Adventures with the Peigans—Crusoe
does good service as a discoverer—The
savages outwitted—The rescue.
A run of twenty miles brought the
travellers to a rugged defile in the mountains, from
which they had a view of a beautiful valley of considerable
extent. During the last two days a steady thaw
had been rapidly melting away the snow, so that it
appeared only here and there in the landscape in dazzling
patches. At the distance of about half-a-mile
from where they halted to breathe the horses before
commencing the descent into this vale, several thin
wreaths of smoke were seen rising above the trees.
“Is that your camp?” inquired
Cameron, riding up to the Indian runners, who stood
in a group in front, looking as fresh after their
twenty miles’ run as though they had only had
a short walk.
To this they answered in the affirmative,
adding that there were about two hundred Peigans there.
It might have been thought that thirty
men would have hesitated to venture to attack so large
a number as two hundred; but it had always been found
in the experience of Indian life that a few resolute
white men well armed were more than a match for ten
times their number of Indians. And this arose
not so much from the superior strength or agility
of the Whites over their red foes, as from that bull-dog
courage and utter recklessness of their lives in combat—qualities
which the crafty savage can neither imitate nor understand.
The information was received with perfect indifference
by most of the trappers, and with contemptuous laughter
by some; for a large number of Cameron’s men
were wild, evil-disposed fellows, who would have as
gladly taken the life of an Indian as that of a buffalo.
Just as the word was given to resume
the march, Dick Varley rode up to Cameron and said
in a somewhat anxious tone,—
“D’ye obsarve, sir, that
one o’ the Redskins has gone off ahead o’
his comrades?”
“I see that, Master Dick; and
it was a mistake of mine not to have stopped him,
but he was gone too far before I observed it, and I
thought it better to appear unconcerned. We must
push on, though, and give him as short time as possible
to talk with his comrades in the camp.”
The trappers pressed forward accordingly
at a gallop, and were soon in front of the clump of
trees amongst which the Peigans were encamped.
Their approach had evidently spread great alarm among
them, for there was a good deal of bustle and running
to and fro; but by the time the trappers had dismounted
and advanced in a body on foot, the savages had resumed
their usual quiet dignity of appearance, and were seated
calmly round their fires with their bows and arrows
beside them. There were no tents, no women or
children, and the general aspect of the men showed
Cameron conclusively that his surmise about their being
a war party was correct.
A council was immediately called.
The trappers ranged themselves on one side of the
council fire and the Indians on the other. Meanwhile,
our friend Crusoe had been displaying considerable
irritability against the Indians, and he would certainly
have attacked the whole two hundred single-handed
if he had not been ordered by his master to lie still;
but never in his life before had Crusoe obeyed with
such a bad grace. He bristled and whined in a
low tremulous tone, and looked imploringly at Dick
as if for permission to fly at them.
“The Pale-face traders are glad
to meet with the Peigans,” began Cameron, who
determined to make no allusion to his knowledge that
they were a war party, “for they wish to be
friends with all the children of the woods and prairies.
They wish to trade with them—to exchange
blankets, and guns, and beads, and other goods which
the Peigans require, for furs of animals which the
Pale-faces require.”
“Ho! ho!” exclaimed the
Indians, which expression might be translated, “Hear!
hear!”
“But,” continued Cameron,
“we wish to have no war. We wish to see
the hatchet buried, and to see all the red men and
the white men smoking the pipe of peace, and hunting
like brothers.”
The “Ho—ho—ing”
at this was very emphatic.
“Now,” resumed the trader,
“the Peigans have got two prisoners—two
Pale-faces—in their camp, and as we cannot
be on good terms while our brothers are detained,
we have come to ask for them, and to present some
gifts to the Peigans.”
To this there was no “Ho”
at all, but a prolonged silence, which was at length
interrupted by a tall chief stepping forward to address
the trappers.
“What the Pale-face chief has
said is good,” began the Indian. “His
words are wise, and his heart is not double. The
Red-men are willing to smoke the pipe of peace, and
to hunt with all men as brothers, but they cannot
do it while many of their scalps are hanging in the
lodges of their enemies and fringing the robes of
the warriors. The Peigans must have vengeance;
then they will make peace.”
After a short pause he continued,—
“The chief is wrong when he
says there are Pale-faces in the Peigan camp.
The Peigans are not at war with the Pale-faces; neither
have they seen any on their march. The camp is
open. Let the Pale-faces look round and see that
what we say is true.”
The chief waved his hand towards his
warriors as he concluded, as if to say, “Search
amongst them. There are no Pale-faces there.”
Cameron now spoke to Dick in a low
tone. “They speak confidently,” he
said, “and I fear greatly that your poor comrades
have either been killed or conveyed away from the
camp and hidden among the mountains, in which case,
even though they should not be far off, it would be
next to impossible to find them, especially when such
a band of rascals is near, compelling us to keep together.
But I’ll try what a little tempting them with
goods will do. At any rate, we shan’t give
in without a scuffle.”
It now, for the first time, flashed
across Dick Varley that there was something more than
he imagined in Crusoe’s restless anxiety, which
had not in the least abated, and the idea of making
use of him now occurred to his mind.
“I’ve a notion that I’ll
settle this matter in a shorter time than you think,”
he said hurriedly, “if you’ll agree to
try what threatening will do.”
The trader looked grave and undecided.
“I never resort to that except as a last hope,”
he answered; “but I’ve a good deal of confidence
in your prudence. What would you advise?”
Dick and the trader whispered a few
minutes together, while some of the men, in order
to show the Indians how perfectly unconcerned they
were, and how ready for anything, took out their
pipes and began to smoke. Both parties were seated
on the ground, and during this interval the Indians
also held eager discussion.
At length Cameron stood up, and said
to his men in a quiet tone, “Be ready, lads,
for instant action. When I give the word ‘Up,’
spring to your feet and cock your guns; but don’t
fire a shot till you get the word.”
He then stepped forward and said,—
“The Peigan warriors are double-tongued;
they know that they have hid the Pale-face prisoners.
We do not wish to quarrel, but if they are not delivered
up at once the Pale-faces and the Peigans will not
be friends.”
Upon this the Indian chief again stood
forward and said, “The Peigans are not
double-tongued. They have not seen Pale-faces
till to-day. They can say no more.”
Without moving hand or foot, Cameron
then said in a firm tone, “The first Peigan
that moves shall die! Up, lads, and ready!”
In the twinkling of an eye the trappers
sprang to their feet, and cocking their rifles stood
perfectly motionless, scowling at the savages, who
were completely taken by surprise at the unusual suddenness
and informality of such a declaration of war.
Not a man moved, for, unlike white men, they seldom
risk their lives in open fight; and as they looked
at the formidable row of muzzles that waited but a
word to send instant death into their midst, they felt
that discretion was at that time the better part of
valour.
“Now,” said Cameron, while
Dick Varley and Crusoe stepped up beside him, “my
young warrior will search for the Pale-face prisoners.
If they are found, we will take them and go away.
If they are not found, we will ask the Peigans to
forgive us, and will give them gifts. But in
the meantime, if a Peigan moves from the spot where
he sits, or lifts a bow, my young men shall fire,
and the Peigans know that the rifle of the Pale-face
always kills.”
Without waiting for an answer, Dick
immediately said, “Seek ’em out, pup,”
and Crusoe bounded away.
For a few minutes he sprang hither
and thither through the camp, quite regardless of
the Indians, and snuffed the air several times, whining
in an excited tone, as if to relieve his feelings.
Then he put his nose to the ground and ran straight
forward into the woods.
Dick immediately bounded after him
like a deer, while the trappers kept silent guard
over the savages.
For some time Crusoe ran straight
forward. Then he came to a spot where there was
a good deal of drifted snow on the ground. Here
he seemed to lose the trail for a little, and ran about
in all directions, whining in a most piteous tone.
“Seek ’em out, pup,”
repeated Dick encouragingly, while his own breast
heaved with excitement and expectation.
In a few seconds the dog resumed its
onward course, and led the way into a wild, dark spot,
which was so overshadowed by trees and precipitous
cliffs that the light of the sun scarce found entrance.
There were many huge masses of rock scattered over
the ground, which had fallen from the cliffs.
Behind one of these lay a mound of dried leaves, towards
which Crusoe darted and commenced scraping violently.
Trembling with dread that he should
find this to be the grave of his murdered companions,
Dick rushed forward and hastily cleared away the leaves.
The first handful thrown off revealed part of the figure
of a man. Dick’s heart beat audibly as
he cleared the leaves from the face, and he uttered
a suppressed cry on beholding the well-known features
of Joe Blunt. But they were not those of a dead
man. Joe’s eyes met his with a scowl of
anger, which instantly gave place to one of intense
surprise.
“Joe Blunt!” exclaimed
Dick in a voice of intense amazement, while Crusoe
snuffed round the heap of leaves and whined with excitement.
But Joe did not move, neither did he speak a word in
reply—for the very good reason that his
mouth was tightly bound with a band of leather, his
hands and feet were tied, and his whole body was secured
in a rigid, immovable position by being bound to a
pole of about his own length.
In a moment Dick’s knife was
out, bands and cords were severed, and Joe Blunt was
free.
“Thank God!” exclaimed
Joe with a deep, earnest sigh, the instant his lips
were loosened, “and thanks to you, lad!”
he added, endeavouring to rise; but his limbs had
become so benumbed in consequence of the cords by
which they had been compressed that for some time he
could not move.
“I’ll rub ye, Joe; I’ll
soon rub ye into a right state,” said Dick,
going down on his knees.
“No, no, lad, look sharp and
dig up Henri. He’s just beside me here.”
Dick immediately rose, and pushing
aside the heap of leaves, found Henri securely bound
in the same fashion. But he could scarce refrain
from laughing at the expression of that worthy’s
face. Hearing the voices of Joe and Dick Varley
in conversation, though unable to see their persons,
he was filled with such unbounded amazement that his
eyes, when uncovered, were found to be at their largest
possible stretch, and as for the eyebrows they were
gone, utterly lost among the roots of his voluminous
hair.
“Henri, friend, I knew I should
find ye,” said Dick, cutting the thongs that
bound him. “Get up if ye can; we haven’t
much time to lose, an’ mayhap we’ll have
to fight afore we’re done wi’ the Redskins.
Can ye rise?”
Henri could do nothing but lie on
his back and gasp, “Eh! possible! mon frere!
Oh, non, non, not possible. Oui! my broder
Deek!”
Here he attempted to rise, but being
unable fell back again, and the whole thing came so
suddenly, and made so deep an impression on his impulsive
mind, that he incontinently burst into tears; then
he burst into a long laugh. Suddenly he paused,
and scrambling up to a sitting posture, looked earnestly
into Dick’s face through his tearful eyes.
“Oh, non, non!” he exclaimed,
stretching himself out at full length again, and closing
his eyes; “it are too goot to be true. I
am dream. I vill wait till I am wake.”
Dick roused him out of this, resolute
sleep, however, somewhat roughly. Meanwhile Joe
had rubbed and kicked himself into a state of animation,
exclaiming that he felt as if he wos walkin’
on a thousand needles and pins, and in a few minutes
they were ready to accompany their overjoyed deliverer
back to the Peigan camp. Crusoe testified his
delight in various elephantine gambols round the persons
of his old friends, who were not slow to acknowledge
his services.
“They haven’t treated
us overly well,” remarked Joe Blunt, as they
strode through the underwood.
“Non, de rascale, vraiment,
de am villains. Oui! How de have talk, too,
‘bout—oh-o-oo-ooo-wah!—roastin’
us alive, an’ puttin’ our scalp in de
vigvam for de poo-poose to play wid!”
“Well, niver mind, Henri, we’ll
be quits wi’ them now,” said Joe, as they
came in sight of the two bands, who remained in precisely
the same position in which they had been left, except
that one or two of the more reckless of the trappers
had lit their pipes and taken to smoking, without,
however, laying down their rifles or taking their
eyes off the savages.
A loud cheer greeted the arrival of
the prisoners, and looks of considerable discomfort
began to be evinced by the Indians.
“Glad to see you, friends,”
said Cameron, as they came up.
“Ve is ’appy ov de same,”
replied Henri, swaggering up in the joviality of his
heart, and seizing the trader’s hand in his own
enormous fist. “Shall ve go to vork an’
slay dem all at vonce, or von at a time?”
“We’ll consider that afterwards,
my lad. Meantime go you to the rear and get a
weapon of some sort.”
“Oui. Ah! c’est
charmant,” he cried, going with an immense flounder
into the midst of the amused trappers, and slapping
those next to him on the back. “Give me
veapon, do, mes amis—gun, pistol, anyting—cannon,
if you have von.”
Meanwhile Cameron and Joe spoke together
for a few moments.
“You had goods with you, and
horses, I believe, when you were captured,”
said the former.
“Ay, that we had. Yonder
stand the horses, under the pine-tree, along wi’
the rest o’ the Redskin troop; an’ a hard
time they’ve had o’t, as their bones may
tell without speakin’. As for the goods,”
he continued, glancing round the camp, “I don’t
know where—ah! yes, there they be in the
old pack. I see all safe.”
Cameron now addressed the Indians.
“The Peigans,” he said,
“have not done well. Their hearts have not
been true to the Pale-faces. Even now I could
take your scalps where you sit, but white men do not
like war, they do not like revenge. The Peigans
may go free.”
Considering the fewness of their numbers,
this was bold language to use towards the Indians;
but the boldest is generally the best policy on such
occasions. Moreover, Cameron felt that, being
armed with rifles, while the Indians had only bows
and arrows, the trappers had a great advantage over
them.
The Indian who had spoken before now
rose and said he was sorry there should be any cause
of difference between them, and added he was sorry
for a great many more things besides, but he did not
say he was sorry for having told a lie.
“But, before you go, you must
deliver up the horses and goods belonging to these
men,” said Cameron, pointing to Joe and Henri.
This was agreed to. The horses
were led out, the two little packs containing Joe’s
goods were strapped upon them, and then the trappers
turned to depart. The Indians did not move until
they had mounted; then they rose and advanced in a
body to the edge of the wood, to see the Pale-faces
go away. Meanwhile Joe spoke a few words to Cameron,
and the men were ordered to halt, while the former
dismounted and led his horse towards the band of savages.
“Peigans,” he said, “you
know the object for which I came into this country
was to make peace between you and the Pale-faces.
I have often told you so when you would not listen,
and when you told me that I had a double heart and
told lies. You were wrong when you said this;
but I do not wonder, for you live among nations who
do not fear God, and who think it right to lie.
I now repeat to you what I said before. It would
be good for the Red-men if they would make peace with
the Pale-faces, and if they would make peace with
each other. I will now convince you that I am
in earnest, and have all along been speaking the truth.”
Hereupon Joe Blunt opened his bundle
of goods, and presented fully one-half of the gaudy
and brilliant contents to the astonished Indians,
who seemed quite taken aback by such generous treatment.
The result of this was that the two parties separated
with mutual expressions of esteem and good-will.
The Indians then returned to the forest, and the white
men galloped back to their camp among the hills.