don't yell," he warned in a whisper.
-"There may be others behind him. Scar Face can see it is not Murray. I
-told him how a white man warned us. He'll let him cross. He knows he will
-lose his chance if he fires before he sees Murray himself."
-
-There was reason in what the younger boy said. Walter and Neil kept
-silence, but they held their breaths for fear the Ojibwas might make a
-mistake.
-
-McNab's horse took to the stream, picking its way carefully. The water
-was shallow, the current sluggish, and the rider was not obliged to
-dismount or the horse to swim. Not a leaf moved on the willow-covered
-islet. Not a sound, except the peaceful twittering of a bird, came from
-it, as Duncan McNab, unconscious of any peril from that direction, rode
-past the tip, and on across the stream. Intent upon finding the ford, he
-did not even glance back, so caught no glimpse of the birch canoes.
-
-Before McNab reached shore, Neil had left his post and slipped through
-the bushes to meet him. In a few moments he was back again, the trader,
-without his buffalo robe and horse, following. He squatted down beside
-Walter and looked at the island and the bark canoes. Neil had told him of
-Scar Face and his companions.
-
-"Are the Sioux after _you_?" Walter whispered.
-
-"That I don't know," was the response in French. "I suspect Murray would
-set them on me if he could. When he and some of the young fools started
-for your camp this morning, I thought it was time for me to be away. So I
-took short leave of Chief Tatanka Wechacheta. I struck your trail at the
-head of the coulee."
-
-"But they are coming, aren't they? We thought that----"
-
-"Aye, they're coming, on your trail. It was no band of buffalo you saw. I
-had a buffalo hide over me and the hind quarters of my horse, but I don't
-know whether I fooled them or no." His keen eyes were fastened on the
-break in the bushes, watching.
-
-Walter asked no more questions. Silence was best. But while he waited he
-stole more than one glance at the trader, whose strange appearance had
-aroused his curiosity the night before. A queer figure indeed was this
-tall, lank, big-boned man of almost skeleton thinness; seeming to consist
-entirely of bone and gristle. His name was Scotch and so was his tongue,
-but Walter suspected that he was far from being wholly white. The coarse,
-straight black hair that hung below his fur cap, the dark bronze of his
-long face, the high-bridged nose, and prominent cheek bones, betrayed the
-Indian. Yet his beard was uneven in color, rusty in places, and the eyes
-he turned on the Swiss boy were steel gray, startlingly light in his dark
-face. A singular man surely, with a grim, shrewd face, no longer young,
-as its many lines and wrinkles betrayed. In spite of the suspense of
-waiting, Walter found himself wondering about Duncan McNab and his
-history.
-
-The wait was not a long one. McNab suddenly raised his head, like a hound
-listening. Then the ears of the others caught the sounds too,--the
-crackling of twigs, the clatter of accouterments, as mounted men came
-through the strip of poplars and willows on the low opposite bank of the
-stream. Duncan looked to the priming of his musket and dropped a ball
-into the muzzle. Walter felt for his own weapon. Even in the midst of his
-excitement, the thought of shooting unwarned men from ambush sickened
-him. But if Murray and his Sioux were really on the trail, they must not
-cross. Fear for Elise and for Louis' mother and sisters steeled the boy's
-nerves.
-
-The willows were moving. A horse's head appeared, then the rider, a
-slender, bronze figure, brave in red paint and feathered head-dress. It
-was not Murray. He halted at the edge of the water and turned his head to
-look back. Another horse was coming, a white one.
-
-"Himsel," muttered McNab under his breath.
-
-The rider came in view, tall, stately, his painted body naked to the
-waist, his black head bare. There was nothing about him except his size
-to distinguish him from any other Indian. The two talked together for a
-moment. The slender warrior seemed, from his gestures, to object or
-protest.
-
-The waving and rustling of the willows, the sounds that came across the
-water, proved that other men were following. But the track was narrow,
-and they were obliged to check their horses until the leaders should take
-to the water.
-
-"How many?" Neil whispered to McNab.
-
-"Eight or ten," was the equally low reply.
-
-The discussion ended in Murray's going first. When the white horse
-stepped into the water, a cold shudder passed over Walter. He had every
-cause to hate and fear the Black Murray. He hoped Scar Face would not
-miss. Yet, quite unreasonably, he wished the rascally mixed blood might
-have a chance to fight for his life. He looked a fine figure of a man on
-his big, white horse.
-
-He came deliberately enough, letting his horse pick its way, as McNab had
-done. From the willows on the islet there was no move, no sound. He was
-opposite the tip now. He was past it. He was coming on. Had Scar Face
-weakened? Had he lost his courage?
-
-The silence was broken by a sudden menacing sound, not loud but strangely
-blood-chilling; the Ojibwa war whoop. On the near side of the islet a
-figure leaped into view. At the same instant, it seemed, Murray swung
-about on his horse's back, musket raised. He was a breath too late. Scar
-Face had fired.
-
-The distance was too short, the target too good for the Ojibwa hunter to
-miss. Even as his own gun went off, Murray swayed forward. The white
-horse leaped and plunged. More shots came from the island. Horse and
-rider went down, and the muddy water flowed over them.
-
-On the farther bank, the slender Dakota's horse was hit. As it fell, the
-man leaped clear, and darted back among the willows. There followed an
-exchange of shots between shore and islet, without a man visible in
-either place. Only the puffs of smoke betrayed the hiding places.
-
-Gray eyes gleaming, Duncan McNab turned to Neil. "Get you awa'," he
-ordered. "Ta Traverse as fast as your legs can carry ye."
-
-"And you?" the boy asked.
-
-"I'll o'ertak ye. I'll be seein' the end o' this, ta mak sure there's na
-followin'. On your wa', all o' ye."
-
-
-
-
- XXXIX
- SAFE
-
-
-Not one of the three boys thought of disobeying Duncan McNab's stern
-command. On hands and knees, for fear some Indian might catch a glimpse
-of them and send a shot in their direction, they crawled through the
-bushes. Not until they were out of sight as well as out of range, did
-they stand upright.
-
-They tried to follow McNab's instructions and make good speed towards
-Lake Traverse, but all three suddenly found themselves very tired. The
-night before, after a hard day's journey, they had had not a wink of
-sleep. It had been a night of continuous physical exertion and intense
-strain. Then came the meeting with Scar Face, and the anxious waiting for
-Murray and the Dakotas, capped by the excitement of the brief fight. The
-time had seemed long, yet in reality events had followed one another so
-swiftly that the sun even now was scarcely more than half-way up the sky.
-
-"If I didn't know we were going in the right direction, I should think we
-were headed north, not south," said Walter, as he plodded wearily along.
-"It seems as if the sun must be on the way down, instead of up."
-
-Neil nodded. "I'm dead sleepy," he admitted, "but we must try to keep on
-going till McNab overtakes us."
-
-"The firing has stopped," put in Raoul. "The fight must be over."
-
-"Or else the noise doesn't reach us here."
-
-If the fight was over, who had won? The answer to that question might
-mean life or death to the fugitives. Murray had fallen, but if the
-Dakotas had destroyed the Ojibwas, they might, even without his
-leadership, cross the river and continue the pursuit. The boys felt they
-must go on as long as they possibly could. They trudged doggedly on,
-casting many a glance behind them.
-
-At last Neil, turning to look back, gave a cry of joy. A single horseman
-was on their trail, coming at good speed. He raised one long arm in the
-friendship sign. The three stopped short and dropped down to rest and let
-him overtake them. They were almost asleep when he reached them.
-
-McNab reined in his horse and looked down at the weary figures with a
-grim smile. "Weel," he said slowly, in his peculiar Scots' English with
-its guttural suggestion of Dakota, "ye disappeart sa quick I thocht the
-prairie had swallowed ye."
-
-"Did the Saulteux win?" Neil roused himself to ask.
-
-"Aye, an' withoot losin' a man. Scar Face himsel got a shot in the thigh,
-but it's only a flesh wound. The ither side didna ken the number o' the
-enemy, an' they were mair nor a little upset by Murray's fa'. When they
-found they coudna drive the Ojubwas fra the wee isle, they turnt tail
-theirsel an' were awa'. If ye can mak it, we'd best be gettin' ta that
-bit _ile des bois_ ower yon, where ye can be sleepin' in the shade."
-
-The clump of small trees was only a short distance away. There, shaded
-from the heat of midday, the boys slept, utterly relaxed, until the sun
-was far on its downward course. Duncan McNab kept watch. He had had no
-more sleep than they the night before, but he was more used to going
-without and needed less than growing boys required.
-
-Neil's first words, when he woke to find the sun low in the west, were,
-"How far have we got to go to Lake Traverse?"
-
-"Ta the post thirty mile or mair," was the reply.
-
-Neil groaned and stretched. "And we've got to walk it," he muttered.
-
-"Weel, ye may be glad ye've got twa soond legs left ta walk it wi',"
-McNab returned with his grim smile. There were no more complaints.
-
-McNab, old campaigner that he was, carried cooking utensils, pemmican,
-and a packet of tea in his saddle bags. A hot meal put new courage into
-the lads. Before the sun was down they were on their way again. The night
-was clear and light, and they kept up a steady pace till midnight. Then
-they stopped for a brief rest and more tea.
-
-Luckily for the boys they did not have to walk the whole distance to the
-trading post. Dawn had not yet come, when McNab made out a party of
-horsemen coming towards them. The foremost rider waved his arms and
-shouted. The boys knew that voice. Louis had come back to seek them.
-
-Unashamed to display his feelings, Louis sprang from his pony to hug his
-brother and his friends. "Thank the good God," he cried. "I felt like a
-coward and a traitor to leave you behind."
-
-"It was the only thing to do," Walter and Neil exclaimed together. "Are
-the others safe?"
-
-"All safe, but we did not reach the fort till after sunset. After we
-crossed the Bois des Sioux we had to rest our horses a little, and the
-children slept. We dared not stop long. The ponies did their best, but
-they could not carry double all the time. My mother and M'sieu Perier and
-I walked much of the way, and sometimes Marie and Elise walked also."
-
-"And you started right back to find us?" cried Walter.
-
-"I rested a while first, but I could not sleep. M'sieu Renville gave me a
-fresh horse, and these men offered to come with me. I thought you would
-follow our trail. If I kept to it, I would find you; if _le Murrai_ had
-not overtaken you."
-
-The _bois brules_ from the trading post gladly gave up their horses to
-the weary boys, and went afoot. So Lake Traverse and the shelter of the
-Columbia Fur Company's fort was reached at last. There, in one of the log
-buildings within the stockade on the shore of the lake, the rest of the
-little party were waiting anxiously. The boys, almost dropping from their
-saddles with sleep and weariness, were embraced and shaken by the hand,
-and cried over, and questioned, until the trader, Joseph Renville,
-intervened. He led them away to bunks where they could sleep undisturbed
-for as many hours as they cared to.
-
-When the boys had had their sleep out, the two sections of the party
-exchanged stories. Afterwards Duncan McNab had something to add. He had
-returned to the Indian camp two nights before to find the dance in full
-swing. Within the medicine lodge, Murray was instructing the chosen
-initiates in some sort of mystic rites. From time to time one of them
-would come out to chant or howl a few words or syllables and to go
-through the steps and posturings of the new dance. The men around the
-fires would repeat the lesson over and over, until another of the chosen
-ones appeared to teach them something new.
-
-"As near as I could mak oot," said Duncan, "it was something like the
-medicine dance the Mdewakanton Dakota on the Mississippi mak ta their god
-Unktahi, that Murray was teachin' yon Wahpetons, but he was puttin' in
-some stuff of his ain. Some o' the words o' the sangs soundit like
-Gaelic, but made na sense as far as I could ken, an' I hae a bit o' the
-Gaelic mysel. I'm thinkin' he picked the words for their mysterious sound
-like."
-
-When the excitement had reached the right pitch, Murray began to serve
-out liquor. "I dinna ken where he got sa mickle,"--McNab shook his head.
-"He had a cairt loadit wi' goods an' kegs an' what a'. He must be in wi'
-ither free traders, some o' the men on the Missouri most like, or mayhap
-he stole the stuff fra them. It's the wrang time o' year ta be buyin'
-furs. It was the good will o' the sauvages an' power ower 'em he was
-after, sa they'd be sure an' bring him their next winter's catch."
-
-As the liquor flowed more freely, the performance grew frenzied. It was a
-wild night in Tatanka Wechacheta's village, and McNab spared his
-listeners the details. He feared every moment that the Indians would raid
-the neighboring camp, and discover too soon that the white men had gone.
-But the Black Murray overdid the celebration. He supplied liquor so
-lavishly that his followers were soon entirely overcome by it. Perhaps he
-dared not try to withhold what they knew he had. And he failed to curb
-his own immoderate thirst, but overindulged until, inert in the medicine
-lodge, he slept as heavily as they. "I'm thinkin' it was the rascal's
-owerfondness for _minnewakan_ that saved a' your lives," said McNab. "If
-he hadna slept sa late, he wad sure hae owertaken the lads on foot an'
-maybe the rest o' ye."
-
-When Murray finally roused himself, in ugly mood, he gathered together
-eight or ten reckless young braves who could still sit their horses, and
-started for the white men's camp. Up to that time McNab had not felt
-himself in any great danger, as long as he kept to his own lodge. He was
-a man of influence among the Dakotas, and back of him was the authority
-of the Columbia Fur Company and of Joseph Renville. Renville himself was
-half Dakota and powerful and respected among his mother's people. But the
-young chief, still partially drunk, was in almost as savage a mood as
-Murray that morning, and McNab did not know what might happen.
-
-As soon as Murray had gone, McNab took his leave. On the other side of a
-tiny clump of trees, he threw his buffalo robe over his horse and
-himself, hoping that, seen from behind, horse and rider might be taken
-for a lone bull. He made for the head of the coulee, intending to follow
-the fugitives and lend his aid if they were attacked. Finding that Murray
-and his men were coming, he urged his horse to its best speed, to get
-across the Bois des Sioux before them.
-
-After he had sent the boys on their way, McNab remained to watch the
-outcome of the fight. It was soon over. The fall of Murray had struck
-panic into the hearts of his followers. "There was reason for that,"
-Duncan explained. "Yon Wahpetons are na cowards, but Wechacheta's chief
-medicine man was against Murray. The auld fellow claimed Murray was na
-medicine man at a' an' had na _wakan_ or _tonwan_, na magic powers. When
-Murray was gatherin' men ta plunder the white men, the auld man tauld 'em
-they'd gang ta destruction sure. Murray's time was come, he said. Afore
-the sun gaed doon, he wad be deed, an' likewise a' that followt him. Sa
-it was na wonder the young braves was scairt when Murray was shot doon at
-the ford."
-
-"You're sure he was killed?" questioned Renville. "From what I have heard
-of the fellow, he seems to have as many lives as a cat."
-
-"I made sure afore ever I left the Bois des Sioux," McNab replied
-quietly. "An' there's his medicine bag ta prove it." He handed Renville a
-curious looking pouch made of rattlesnake skin. "An' a fine lot o' trash
-there is in it,--birds' claws, an' dried roots, a copper nugget, a
-snake's fang, a man's finger bone, an' a wee packet o' black, sticky
-stuff. Do na handle that, it micht be poison."
-
-"It is poison," asserted Walter, and told the story of his infected hand.
-
-
-
-
- XL
- CONCLUSION
-
-
-As guests of Joseph Renville, French _bois brule_, and Colonel Jeffries,
-Scotchman, partners of the Columbia Fur Company, the Brabant-Perier party
-remained at Lake Traverse for more than a week. Guided to the spot by
-Louis, Renville himself went to find the abandoned carts. The vehicles
-were where the boys had left them, but empty and so badly wrecked that
-the remains were good for nothing but firewood. Tatanka Wechacheta's band
-was gone. From the appearance of the camp ground, the Wahpetons'
-departure had been a hurried one. Scar Face and his Ojibwas had vanished
-also. No doubt they had returned full speed to their own country,
-satisfied with their revenge and a scalp or two.
-
-Stripped of practically all of their belongings, the Brabants and Periers
-were obliged to run in debt to the traders for supplies and equipment for
-the rest of the journey. The boys agreed,--if they could pay the debt no
-other way,--to work it out the next winter. With that arrangement the
-partners seemed satisfied.
-
-Of the remainder of the long journey overland and down the St. Peter,--as
-the Minnesota River was called in those days,--to the Mississippi, there
-is no room here to tell. The trip was not without hardship and adventure.
-Fort St. Anthony,--later to be renamed Fort Snelling,--at the junction of
-the St. Peter with the Mississippi, was reached at last. There a
-disappointment awaited the immigrants. St. Antoine, in his talks with
-them, had not overstated the beauty and attractiveness of the country,
-but his assurance that they might take possession of whatever land they
-chose was an error. The country was not yet open to settlement. They
-might squat on or near the military reservation, they found, but could
-not obtain title to the land or be sure of undisturbed possession. They
-were treated with kindness at the fort, but were not encouraged to settle
-near by. Instead, they were advised to go on down the Mississippi.
-
-Neil had a chance to join a party just setting out for the Red River.
-After parting with him, the others went on again, traveling by river in
-an open boat not unlike the York boats that had taken them from Fort York
-to Fort Douglas. At Prairie du Chien, on the east side of the river, they
-disembarked. Prairie du Chien was in what was then Michigan Territory,
-but later became Wisconsin. The little settlement resembled Pembina in
-that many of its people were French Canadians and _bois brules_. There
-were, however, some Americans who had come from farther east. There were
-good farms and a military post. It was not necessary at Prairie du Chien
-to depend entirely on hunting for a living.
-
-There the weary immigrants decided to try to make homes for themselves.
-They made friends at once, who helped them to get a start, and prospects
-seemed more encouraging than in the Red River Colony. The Brabants showed
-no desire to return, and certainly the Periers and Walter did not want
-to. When, late in the autumn, Louis and Walter left the settlement to
-work out the family debts to the Columbia Fur Company, they went well
-assured that those left behind would be comfortable and well cared for.
-Other families of the Swiss had already left the Red River and more
-followed, including the Scheideckers, in the next and succeeding years.
-Like the Periers, they took the long journey to the Mississippi, and
-settled at the junction of that river with the St. Peter or lower down
-its course in what was to become Wisconsin and Illinois.
-
-The Brabants and the Periers had their ups and downs, but on the whole
-they prospered. In time Mr. Perier's dream of an apothecary shop in the
-new land came true. He even had his herb garden, started from the few
-packets of seeds he had carried in his pockets during all his wanderings.
-Walter became a successful farmer on his own land and married Elise, as
-he had dreamed of doing. Little Max was ambitious to be a physician. He
-helped in his father's shop and went to school, until he was old enough
-to go east to study medicine.
-
-Louis and his mother were land owners also, but farming was less to
-Louis' taste than following the river. He found employment on a
-Mississippi steamboat, became a skilled pilot, and in time owned the boat
-he captained. Of all the boys Raoul was the only one to follow the fur
-trade. As a clerk and trader with the American Fur Company, he traveled
-and traded over much of the northwest. The Brabant girls grew into
-bright, attractive women. Marie married a Canadian settler, Jeanne, a
-merchant and trader.
-
-Of Neil the others heard nothing for several years. Then, after the
-disastrous Red River flood of 1826 that almost destroyed the Selkirk
-Colony, he appeared at Prairie du Chien. His father still refused to
-leave Kildonan, but Neil had decided to emigrate to the United States. He
-took up land in Wisconsin, and afterwards, when the Indian lands of
-Minnesota were opened to settlement, moved to the Minnesota valley.
-
-The bonds of friendship and understanding which had been knit by the long
-journey together and the perils and hardships undergone, remained firm
-and strong between the Periers, and Rossels, and Brabants, and MacKays.
-Even after all had their separate homes and families, they enjoyed many a
-reunion when they recalled the old days and told children and
-grandchildren of the long and perilous journey from the Red River to the
-Mississippi.
-
-
- THE END
-
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- 5. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY IN THE ABANDONED CITY
- 6. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY ON TERROR TRAIL
- 7. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY IN THE SWAMP OF DEATH
- 8. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AMONG THE SLAVES
- 9. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY ON THE UNDERGROUND RIVER
- 10. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AND THE LOST EXPLORERS
- 11. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY IN A STRANGE LAND
- 12. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AMONG THE PYGMIES
- 13. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AND THE CANNIBALS
- 14. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AND THE PAINTED HUNTERS
- 15. BOMBA THE JUNGLE BOY AND THE RIVER DEMONS
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-
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- Transcriber's Notes
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-
---Copyright notice provided as in the original--this e-text is public
- domain in the country of publication.
-
---Research suggests that the copyright date in the printed text is not
- accurate.
-
---Silently corrected palpable typos; left non-standard spellings and
- dialect unchanged.
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-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of South from Hudson Bay, by
-E. C. [Ethel Claire] Brill
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