A terrible moment.
Melville’s purchase comprised
not only the cottage, but its contents, pictures and
books included. This was fortunate, for though
Herbert, who was strong, and fond of outdoor sports,
such as hunting and fishing, could have contented
himself, Melville was easily fatigued, and spent at
least half of the day in the cabin. The books,
most of which were new to him, were a great and unfailing
resource.
Among the articles which Falkland
left behind him were two guns, of which Herbert and
Melville made frequent use. Herbert had a natural
taste for hunting, though, at home, having no gun of
his own, he had not been able to gratify his taste
as much as he desired. Often after breakfast
the two sallied forth, and wandered about in the neighboring
woods, gun in hand. Generally Melville returned
first, leaving Herbert, not yet fatigued, to continue
the sport. In this way our hero acquired a skill
and precision of aim which enabled him to make a very
respectable figure even among old and practiced hunters.
One morning, after Melville had returned
home, Herbert was led, by the ardor of the chase,
to wander farther than usual. He was aware of
this, but did not fear being lost, having a compass
and knowing his bearings. All at once, as he
was making his way along a wooded path, he was startled
by hearing voices. He hurried forward, and the
scene upon which he intruded was dramatic enough.
With arms folded, a white man, a hunter,
apparently, stood erect, and facing him, at a distance
of seventy-five or eighty feet, was an Indian, with
gun raised, and leveled at the former.
“Why don’t you shoot,
you red rascal!” said the white man. “You’ve
got the drop on me, I allow, and I am in your power.”
The Indian laughed in his guttural
way; but though he held the gun poised, he did not
shoot. He was playing with his victim as a cat
plays with a mouse before she kills it.
“Is white man afraid?”
said the Indian, not tauntingly, but with real curiosity,
for among Indians it is considered a great triumph
if a warrior can inspire fear in his foe, and make
him show the white feather.
“Afraid!” retorted the
hunter. “Who should I be afraid of?”
“Of Indian.”
“Don’t flatter yourself,
you pesky savage,” returned the white man, coolly,
ejecting a flood of tobacco juice from his mouth, for
though he was a brave man, he had some drawbacks.
“You needn’t think I am afraid of you.”
“Indian shoot!” suggested
his enemy, watching the effect of this announcement.
“Well, shoot, then, and be done with it.”
“White man no want to live?”
“Of course I want to live.
Never saw a healthy white man that didn’t.
If I was goin’ to die at all, I wouldn’t
like to die by the hands of a red rascal like you.”
“Indian great warrior,”
said the dusky denizen of the woods, straightening
up, and speaking complacently.
“Indian may be great warrior,
but he is a horse thief, all the same,” said
the hunter, coolly.
“White man soon die, and Indian
wear his scalp,” remarked the Indian, in a manner
likely to disturb the composure of even the bravest
listener.
The hunter’s face changed.
It was impossible to reflect upon such a fate without
a pang. Death was nothing to that final brutality.
“Ha! White man afraid now!”
said the Indian, triumphantly—quick to
observe the change of expression in his victim.
“No, I am not afraid,”
said the hunter, quickly recovering himself; “but
it’s enough to disgust any decent man to think
that his scalp will soon be dangling from the belt
of a filthy heathen like you. However, I suppose
I won’t know it after I’m dead. You
have skulked and dogged my steps, you red hound, ever
since I punished you for trying to steal my horse.
I made one great mistake. Instead of beating
you, I should have shot you, and rid the earth of you
once for all.”
“Indian no forget white man’s
blows. White man die, and Indian be revenged.”
“Yes, I s’pose that’s
what it’s coming to,” said the hunter,
in a tone of resignation. “I was a ‘tarnal
fool to come out this mornin’ without my gun.
If I had it you would sing a different song.”
Again the Indian laughed, a low, guttural,
unpleasant laugh, which Herbert listened to with a
secret shudder. It was so full of malignity,
and cunning triumph, and so suggestive of the fate
which he reserved for his white foe, that it aggravated
the latter, and made him impatient to have the blow
fall, since it seemed to be inevitable.
“Why don’t you shoot,
you red savage?” he cried. “What are
you waiting for?”
The Indian wished to gloat over the
mental distress of his foe. He liked to prolong
his own feeling of power—to enjoy the consciousness
that, at any moment, he could put an end to the life
of the man whom he hated for the blows which he felt
had degraded him, and which he was resolved never
to forget or forgive. It was the same feeling
that has often led those of his race to torture their
hapless victims, that they may, as long as possible,
enjoy the spectacle of their agonies. For this
reason he was in no hurry to speed on its way the
fatal bullet.
Again the Indian laughed, and, taking
aim, made a feint of firing, but withheld his shot.
Pale and resolute his intended victim continued to
face him. He thought that the fatal moment had
come, and braced himself to meet his fate; but he
was destined to be disappointed.
“How long is this goin’
to last, you red hound?” he demanded. “If
I’ve got to die, I am ready.”
“Indian can wait!” said
the savage, with a smile of enjoyment.
“You wouldn’t find it
prudent to wait if I were beside you,” said
the hunter. “It’s easy enough to threaten
an unarmed man. If some friend would happen along
to foil you in your cowardly purpose—–”
“White man send for friend!”
suggested the Indian, tauntingly.
Herbert had listened to this colloquy
with varying emotions, and his anger and indignation
were stirred by the cold-blooded cruelty of the savage.
He stood motionless, seen by neither party, but he
held his weapon leveled at the Indian, ready to shoot
at an instant’s warning. Brought up, as
he had been, with a horror for scenes of violence,
and a feeling that human life was sacred, he had a
great repugnance to use his weapon, even where it
seemed his urgent duty to do so. He felt that
on him, young as he was, rested a weighty responsibility.
He could save the life of a man of his own color,
but only by killing or disabling a red man. Indian
though he was, his life, too, was sacred; but when
he threatened the life of another he forfeited his
claim to consideration.
Herbert hesitated till he saw it was
no longer safe to do so—till he saw that
it was the unalterable determination of the Indian
to kill the hunter, and then, his face pale and fixed,
he pulled the trigger.
His bullet passed through the shoulder
of the savage. The latter uttered a shrill cry
of surprise and dismay, and his weapon fell at his
feet, while he pressed his left hand to his wounded
shoulder.
The hunter, amazed at the interruption,
which had been of such essential service to him, lost
not a moment in availing himself of it. He bounded
forward, and before the savage well knew what he purposed,
he had picked up his fallen weapon, and, leveling it
at his wounded foe, fired.
His bullet was not meant to disable,
but to kill. It penetrated the heart of the savage,
and, staggering back, he fell, his face distorted
with rage and disappointment.
“The tables are turned, my red
friend!” said the hunter, coolly. “It’s
your life, not mine, this time!”
At that moment Herbert, pale and shocked,
but relieved as well, pressed forward, and the hunter
saw him for the first time.
“Was it you, boy, who fired
the shot?” asked the hunter, in surprise.
“Yes,” answered Herbert.
“Then I owe you my life, and
that’s a debt Jack Holden isn’t likely
to forget!”