Wanderings on the prairie—A
war party—Chased by Indians—A
bold leap for life.
For many days the three hunters wandered
over the trackless prairie in search of a village
of the Sioux Indians, but failed to find one, for
the Indians were in the habit of shifting their ground
and following the buffalo. Several times they
saw small isolated bands of Indians; but these they
carefully avoided, fearing they might turn out to be
war parties, and if they fell into their hands the
white men could not expect civil treatment, whatever
nation the Indians might belong to.
During the greater portion of this
time they met with numerous herds of buffalo and deer,
and were well supplied with food; but they had to
cook it during the day, being afraid to light a fire
at night while Indians were prowling about.
One night they halted near the bed
of a stream which was almost dry. They had travelled
a day and a night without water, and both men and
horses were almost choking, so that when they saw the
trees on the horizon which indicated the presence
of a stream, they pushed forward with almost frantic
haste.
“Hope it’s not dry,”
said Joe anxiously as they galloped up to it.
“No, there’s water, lads,” and they
dashed forward to a pool that had not yet been dried
up. They drank long and eagerly before they noticed
that the pool was strongly impregnated with salt.
Many streams in those parts of the prairies are quite
salt, but fortunately this one was not utterly undrinkable,
though it was very unpalatable.
“We’ll make it better,
lads,” said Joe, digging a deep hole in the
sand with his hands, a little below the pool.
In a short time the water filtered through, and though
not rendered fresh, it was, nevertheless, much improved.
“We may light a fire to-night,
d’ye think?” inquired Dick; “we’ve
not seed Injuns for some days.”
“P’r’aps ’twould
be better not,” said Joe; “but I daresay
we’re safe enough.”
A fire was therefore lighted in as
sheltered a spot as could be found, and the three
friends bivouacked as usual. Towards dawn they
were aroused by an angry growl from Crusoe.
“It’s a wolf likely,”
said Dick, but all three seized and cocked their rifles
nevertheless.
Again Crusoe growled more angrily
than before, and springing out of the camp snuffed
the breeze anxiously.
“Up, lads! catch the nags!
There’s something in the wind, for the dog niver
did that afore.”
In a few seconds the horses were saddled
and the packs secured.
“Call in the dog,” whispered
Joe Blunt; “if he barks they’ll find out
our whereabouts.”
“Here, Crusoe, come—”
It was too late; the dog barked loudly
and savagely at the moment, and a troop of Indians
came coursing over the plain. On hearing the
unwonted sound they wheeled directly and made for the
camp.
“It’s a war party; fly,
lads! nothin’ ’ll save our scalps now but
our horses’ heels,” cried Joe.
In a moment they vaulted into the
saddle and urged their steeds forward at the utmost
speed. The savages observed them, and with an
exulting yell dashed after them. Feeling that
there was now no need of concealment, the three horsemen
struck off into the open prairie, intending to depend
entirely on the speed and stamina of their horses.
As we have before remarked, they were good ones; but
the Indians soon proved that they were equally well
if not better mounted.
“It’ll be a hard run,”
said Joe in a low, muttering tone, and looking furtively
over his shoulder. “The varmints are mounted
on wild horses—leastways they were wild
not long agone. Them chaps can throw the lasso
and trip a mustang as well as a Mexican. Mind
the badger-holes, Dick.—Hold in a bit,
Henri; yer nag don’t need drivin’; a foot
in a hole just now would cost us our scalps. Keep
down by the creek, lads.”
“Ha! how dey yell,” said
Henri in a savage tone, looking back, and shaking
his rifle at them, an act that caused them to yell
more fiercely than ever. “Dis old pack-hoss
give me moche trobel.”
The pace was now tremendous.
Pursuers and pursued rose and sank on the prairie
billows as they swept along, till they came to what
is termed a “dividing ridge,” which is
a cross wave, as it were, that cuts the others in
two, thus forming a continuous level. Here they
advanced more easily; but the advantage was equally
shared with their pursuers, who continued the headlong
pursuit with occasional yells, which served to show
the fugitives that they at least did not gain ground.
A little to the right of the direction
in which they were flying a blue line was seen on
the horizon. This indicated the existence of
trees to Joe’s practised eyes, and feeling that
if the horses broke down they could better make a
last manful stand in the wood than on the plain he
urged his steed towards it. The savages noticed
the movement at once, and uttered a yell of exultation,
for they regarded it as an evidence that the fugitives
doubted the strength of their horses.
“Ye haven’t got us yet,”
muttered Joe, with a sardonic grin. “If
they get near us, Dick, keep yer eyes open an’
look out for yer neck, else they’ll drop a noose
over it, they will, afore ye know they’re near,
an’ haul ye off like a sack.”
Dick nodded in reply, but did not
speak, for at that moment his eye was fixed on a small
creek ahead which they must necessarily leap or dash
across. It was lined with clumps of scattered
shrubbery, and he glanced rapidly for the most suitable
place to pass. Joe and Henri did the same, and
having diverged a little to the different points chosen,
they dashed through the shrubbery and were hid from
each other’s view. On approaching the edge
of the stream, Dick found to his consternation that
the bank was twenty feet high opposite him, and too
wide for any horse to clear. Wheeling aside without
checking speed, at the risk of throwing his steed,
he rode along the margin of the stream for a few hundred
yards until he found a ford—at least such
a spot as might be cleared by a bold leap. The
temporary check, however, had enabled an Indian to
gain so close upon his heels that his exulting yell
sounded close in his ear.
With a vigorous bound his gallant
little horse went over. Crusoe could not take
it, but he rushed down the one bank and up the other,
so that he only lost a few yards. These few yards,
however, were sufficient to bring the Indian close
upon him as he cleared the stream at full gallop.
The savage whirled his lasso swiftly round for a second,
and in another moment Crusoe uttered a tremendous
roar as he was tripped up violently on the plain.
Dick heard the cry of his faithful
dog, and turned quickly round, just in time to see
him spring at the horse’s throat, and bring both
steed and rider down upon him. Dick’s heart
leaped to his throat. Had a thousand savages
been rushing on him he would have flown to the rescue
of his favourite; but an unexpected obstacle came in
the way. His fiery little steed, excited by the
headlong race and the howls of the Indians, had taken
the bit in his teeth and was now unmanageable.
Dick tore at the reins like a maniac, and in the height
of his frenzy even raised the butt of his rifle with
the intent to strike the poor horse to the earth,
but his better nature prevailed. He checked the
uplifted hand, and with, a groan dropped the reins,
and sank almost helplessly forward on the saddle;
for several of the Indians had left the main body
and were pursuing him alone, so that there would have
been now no chance of his reaching the place where
Crusoe fell, even if he could have turned his horse.
Spiritless, and utterly indifferent
to what his fate might be, Dick Varley rode along
with his head drooping, and keeping his seat almost
mechanically, while the mettlesome little steed flew
on over wave and hollow. Gradually he awakened
from this state of despair to a sense of danger.
Glancing round he observed that the Indians were now
far behind him, though still pursuing. He also
observed that his companions were galloping miles
away on the horizon to the left, and that he had foolishly
allowed the savages to get between him and them.
The only chance that remained for him was to outride
his pursuers, and circle round towards his comrades,
and this he hoped to accomplish, for his little horse
had now proved itself to be superior to those of the
Indians, and there was good running in him still.
Urging him forward, therefore, he
soon left the savages still farther behind, and feeling
confident that they could not now overtake him he
reined up and dismounted. The pursuers quickly
drew near, but short though it was the rest did his
horse good. Vaulting into the saddle, he again
stretched out, and now skirted along the margin of
a wood which seemed to mark the position of a river
of considerable size.
At this moment his horse put his foot
into a badger-hole, and both of them came heavily
to the ground. In an instant Dick rose, picked
up his gun, and leaped unhurt into the saddle.
But on urging his poor horse forward he found that
its shoulder was badly sprained.
There was no room for mercy, however—life
and death were in the balance—so he plied
the lash vigorously, and the noble steed warmed into
something like a run, when again it stumbled, and fell
with a crash on the ground, while the blood burst
from its mouth and nostrils. Dick could hear
the shout of triumph uttered by his pursuers.
“My poor, poor horse!”
he exclaimed in a tone of the deepest commiseration,
while he stooped and stroked its foam-studded neck.
The dying steed raised its head for
a moment, it almost seemed as if to acknowledge the
tones of affection, then it sank down with a gurgling
groan.
Dick sprang up, for the Indians were
now upon him, and bounded like an antelope into the
thickest of the shrubbery; which was nowhere thick
enough, however, to prevent the Indians following.
Still, it sufficiently retarded them to render the
chase a more equal one than could have been expected.
In a few minutes Dick gained a strip of open ground
beyond, and found himself on the bank of a broad river,
whose evidently deep waters rushed impetuously along
their unobstructed channel. The bank at the spot
where he reached it was a sheer precipice of between
thirty and forty feet high. Glancing up and down
the river he retreated a few paces, turned round and
shook his clenched fist at the savages, accompanying
the action with a shout of defiance, and then running
to the edge of the bank, sprang far out into the boiling
flood and sank.
The Indians pulled up on reaching
the spot. There was no possibility of galloping
down the wood-encumbered banks after the fugitive;
but quick as thought each Red-man leaped to the ground,
and fitting an arrow to his bow, awaited Dick’s
re-appearance with eager gaze.
Young though he was, and unskilled
in such wild warfare, Dick knew well enough what sort
of reception he would meet with on coming to the surface,
so he kept under water as long as he could, and struck
out as vigorously as the care of his rifle would permit.
At last he rose for a few seconds, and immediately
half-a-dozen arrows whizzed through the air; but most
of them fell short—only one passed close
to his cheek, and went with a “whip” into
the river. He immediately sank again, and the
next time he rose to breathe he was far beyond the
reach of his Indian enemies.