Plans and prospects—Dick
becomes home-sick, and Henri metaphysical—Indians
attack the camp—A blow-up.
On the following day the Indians gave
themselves up to unlimited feasting, in consequence
of the arrival of a large body of hunters with an
immense supply of buffalo meat. It was a regular
day of rejoicing. Upwards of six hundred buffaloes
had been killed and as the supply of meat before their
arrival had been ample, the camp was now overflowing
with plenty.
Feasts were given by the chiefs, and
the medicine men went about the camp uttering loud
cries, which were meant to express gratitude to the
Great Spirit for the bountiful supply of food.
They also carried a portion of meat to the aged and
infirm who were unable to hunt for themselves, and
had no young men in their family circle to hunt for
them.
This arrival of the hunters was a
fortunate circumstance, as it put the Indians in great
good-humour, and inclined them to hold friendly intercourse
with the trappers, who for some time continued to drive
a brisk trade in furs. Having no market for the
disposal of their furs, the Indians of course had
more than they knew what to do with, and were therefore
glad to exchange those of the most beautiful and valuable
kind for a mere trifle, so that the trappers laid aside
their traps for a time and devoted themselves to traffic.
Meanwhile Joe Blunt and his friends
made preparations for their return journey.
“Ye see,” remarked Joe
to Henri and Dick, as they sat beside the fire in
Pee-eye-em’s lodge, and feasted on a potful of
grasshopper soup, which the great chief’s squaw
had just placed before them—“ye see,
my calc’lations is as follows. Wot with
trappin’ beavers and huntin’, we three
ha’ made enough to set us up, an it likes us,
in the Mustang Valley—”
“Ha!” interrupted Dick,
remitting for a few seconds the use of his teeth in
order to exercise his tongue—ha! Joe,
but it don’t like me! What, give
up a hunter’s life and become a farmer?
I should think not!”
“Bon!” ejaculated Henri,
but whether the remark had reference to the grasshopper
soup or the sentiment we cannot tell.
“Well,” continued Joe,
commencing to devour a large buffalo steak with a
hunter’s appetite, “ye’ll please
yourselves, lads, as to that; but as I wos sayin’,
we’ve got a powerful lot o’ furs, an’
a big pack o’ odds and ends for the Injuns we
chance to meet with by the way, an’ powder and
lead to last us a twelvemonth, besides five good horses
to carry us an’ our packs over the plains; so
if it’s agreeable to you, I mean to make a bee-line
for the Mustang Valley. We’re pretty sure
to meet with Blackfeet on the way, and if we do we’ll
try to make peace between them an’ the Snakes.
I ’xpect it’ll be pretty well on for six
weeks afore we git to home, so we’ll start to-morrow.”
“Dat is fat vill do ver’
vell,” said Henri; “vill you please donnez
me one petit morsel of steak.”
“I’m ready for anything,
Joe,” cried Dick; “you are leader.
Just point the way, and I’ll answer for two
o’ us followin’ ye—eh! won’t
we, Crusoe?”
“We will,” remarked the dog quietly.
“How comes it,” inquired
Dick, “that these Indians don’t care for
our tobacco?”
“They like their own better,
I s’pose,” answered Joe; “most all
the western Injuns do. They make it o’
the dried leaves o’ the shumack and the inner
bark o’ the red-willow, chopped very small an’
mixed together. They call this stuff kinnekinnik;
but they like to mix about a fourth o’ our tobacco
with it, so Pee-eye-em tells me, an’ he’s
a good judge. The amount that red-skinned mortal
smokes is oncommon.”
“What are they doin’ yonder?”
inquired Dick, pointing to a group of men who had
been feasting for some time past in front of a tent
within sight of our trio.
“Goin’ to sing, I think,” replied
Joe.
As he spoke six young warriors were
seen to work their bodies about in a very remarkable
way, and give utterance to still more remarkable sounds,
which gradually increased until the singers burst out
into that terrific yell, or war-whoop, for which American
savages have long been famous. Its effect would
have been appalling to unaccustomed ears. Then
they allowed their voices to die away in soft, plaintive
tones, while their action corresponded thereto.
Suddenly the furious style was revived, and the men
wrought themselves into a condition little short of
madness, while their yells rang wildly through the
camp. This was too much for ordinary canine nature
to withstand, so all the dogs in the neighbourhood
joined in the horrible chorus.
Crusoe had long since learned to treat
the eccentricities of Indians and their curs with
dignified contempt. He paid no attention to this
serenade, but lay sleeping by the fire until Dick and
his companions rose to take leave of their host and
return to the camp of the fur-traders. The remainder
of that night was spent in making preparations for
setting forth on the morrow; and when, at gray dawn,
Dick and Crusoe lay down to snatch a few hours’
repose, the yells and howling in the Snake camp were
going on as vigorously as ever.
The sun had arisen, and his beams
were just tipping the summits of the Rocky Mountains,
causing the snowy peaks to glitter like flame, and
the deep ravines and gorges to look sombre and mysterious
by contrast, when Dick and Joe and Henri mounted their
gallant steeds, and, with Crusoe gambolling before,
and the two pack-horses trotting by their side, turned
their faces eastward, and bade adieu to the Indian
camp.
Crusoe was in great spirits.
He was perfectly well aware that he and his companions
were on their way home, and testified his satisfaction
by bursts of scampering over the hills and valleys.
Doubtless he thought of Dick Varley’s cottage,
and of Dick’s mild, kind-hearted mother.
Undoubtedly, too, he thought of his own mother, Fan,
and felt a glow of filial affection as he did so.
Of this we feel quite certain. He would have
been unworthy the title of hero if he hadn’t.
Perchance he thought of Grumps, but of this we are
not quite so sure. We rather think, upon the
whole, that he did.
Dick, too, let his thoughts run away
in the direction of home. Sweet word!
Those who have never left it cannot, by any effort
of imagination, realize the full import of the word
“home.” Dick was a bold hunter; but
he was young, and this was his first long expedition.
Oftentimes, when sleeping under the trees and gazing
dreamily up through the branches at the stars, had
he thought of home, until his longing heart began
to yearn to return. He repelled such tender feelings,
however, when they became too strong, deeming them
unmanly, and sought to turn his mind to the excitements
of the chase; but latterly his efforts were in vain.
He became thoroughly home-sick, and while admitting
the fact to himself, he endeavoured to conceal it from
his comrades. He thought that he was successful
in this attempt. Poor Dick Varley! as yet he
was sadly ignorant of human nature. Henri knew
it, and Joe Blunt knew it. Even Crusoe knew that
something was wrong with his master, although he could
not exactly make out what it was. But Crusoe
made memoranda in the note-book of his memory.
He jotted down the peculiar phases of his master’s
new disease with the care and minute exactness of
a physician, and, we doubt not, ultimately added the
knowledge of the symptoms of home-sickness to his already
well-filled stores of erudition.
It was not till they had set out on
their homeward journey that Dick Varley’s spirits
revived, and it was not till they reached the beautiful
prairies on the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains,
and galloped over the greensward towards the Mustang
Valley, that Dick ventured to tell Joe Blunt what
his feelings had been.
“D’ye know, Joe,”
he said confidentially, reining up his gallant steed
after a sharp gallop—“d’ye know
I’ve bin feelin’ awful low for some time
past.”
“I know it, lad,” answered
Joe, with a quiet smile, in which there was a dash
of something that implied he knew more than he chose
to express.
Dick felt surprised, but he continued,
“I wonder what it could have bin. I never
felt so before.”
“’Twas home-sickness, boy,” returned
Joe.
“How d’ye know that?”
“The same way as how I know
most things—by experience an’ obsarvation.
I’ve bin home-sick myself once, but it was long,
long agone.”
Dick felt much relieved at this candid
confession by such a bronzed veteran, and, the chords
of sympathy having been struck, he opened up his heart
at once, to the evident delight of Henri, who, among
other curious partialities, was extremely fond of
listening to and taking part in conversations that
bordered on the metaphysical, and were hard to be
understood. Most conversations that were not connected
with eating and hunting were of this nature to Henri.
“Hom’-sik,” he cried,
“veech mean bein’ sik of hom’!
Hah! dat is fat I am always be, ven I goes hout on
de expedition. Oui, vraiment.”
“I always packs up,” continued
Joe, paying no attention to Henri’s remark—“I
always packs up an’ sets off for home when I
gits home-sick. It’s the best cure; an’
when hunters are young like you, Dick, it’s
the only cure. I’ve knowed fellers a’most
die o’ home-sickness, an’ I’m told
they do go under altogether sometimes.”
“Go onder!” exclaimed
Henri; “oui, I vas all but die myself ven I
fust try to git away from hom’. If I have
not git away, I not be here to-day.”
Henri’s idea of home-sickness
was so totally opposed to theirs that his comrades
only laughed, and refrained from attempting to set
him right.
“The fust time I wos took bad
with it wos in a country somethin’ like that,”
said Joe, pointing to the wide stretch of undulating
prairie, dotted with clusters of trees and meandering
streamlets, that lay before them. “I had
bin out about two months, an’ was makin’
a good thing of it, for game wos plenty, when I began
to think somehow more than usual o’ home.
My mother wos alive then.”
Joe’s voice sank to a deep,
solemn tone as he said this, and for a few minutes
he rode on in silence.
“Well, it grew worse and worse.
I dreamed o’ home all night an’ thought
of it all day, till I began to shoot bad, an’
my comrades wos gittin’ tired o’ me; so
says I to them one night, says I, ’I give out,
lads; I’ll make tracks for the settlement to-morrow.’
They tried to laugh me out of it at first, but it
was no go, so I packed up, bid them good-day, an’
sot off alone on a trip o’ five hundred miles.
The very first mile o’ the way back I began
to mend, and before two days I wos all right again.”
Joe was interrupted at this point
by the sudden appearance of a solitary horseman on
the brow of an eminence not half-a-mile distant.
The three friends instantly drove their pack-horses
behind a clump of trees; but not in time to escape
the vigilant eye of the Red-man, who uttered a loud
shout, which brought up a band of his comrades at full
gallop.
“Remember, Henri,” cried
Joe Blunt, “our errand is one of peace.”
The caution was needed, for in the
confusion of the moment Henri was making preparation
to sell his life as dearly as possible. Before
another word could be uttered, they were surrounded
by a troop of about twenty yelling Blackfeet Indians.
They were, fortunately, not a war party, and, still
more fortunately, they were peaceably disposed, and
listened to the preliminary address of Joe Blunt with
exemplary patience; after which the two parties encamped
on the spot, the council fire was lighted, and every
preparation made for a long palaver.
We will not trouble the reader with
the details of what was said on this occasion.
The party of Indians was a small one, and no chief
of any importance was attached to it. Suffice
it to say that the pacific overtures made by Joe were
well received, the trifling gifts made thereafter
were still better received, and they separated with
mutual expressions of good-will.
Several other bands which were afterwards
met with were equally friendly, and only one war party
was seen. Joe’s quick eye observed it in
time to enable them to retire unseen behind the shelter
of some trees, where they remained until the Indian
warriors were out of sight.
The next party they met with, however,
were more difficult to manage, and, unfortunately,
blood was shed on both sides before our travellers
escaped.
It was at the close of a beautiful
day that a war party of Blackfeet were seen riding
along a ridge on the horizon. It chanced that
the prairie at this place was almost destitute of
trees or shrubs large enough to conceal the horses.
By dashing down the grassy wave into the hollow between
the two undulations, and dismounting, Joe hoped to
elude the savages, so he gave the word; but at the
same moment a shout from the Indians told that they
were discovered.
“Look sharp, lads! throw down
the packs on the highest point of the ridge,”
cried Joe, undoing the lashings, seizing one of the
bales of goods, and hurrying to the top of the undulation
with it; “we must keep them at arm’s-length,
boys—be alive! War parties are not
to be trusted.”
Dick and Henri seconded Joe’s
efforts so ably that in the course of two minutes
the horses were unloaded, the packs piled in the form
of a wall in front of a broken piece of ground, the
horses picketed close beside them, and our three travellers
peeping over the edge, with their rifles cocked, while
the savages—about thirty in number—came
sweeping down towards them.
“I’ll try to git them
to palaver,” said Joe Blunt; “but keep
yer eye on ’em, Dick, an’ if they behave
ill, shoot the horse o’ the leadin’
chief. I’ll throw up my left hand, as a
signal. Mind, lad, don’t hit human flesh
till my second signal is given, and see that Henri
don’t draw till I git back to ye.”
So saying, Joe sprang lightly over
the slight parapet of their little fortress, and ran
swiftly out, unarmed, towards the Indians. In
a few seconds he was close up with them, and in another
moment was surrounded. At first the savages brandished
their spears and rode round the solitary man, yelling
like fiends, as if they wished to intimidate him;
but as Joe stood like a statue, with his arms crossed,
and a grave expression of contempt on his countenance,
they quickly desisted, and, drawing near, asked him
where he came from, and what he was doing there.
Joe’s story was soon told; but
instead of replying, they began to shout vociferously,
and evidently meant mischief.
“If the Blackfeet are afraid
to speak to the Pale-face, he will go back to his
braves,” said Joe, passing suddenly between two
of the warriors and taking a few steps towards the
camp.
Instantly every bow was bent, and
it seemed as if our bold hunter were about to be pierced
by a score of arrows, when he turned round and cried,—“The
Blackfeet must not advance a single step. The
first that moves his horse shall die.
The second that moves himself shall die.”
To this the Blackfeet chief replied
scornfully, “The Pale-face talks with a big
mouth. We do not believe his words. The Snakes
are liars; we will make no peace with them.”
While he was yet speaking, Joe threw
up his hand; there was a loud report, and the noble
horse of the savage chief lay struggling in death
agony on the ground.
The use of the rifle, as we have before
hinted, was little known at this period among the
Indians of the far west, and many had never heard
the dreaded report before, although all were aware,
from hearsay, of its fatal power. The fall of
the chief’s horse, therefore, quite paralyzed
them for a few moments, and they had not recovered
from their surprise when a second report was heard,
a bullet whistled past, and a second horse fell.
At the same moment there was a loud explosion in the
camp of the Pale-faces, a white cloud enveloped it,
and from the midst of this a loud shriek was heard,
as Dick, Henri, and Crusoe bounded over the packs
with frantic gestures.
At this the gaping savages wheeled
their steeds round, the dismounted horsemen sprang
on behind two of their comrades, and the whole band
dashed away over the plains as if they were chased
by evil spirits.
Meanwhile Joe hastened towards his
comrades in a state of great anxiety, for he knew
at once that one of the powder-horns must have been
accidentally blown up.
“No damage done, boys, I hope?” he cried
on coming up.
“Damage!” cried Henri,
holding his hands tight over his face. “Oh!
oui, great damage—moche damage; me two eyes
be blowed out of dere holes.”
“Not quite so bad as that, I
hope,” said Dick, who was very slightly singed,
and forgot his own hurts in anxiety about his comrade.
“Let me see.”
“My eye!” exclaimed Joe
Blunt, while a broad grin overspread his countenance,
“ye’ve not improved yer looks, Henri.”
This was true. The worthy hunter’s
hair was singed to such an extent that his entire
countenance presented the appearance of a universal
frizzle. Fortunately the skin, although much blackened,
was quite uninjured—a fact which, when
he ascertained it beyond a doubt, afforded so much
satisfaction to Henri that he capered about shouting
with delight, as if some piece of good fortune had
befallen him.
The accident had happened in consequence
of Henri having omitted to replace the stopper of
his powder-horn, and when, in his anxiety for Joe,
he fired at random amongst the Indians, despite Dick’s
entreaties to wait, a spark communicated with the
powder-horn and blew him up. Dick and Crusoe
were only a little singed, but the former was not
disposed to quarrel with an accident which had sent
their enemies so promptly to the right-about.
This band followed them for some nights,
in the hope of being able to steal their horses while
they slept; but they were not brave enough to venture
a second time within range of the death-dealing rifle.