Anxious fears followed by a joyful
surprise—Safe home at last, and happy hearts.
One fine afternoon, a few weeks after
the storm of which we have given an account in the
last chapter, old Mrs. Varley was seated beside her
own chimney corner in the little cottage by the lake,
gazing at the glowing logs with the earnest expression
of one whose thoughts were far away. Her kind
face was paler than usual, and her hands rested idly
on her knee, grasping the knitting-wires to which was
attached a half-finished stocking.
On a stool near to her sat young Marston,
the lad to whom, on the day of the shooting-match,
Dick Varley had given his old rifle. The boy
had an anxious look about him, as he lifted his eyes
from time to time to the widow’s face.
“Did ye say, my boy, that they
were all killed?” inquired Mrs. Varley,
awaking from her reverie with a deep sigh.
“Every one,” replied Marston.
“Jim Scraggs, who brought the news, said they
wos all lying dead with their scalps off. They
wos a party o’ white men.”
Mrs. Varley sighed again, and her
face assumed an expression of anxious pain as she
thought of her son Dick being exposed to a similar
fate. Mrs. Varley was not given to nervous fears,
but as she listened to the boy’s recital of
the slaughter of a party of white men, news of which
had just reached the valley, her heart sank, and she
prayed inwardly to Him who is the husband of the widow
that her dear one might be protected from the ruthless
hand of the savage.
After a short pause, during which
young Marston fidgeted about and looked concerned,
as if he had something to say which he would fain
leave unsaid, Mrs. Varley continued,—
“Was it far off where the bloody deed was done?”
“Yes; three weeks off, I believe.
And Jim Scraggs said that he found a knife that looked
like the one wot belonged to—to—”
the lad hesitated.
“To whom, my boy? Why don’t ye go
on?”
“To your son Dick.”
The widow’s hands dropped by
her side, and she would have fallen had not Marston
caught her.
“O mother dear, don’t
take on like that!” he cried, smoothing down
the widow’s hair as her head rested on his breast.
For some time Mrs. Varley suffered
the boy to fondle her in silence, while her breast
laboured with anxious dread.
“Tell me all,” she said
at last, recovering a little. “Did Jim
see—Dick?”
“No,” answered the boy.
“He looked at all the bodies, but did not find
his; so he sent me over here to tell ye that p’r’aps
he’s escaped.”
Mrs. Varley breathed more freely,
and earnestly thanked God; but her fears soon returned
when she thought of his being a prisoner, and recalled
the tales of terrible cruelty often related of the
savages.
While she was still engaged in closely
questioning the lad, Jim Scraggs himself entered the
cottage, and endeavoured in a gruff sort of way to
reassure the widow.
“Ye see, mistress,” he
said, “Dick is an oncommon tough customer, an’
if he could only git fifty yards’ start, there’s
not an Injun in the West as could git hold o’
him agin; so don’t be takin’ on.”
“But what if he’s been taken prisoner?”
said the widow.
“Ay, that’s jest wot I’ve
comed about. Ye see it’s not onlikely he’s
bin took; so about thirty o’ the lads o’
the valley are ready jest now to start away and give
the red riptiles chase, an’ I come to tell ye;
so keep up heart, mistress.”
With this parting word of comfort,
Jim withdrew, and Marston soon followed, leaving the
widow to weep and pray in solitude.
Meanwhile an animated scene was going
on near the block-house. Here thirty of the young
hunters of the Mustang Valley were assembled, actively
engaged in supplying themselves with powder and lead,
and tightening their girths, preparatory to setting
out in pursuit of the Indians who had murdered the
white men; while hundreds of boys and girls, and not
a few matrons, crowded round and listened to the conversation,
and to the deep threats of vengeance that were uttered
ever and anon by the younger men.
Major Hope, too, was among them.
The worthy major, unable to restrain his roving propensities,
determined to revisit the Mustang Valley, and had
arrived only two days before.
Backwoodsmen’s preparations
are usually of the shortest and simplest. In
a few minutes the cavalcade was ready, and away they
went towards the prairies, with the bold major at
their head. But their journey was destined to
come to an abrupt and unexpected close. A couple
of hours’ gallop brought them to the edge of
one of those open plains which sometimes break up
the woodland near the verge of the great prairies.
It stretched out like a green lake towards the horizon,
on which, just as the band of horsemen reached it,
the sun was descending in a blaze of glory.
With a shout of enthusiasm, several
of the younger members of the party sprang forward
into the plain at a gallop; but the shout was mingled
with one of a different tone from the older men.
“Hist
—hold
on, ye catamounts! There’s Injuns ahead!”
The whole band came to a sudden halt
at this cry, and watched eagerly, and for some time
in silence, the motions of a small party of horsemen
who were seen in the far distance, like black specks
on the golden sky.
“They come this way, I think,”
said Major Hope, after gazing steadfastly at them
for some minutes.
Several of the old hands signified
their assent to this suggestion by a grunt, although
to unaccustomed eyes the objects in question looked
more like crows than horsemen, and their motion was
for some time scarcely perceptible.
“I sees pack-horses among them,”
cried young Marston in an excited tone; “an’
there’s three riders; but there’s som’thin’
else, only wot it be I can’t tell.”
“Ye’ve sharp eyes, younker,”
remarked one of the men, “an’ I do b’lieve
ye’re right.”
Presently the horsemen approached,
and soon there was a brisk fire of guessing as to
who they could be. It was evident that the strangers
observed the cavalcade of white men, and regarded them
as friends, for they did not check the headlong speed
at which they approached. In a few minutes they
were clearly made out to be a party of three horsemen
driving pack-horses before them, and somethin’
which some of the hunters guessed was a buffalo calf.
Young Marston guessed too, but his
guess was different. Moreover, it was uttered
with a yell that would have done credit to the fiercest
of all the savages. “Crusoe!” he shouted,
while at the same moment he brought his whip heavily
down on the flank of his little horse, and sprang
over the prairie like an arrow.
One of the approaching horsemen was
far ahead of his comrades, and seemed as if encircled
with the flying and voluminous mane of his magnificent
horse.
“Ha! ho!” gasped Marston
in a low tone to himself, as he flew along. “Crusoe!
I’d know ye, dog, among a thousand! A buffalo
calf! Ha! git on with ye!”
This last part of the remark was addressed
to his horse, and was followed by a whack that increased
the pace considerably.
The space between two such riders was soon devoured.
“Hallo! Dick—Dick Varley!”
“Eh! why, Marston, my boy!”
The friends reined up so suddenly
that one might have fancied they had met like the
knights of old in the shock of mortal conflict.
“Is’t yerself, Dick Varley?”
Dick held out his hand, and his eyes
glistened, but he could not find words.
Marston seized it, and pushing his
horse close up, vaulted nimbly off and alighted on
Charlie’s back behind his friend.
“Off ye go, Dick! I’ll take ye to
yer mother.”
Without reply, Dick shook the reins,
and in another minute was in the midst of the hunters.
To the numberless questions that were
put to him he only waited to shout aloud, “We’re
all safe! They’ll tell ye all about it,”
he added, pointing to his comrades, who were now close
at hand; and then, dashing onward, made straight for
home, with little Marston clinging to his waist like
a monkey.
Charlie was fresh, and so was Crusoe,
so you may be sure it was not long before they all
drew up opposite the door of the widow’s cottage.
Before Dick could dismount, Marston had slipped off,
and was already in the kitchen.
“Here’s Dick, mother!”
The boy was an orphan, and loved the
widow so much that he had come at last to call her
mother.
Before another word could be uttered,
Dick Varley was in the room. Marston immediately
stepped out and softly shut the door. Reader,
we shall not open it!
Having shut the door, as we have said,
Marston ran down to the edge of the lake and yelled
with delight—usually terminating each paroxysm
with the Indian war-whoop, with which he was well acquainted.
Then he danced, and then he sat down on a rock, and
became suddenly aware that there were other hearts
there, close beside him, as glad as his own.
Another mother of the Mustang Valley was rejoicing
over a long-lost son.
Crusoe and his mother Fan were scampering
round each other in a manner that evinced powerfully
the strength of their mutual affection.
Talk of holding converse! Every
hair on Crusoe’s body, every motion of his limbs,
was eloquent with silent language. He gazed into
his mother’s mild eyes as if he would read her
inmost soul (supposing that she had one). He
turned his head to every possible angle, and cocked
his ears to every conceivable elevation, and rubbed
his nose against Fan’s, and barked softly, in
every imaginable degree of modulation, and varied
these proceedings by bounding away at full speed over
the rocks of the beach, and in among the bushes and
out again, but always circling round and round Fan,
and keeping her in view!
It was a sight worth seeing, and young
Marston sat down on a rock, deliberately and enthusiastically,
to gloat over it. But perhaps the most remarkable
part of it has not yet been referred to. There
was yet another heart there that was glad—exceeding
glad that day. It was a little one too, but it
was big for the body that held it. Grumps was
there, and all that Grumps did was to sit on his haunches
and stare at Fan and Crusoe, and wag his tail as well
as he could in so awkward a position! Grumps
was evidently bewildered with delight, and had lost
nearly all power to express it. Crusoe’s
conduct towards him, too, was not calculated to clear
his faculties. Every time he chanced to pass
near Grumps in his elephantine gambols, he gave him
a passing touch with his nose, which always knocked
him head over heels; whereat Grumps invariably got
up quickly and wagged his tail with additional energy.
Before the feelings of those canine friends were calmed,
they were all three ruffled into a state of comparative
exhaustion.
Then young Marston called Crusoe to
him, and Crusoe, obedient to the voice of friendship,
went.
“Are you happy, my dog?”
“You’re a stupid fellow
to ask such a question; however it’s an amiable
one. Yes, I am.”
“What do you want, ye small bundle o’
hair?”
This was addressed to Grumps, who
came forward innocently, and sat down to listen to
the conversation.
On being thus sternly questioned the
little dog put down its ears flat, and hung its head,
looking up at the same time with a deprecatory look,
as if to say, “Oh dear, I beg pardon. I—I
only want to sit near Crusoe, please; but if you wish
it, I’ll go away, sad and lonely, with my tail
very much between my legs; indeed I will, only
say the word, but—but I’d rather
stay if I might.”
“Poor bundle!” said Marston,
patting its head, “you can stay then. Hooray!
Crusoe, are you happy, I say? Does your heart
bound in you like a cannon ball that wants to find
its way out, and can’t, eh?” Crusoe put
his snout against Marston’s cheek, and in the
excess of his joy the lad threw his arms round the
dog’s neck and hugged it vigorously—a
piece of impulsive affection which that noble animal
bore with characteristic meekness, and which Grumps
regarded with idiotic satisfaction.