A mission of peace—Unexpected
joys—Dick and Crusoe set off for the land
of the Redskins, and meet with adventures by the way
as a matter of course—Night in the wild
woods.
One day the inhabitants of Mustang
Valley were thrown into considerable excitement by
the arrival of an officer of the United States army
and a small escort of cavalry. They went direct
to the blockhouse, which, since Major Hope’s
departure, had become the residence of Joe Blunt—that
worthy having, by general consent, been deemed the
fittest man in the settlement to fill the major’s
place.
Soon it began to be noised abroad
that the strangers had been sent by Government to
endeavour to bring about, if possible, a more friendly
state of feeling between the Whites and the Indians
by means of presents, and promises, and fair speeches.
The party remained all night in the
block-house, and ere long it was reported that Joe
Blunt had been requested, and had consented, to be
the leader and chief of a party of three men who should
visit the neighbouring tribes of Indians to the west
and north of the valley as Government agents.
Joe’s knowledge of two or three different Indian
dialects, and his well-known sagacity, rendered him
a most fitting messenger on such an errand. It
was also whispered that Joe was to have the choosing
of his comrades in this mission, and many were the
opinions expressed and guesses made as to who would
be chosen.
That same evening Dick Varley was
sitting in his mother’s kitchen cleaning his
rifle. His mother was preparing supper, and talking
quietly about the obstinacy of a particular hen that
had taken to laying her eggs in places where they
could not be found. Fan was coiled up in a corner
sound asleep, and Crusoe was sitting at one side of
the fire looking on at things in general.
“I wonder,” remarked Mrs.
Varley, as she spread the table with a pure white
napkin—“I wonder what the sodgers
are doin’ wi’ Joe Blunt.”
As often happens when an individual
is mentioned, the worthy referred to opened the door
at that moment and stepped into the room.
“Good e’en t’ye,
dame,” said the stout hunter, doffing his cap,
and resting his rifle in a corner, while Dick rose
and placed a chair for him.
“The same to you, Master Blunt,”
answered the widow; “you’ve jist comed
in good time for a cut o’ venison.”
“Thanks, mistress; I s’pose
we’re beholden to the silver rifle for that.”
“To the hand that aimed it,
rather,” suggested the widow.
“Nay, then, say raither to the
dog that turned it,” said Dick Varley.
“But for Crusoe, that buck would ha’ bin
couched in the woods this night.”
“Oh! if it comes to that,”
retorted Joe, “I’d lay it to the door o’
Fan, for if she’d niver bin born nother would
Crusoe. But it’s good an’ tender
meat, whativer ways ye got it. Howsiver, I’ve
other things to talk about jist now. Them sodgers
that are eatin’ buffalo tongues up at the block-house
as if they’d niver ate meat before, and didn’t
hope to eat again for a twelvemonth—”
“Ay, what o’ them?”
interrupted Mrs. Varley; “I’ve bin wonderin’
what was their errand.”
“Of coorse ye wos, Dame Varley,
and I’ve comed here a purpis to tell ye.
They want me to go to the Redskins to make peace between
them and us; and they’ve brought a lot o’
goods to make them presents withal—beads,
an’ knives, an’ lookin’-glasses,
an’ vermilion paint, an’ sich like, jist
as much as’ll be a light load for one horse—for,
ye see, nothin’ can be done wi’ the Redskins
without gifts.”
“’Tis a blessed mission,”
said the widow; “I wish it may succeed.
D’ye think ye’ll go?”
“Go? ay, that will I.”
“I only wish they’d made the offer to
me,” said Dick with a sigh.
“An’ so they do make the
offer, lad. They’ve gin me leave to choose
the two men I’m to take with me, and I’ve
corned straight to ask you. Ay or no,
for we must up an’ away by break o’ day
to-morrow.”
Mrs. Varley started. “So soon?” she
said, with a look of anxiety.
“Ay; the Pawnees are at the
Yellow Creek jist at this time, but I’ve heerd
they’re ‘bout to break up camp an’
away west; so we’ll need to use haste.”
“May I go, mother?” asked Dick, with a
look of anxiety.
There was evidently a conflict in
the widow’s breast, but it quickly ceased.
“Yes, my boy,” she said
in her own low, quiet voice; “and God go with
ye. I knew the time must come soon, an’
I thank him that your first visit to the Redskins
will be on an errand o’ peace. ’Blessed
are the peace-makers: for they shall be called
the children of God.’”
Dick grasped his mother’s hand
and pressed it to his cheek in silence. At the
same moment Crusoe, seeing that the deeper feelings
of his master were touched, and deeming it his duty
to sympathize, rose up and thrust his nose against
him.
“Ah, pup,” cried the young
man hastily, “you must go too.—Of
course Crusoe goes, Joe Blunt?”
“Hum! I don’t know
that. There’s no dependin’ on a dog
to keep his tongue quiet in times o’ danger.”
“Believe me,” exclaimed
Dick, flashing with enthusiasm, “Crusoe’s
more trustworthy than I am myself. If ye can
trust the master, ye’re safe to trust the pup.”
“Well, lad, ye may be right. We’ll
take him.”
“Thanks, Joe. And who else goes with us?”
“I’ve’ bin castin’
that in my mind for some time, an’ I’ve
fixed to take Henri. He’s not the safest
man in the valley, but he’s the truest, that’s
a fact. And now, youngster, get yer horse an’
rifle ready, and come to the block-house at daybreak
to-morrow.—Good luck to ye, mistress, till
we meet agin.”
Joe Blunt rose, and taking up his
rifle—without which he scarcely ever moved
a foot from his own door—left the cottage
with rapid strides.
“My son,” said Mrs. Varley,
kissing Dick’s cheek as he resumed his seat,
“put this in the little pocket I made for it
in your hunting-shirt.”
She handed him a small pocket Bible.
“Dear mother,” he said,
as he placed the book carefully within the breast
of his coat, “the Redskin that takes that from
me must take my scalp first. But don’t
fear for me. You’ve often said the Lord
would protect me. So he will, mother, for sure
it’s an errand o’ peace.”
“Ay that’s it, that’s
it,” murmured the widow in a half-soliloquy.
Dick Varley spent that night in converse
with his mother, and next morning at daybreak he was
at the place of meeting, mounted on his sturdy little
horse, with the “silver rifle” on his shoulder
and Crusoe by his side.
“That’s right, lad, that’s
right. Nothin’ like keepin’ yer time,”
said Joe, as he led out a pack-horse from the gate
of the block-house, while his own charger was held
ready saddled by a man named Daniel Brand, who had
been appointed to the charge of the block-house in
his absence.
“Where’s Henri?—oh,
here he comes!” exclaimed Dick, as the hunter
referred to came thundering up the slope at a charge,
on a horse that resembled its rider in size and not
a little in clumsiness of appearance.
“Ah! mes boy. Him is a goot one to go,”
cried
Henri, remarking Dick’s smile
as he pulled up. “No hoss on de plain can
beat dis one, surement.”
“Now then, Henri, lend a hand
to fix this pack; we’ve no time to palaver.”
By this time they were joined by several
of the soldiers and a few hunters who had come to
see them start.
“Remember, Joe,” said
one, “if you don’t come back in three months
we’ll all come out in a band to seek you.”
“If we don’t come back
in less than that time, what’s left o’
us won’t be worth seekin’ for,”
said Joe, tightening the girth of his saddle.
“Put a bit in yer own mouth,
Henri,” cried another, as the Canadian arranged
his steed’s bridle; “yell need it more
than yer horse when ye git ’mong the red reptiles.”
“Vraiment, if mon mout’
needs one bit, yours will need one padlock.”
“Now, lads, mount!” cried
Joe Blunt as he vaulted into the saddle.
Dick Varley sprang lightly on his
horse, and Henri made a rush at his steed and hurled
his huge frame across its back with a violence that
ought to have brought it to the ground; but the tall,
raw-boned, broad-chested roan was accustomed to the
eccentricities of its master, and stood the shock
bravely. Being appointed to lead the pack-horse,
Henri seized its halter. Then the three cavaliers
shook their reins, and, waving their hands to their
comrades, they sprang into the woods at full gallop,
and laid their course for the “far west.”
For some time they galloped side by
side in silence, each occupied with his own thoughts,
Crusoe keeping close beside his master’s horse.
The two elder hunters evidently ruminated on the object
of their mission and the prospects of success, for
their countenances were grave and their eyes cast
on the ground. Dick Varley, too, thought upon
the Red-men, but his musings were deeply tinged with
the bright hues of a first adventure.
The mountains, the plains, the Indians, the bears,
the buffaloes, and a thousand other objects, danced
wildly before his mind’s eye, and his blood
careered through his veins and flushed his forehead
as he thought of what he should see and do, and felt
the elastic vigour of youth respond in sympathy to
the light spring of his active little steed.
He was a lover of nature, too, and his flashing eyes
glanced observantly from side to side as they swept
along—sometimes through glades of forest
trees, sometimes through belts of more open ground
and shrubbery; anon by the margin of a stream or along
the shores of a little lake, and often over short
stretches of flowering prairie-land—while
the firm, elastic turf sent up a muffled sound from
the tramp of their mettlesome chargers. It was
a scene of wild, luxuriant beauty, that might almost
(one could fancy) have drawn involuntary homage to
its bountiful Creator from the lips even of an infidel.
After a time Joe Blunt reined up,
and they proceeded at an easy ambling pace. Joe
and his friend Henri were so used to these beautiful
scenes that they had long ceased to be enthusiastically
affected by them, though they never ceased to delight
in them.
“I hope,” said Joe, “that
them sodgers’ll go their ways soon. I’ve
no notion o’ them chaps when they’re left
at a place wi’ nothin’ to do but whittle
sticks.”
“Why, Joe!” exclaimed
Dick Varley in a tone of surprise, “I thought
you were admirin’ the beautiful face o’
nature all this time, and ye’re only thinkin’
about the sodgers. Now, that’s strange!”
“Not so strange after all, lad,”
answered Joe. “When a man’s used to
a thing, he gits to admire an’ enjoy it without
speakin’ much about it. But it is
true, boy, that mankind gits in coorse o’ time
to think little o’ the blissin’s he’s
used to.”
“Oui, c’est vrai!” murmured
Henri emphatically.
“Well, Joe Blunt, it may be
so, but I’m thankful I’m not used
to this sort o’ thing yet,” exclaimed Varley.
“Let’s have another gallop—so
ho! come along, Crusoe!” shouted the youth as
he shook his reins and flew over a long stretch of
prairie on which at that moment they entered.
Joe smiled as he followed his enthusiastic
companion, but after a short run he pulled up.
“Hold on, youngster,”
he cried; “ye must larn to do as ye’re
bid, lad. It’s trouble enough to be among
wild Injuns and wild buffaloes, as I hope soon to
be, without havin’ wild comrades to look after.”
Dick laughed, and reined in his panting
horse. “I’ll be as obedient as Crusoe,”
he said, “and no one can beat him.”
“Besides,” continued Joe,
“the horses won’t travel far if we begin
by runnin’ all the wind out o’ them.”
“Wah!” exclaimed Henri,
as the led horse became restive; “I think we
must give to him de pack-hoss for to lead, eh?”
“Not a bad notion, Henri.
We’ll make that the penalty of runnin’
off again; so look out, Master Dick.”
“I’m down,” replied
Dick, with a modest air, “obedient as a baby,
and won’t run off again—till—the
next time. By the way, Joe, how many days’
provisions did ye bring?”
“Two. That’s ’nough
to carry us to the Great Prairie, which is three weeks
distant from this. Our own good rifles must make
up the difference, and keep us when we get there.”
“And s’pose we neither
find deer nor buffalo,” suggested Dick.
“I s’pose we’ll have to starve.”
“Dat is cumfer’able to tink upon,”
remarked Henri.
“More comfortable to think o’
than to undergo,” said Dick; “but I s’pose
there’s little chance o’ that.”
“Well, not much,” replied
Joe Blunt, patting his horse’s neck, “but
d’ye see, lad, ye niver can count for sartin
on anythin’. The deer and buffalo ought
to be thick in them plains at this time—and
when the buffalo are thick they covers the
plains till ye can hardly see the end o’ them;
but, ye see, sometimes the rascally Redskins takes
it into their heads to burn the prairies, and sometimes
ye find the place that should ha’ bin black
wi’ buffalo, black as a coal wi’ fire for
miles an’ miles on end. At other times the
Redskins go huntin’ in ‘ticlur places,
and sweeps them clean o’ every hoof that don’t
git away. Sometimes, too, the animals seems to
take a scunner at a place, and keeps out o’
the way. But one way or another men gin’
rally manage to scramble through.”
“Look yonder, Joe,” exclaimed
Dick, pointing to the summit of a distant ridge, where
a small black object was seen moving against the sky,
“that’s a deer, ain’t it?”
Joe shaded his eyes with his hand,
and gazed earnestly at the object in question.
“Ye’re right, boy; and by good luck we’ve
got the wind of him. Cut in an’ take your
chance now. There’s a long strip o’
wood as’ll let ye git close to him.”
Before the sentence was well finished
Dick and Crusoe were off at full gallop. For
a few hundred yards they coursed along the bottom of
a hollow; then turning to the right they entered the
strip of wood, and in a few minutes gained the edge
of it. Here Dick dismounted.
“You can’t help me here,
Crusoe. Stay where you are, pup, and hold my
horse.”
Crusoe seized the end of the line,
which was fastened to the horse’s nose, in his
mouth, and lay down on a hillock of moss, submissively
placing his chin on his forepaws, and watching his
master as he stepped noiselessly through the wood.
In a few minutes Dick emerged from among the trees,
and creeping from bush to bush, succeeded in getting
to within six hundred yards of the deer, which was
a beautiful little antelope. Beyond the bush
behind which he now crouched all was bare open ground,
without a shrub or a hillock large enough to conceal
the hunter. There was a slight undulation in the
ground, however, which enabled him to advance about
fifty yards farther, by means of lying down quite
flat and working himself forward like a serpent.
Farther than this he could not move without being seen
by the antelope, which browsed on the ridge before
him in fancied security. The distance was too
great even for a long shot; but Dick knew of a weak
point in this little creature’s nature which
enabled him to accomplish his purpose—a
weak point which it shares in common with animals
of a higher order—namely, curiosity.
The little antelope of the North American
prairies is intensely curious about everything that
it does not quite understand, and will not rest satisfied
until it has endeavoured to clear up the mystery.
Availing himself of this propensity, Dick did what
both Indians and hunters are accustomed to do on these
occasions—he put a piece of rag on the
end of his ramrod, and keeping his person concealed
and perfectly still, waved this miniature flag in
the air. The antelope noticed it at once, and,
pricking up its ears, began to advance, timidly and
slowly, step by step, to see what remarkable phenomenon
it could be. In a few seconds the flag was lowered,
a sharp crack followed, and the antelope fell dead
upon the plain.
“Ha, boy! that’s a good
supper, anyhow,” cried Joe, as he galloped up
and dismounted.
“Goot! dat is better nor dried
meat,” added Henri. “Give him to me;
I will put him on my hoss, vich is strongar dan yourn.
But ver is your hoss?”
“He’ll be here in a minute,”
replied Dick, putting his fingers to his mouth and
giving forth a shrill whistle.
The instant Crusoe heard the sound
he made a savage and apparently uncalled-for dash
at the horse’s heels. This wild act, so
contrary to the dog’s gentle nature, was a mere
piece of acting. He knew that the horse would
not advance without getting a fright, so he gave him
one in this way, which sent him off at a gallop.
Crusoe followed close at his heels, so as to bring
the line alongside of the nag’s body, and thereby
prevent its getting entangled; but despite his best
efforts the horse got on one side of a tree and he
on the other, so he wisely let go his hold of the
line, and waited till more open ground enabled him
to catch it again. Then he hung heavily back,
gradually checked the horse’s speed, and finally
trotted him up to his master’s side.
“’Tis a cliver cur, good
sooth,” exclaimed Joe Blunt in surprise.
“Ah, Joe! you haven’t
seen much of Crusoe yet. He’s as good as
a man any day. I’ve done little else but
train him for two years gone by, and he can do most
anything but shoot—he can’t handle
the rifle nohow.”
“Ha! then, I tink perhaps hims
could if he wos try,” said Henri, plunging on
to his horse with a laugh, and arranging the carcass
of the antelope across the pommel of his saddle.
Thus they hunted and galloped, and
trotted and ambled on through wood and plain all day,
until the sun began to descend below the tree-tops
of the bluffs on the west. Then Joe Blunt looked
about him for a place on which to camp, and finally
fixed on a spot under the shadow of a noble birch
by the margin of a little stream. The carpet of
grass on its banks was soft like green velvet, and
the rippling waters of the brook were clear as crystal—very
different from the muddy Missouri into which it flowed.
While Dick Varley felled and cut up
firewood, Henri unpacked the horses and turned them
loose to graze, and Joe kindled the fire and prepared
venison steaks and hot tea for supper.
In excursions of this kind it is customary
to “hobble” the horses—that
is, to tie their fore-legs together, so that they cannot
run either fast or far, but are free enough to amble
about with a clumsy sort of hop in search of food.
This is deemed a sufficient check on their tendency
to roam, although some of the knowing horses sometimes
learn to hop so fast with their hobbles as to give
their owners much trouble to recapture them.
But when out in the prairies where Indians are known
or supposed to be in the neighbourhood, the horses
are picketed by means of a pin or stake attached to
the ends of their long lariats, as well as hobbled;
for Indians deem it no disgrace to steal or tell lies,
though they think it disgraceful to be found out in
doing either. And so expert are these dark-skinned
natives of the western prairies, that they will creep
into the midst of an enemy’s camp, cut the lariats
and hobbles of several horses, spring suddenly on
their backs, and gallop away.
They not only steal from white men,
but tribes that are at enmity steal from each other,
and the boldness with which they do this is most remarkable.
When Indians are travelling in a country where enemies
are prowling, they guard their camps at night with
jealous care. The horses in particular are both
hobbled and picketed, and sentries are posted all
round the camp. Yet, in spite of these precautions,
hostile Indians manage to elude the sentries and creep
into the camp. When a thief thus succeeds in effecting
an entrance, his chief danger is past. He rises
boldly to his feet, and wrapping his blanket or buffalo
robe round him, he walks up and down as if he were
a member of the tribe. At the same time he dexterously
cuts the lariats of such horses as he observes are
not hobbled. He dare not stoop to cut the hobbles,
as the action would be observed, and suspicion would
be instantly aroused. He then leaps on the best
horse he can find, and uttering a terrific war-whoop
darts away into the plains, driving the loosened horses
before him.
No such dark thieves were supposed
to be near the camp under the birch-tree, however,
so Joe, and Dick, and Henri ate their supper in comfort,
and let their horses browse at will on the rich pasturage.
A bright ruddy fire was soon kindled,
which created, as it were, a little ball of light
in the midst of surrounding darkness for the special
use of our hardy hunters. Within this magic circle
all was warm, comfortable, and cheery; outside all
was dark, and cold, and dreary by contrast.
When the substantial part of supper
was disposed of, tea and pipes were introduced, and
conversation began to flow. Then the three saddles
were placed in a row; each hunter wrapped himself in
his blanket, and pillowing his head on his saddle,
stretched his feet towards the fire and went to sleep,
with his loaded rifle by his side and his hunting-knife
handy in his belt. Crusoe mounted guard by stretching
himself out couchant at Dick Varley’s
side. The faithful dog slept lightly, and never
moved all night; but had any one observed him closely
he would have seen that every fitful flame that burst
from the sinking fire, every unusual puff of wind,
and every motion of the horses that fed or rested
hard by, had the effect of revealing a speck of glittering
white in Crusoe’s watchful eye.