These likelihoods confirm her flight from
hence;
Therefore, I pray you, stay not to discourse,
But mount you presently. SHAKESPEARE.
The trapper, after separating from
the Irishman, pursued his way through the woods with
a slow tread, as if he were deliberating some matter
with himself. Occasionally he muttered and shook
his head, in a manner that showed his conscience was
getting the better of the debate, whatever it might
be. Finally he paused.
“Yas, sir; it’s a mean
piece of business in me. ’Cause I want to
cotch a few beavers I must let this gal be, when she
has been lost to her husband already for three months.
It’s ongenerous, and can’t be done!”
he exclaimed, emphatically. “What if I does
lose a few peltries when they’re bringing such
a good price down in St. Louey? Can’t I
afford to do it, when there’s a gal in the matter?”
He resumed his walk as slowly and
thoughtfully as before, muttering to himself.
“If I go, I goes alone; least
I don’t go with that Teddy, for he’d be
sartin to lose my ha’r as sure as we got onto
a trail. There’s no calc’latin’
the blunders of such a man. How he has
saved his own scalp to this time is more nor I can
tell, or himself neither, for that matter, I guess.
I’ve been on many a trail-hunt alone, and if
I goes if I goes, why, in course
I does!” he added, impetuously.
The resolution once taken seemed to
afford him unusual pleasure, as it does with us all
when the voice of conscience is a monitor that is
heeded. He was tramping toward the west, and now
that the matter was decided in his own mind, he paused
again, as if he could better debate other matters
that must in the circumstances necessarily present
themselves.
“In the first place, there’s
no use of going any further on this track,
for I ain’t gettin’ any nigher the gal,
that’s pretty sartin. From what that Teddy
told me of his travels, it can’t be that she’s
anywhere in these parts, for if she war, he couldn’t
have helped l’arning something of her in all
this time. There’s a tribe up north that
I’ve heard was great on gettin’ hold of
white gals, and I think I’ll make a s’arch
in that direction afore I does anything else.”
Nothing more remained for Tim but
to carry out the resolution he had made, and it was
characteristic of the man that he did it at once.
Five minutes after the above words had been muttered,
he was walking rapidly along in a northern direction,
his rifle thrown over his arm, and a beaming expression
of countenance that showed there were no regrets at
the part he was acting. He had a habit of talking
with himself, especially when some weighty or unusual
matter obtruded itself. It is scarcely to be
wondered, therefore, that he became quite talkative
at the present time.
“I allers admire such
adventur’s as this, if they don’t bring
in anything more nor thanks. The style in which
I’ve received them is allers worth more
money nor I ever made trapping beavers. The time
I cotched that little gal down on the Osage, that
had been lost all summer, I thought her mother would
eat me up afore she’d let me go. I believe
I grinned all day and all night for a week after that,
it made me think I was such a nice feller. Maybe
it’ll be the same way with this. Hello!”
The trapper paused abruptly, for on
the ground before him he saw the unmistakable imprint
of a moccasin. A single glance of his experienced
eye assured him upon that point.
“That there are Injins in these
parts is a settled p’int with me, and that red
and white blood don’t agree is another p’int
that is settled. That track wasn’t made
there more nor two hours ago, and it’s pretty
sartin the one that made it ain’t fur away at
this time. It happens it leads to the north’ard,
and it’ll be a little divarsion to foller it,
minding at the same time that there’s an Injin
in it.”
For the present the trapper was on
a trail, and he kept it with the skill and certainty
of a hound. Over the dry leaves, the pebbly earth,
the fresh grass, the swampy hollow everywhere,
he followed it with unerring skill.
“That Injin has been on a hunt,”
he muttered, “and is going back home agin.
If it keeps in this direction much longer, I’ll
believe he’s from the very village I’m
hunting after. Heigh! there’s something
else up!”
He suddenly checked himself and began
snuffing the air, as though it was tainted with something
suspicious.
“I hope I may be shot if there
ain’t a camp-fire within two hundred yards of
where I am standing.”
He looked sharply around in every
direction, but saw nothing of the camp, although positive
that his olfactories could not have deceived him.
“Whether it belongs to white
or red can’t be said, sartin; but it’s
a great deal most likely that it’s red, and it’s
just about as sartin that that Injin ahead of me has
gone pretty close to the camp, so I’ll keep
on follering him.”
A short distance further he became
assured that he was in close proximity to the fire,
and he began to use extreme caution in his movements.
He knew very well how slight an inadvertence would
betray his approach, and a betrayal was almost fatal.
Advancing some distance further, he suddenly came
in full view of the camp-fire. He saw three Indians
seated around it, smoking, and appearing as if they
had just finished their morning meal. It seemed,
also, as if they were discussing some matter that
deeply interested all. The mumbling of their
voices could be heard, and one of them gesticulated
quite freely, as though he were excited over the conference.
There was not even the most remote possibility that
what they were saying was of the least concern to
the trapper; and so, after watching them a few moments,
he moved cautiously by.
It was rarely that Tim ever had a
mishap at such perilous times as these, but to his
dismay something caught his foot so dextrously, that
in spite of himself he was thrown flat upon his face.
There was a dull thump, not very loud, it is true,
but he feared it had reached the ears of the savages.
He lay motionless, listening for a while, but hearing
nothing of their voices or footsteps, he judged that
either they had no suspicion of the true cause, or
else had not heard him at all. He therefore rose
to his feet and moved on, occasionally glancing back,
to be sure he was not pursued.
The trapper proceeded in this manner
until noon. Had the case been urgent, he would
not have paused until nightfall, as his indurated
muscles demanded no rest; he could go a couple of days
without nourishment, and experience little inconvenience.
But there was no call for haste. He therefore
paused at noon, on the banks of a small stream, in
quest of some water-fowl.
Tim gazed up and down-stream, but
saw nothing that would serve as a dinner. He
could have enticed a fish or two from their element,
but he had set his heart upon partaking of a bird,
and was not willing to accept anything else.
Accordingly, he began walking down the bank of the
creek in search of one.
In such a country as was Minnesota
forty years ago, the difficult matter would have been
to avoid game rather than to find it. The
trapper had searched but a short distance, when he
caught sight of a single ptarmigan under the opposite
bank. In a twinkling Tim’s rifle was raised,
and, as it flashed forth its deadly messenger, the
bird made a single struggle, and then floated, a dead
object, down the current.
Although rather anxious for his prize,
the trapper, like many a hunter since that day, was
not willing to receive a wet skin so long as it was
possible to avoid it. The creek could be only
of inconsiderable depth, yet, on such a blustering
day, he felt a distaste toward exposing himself to
its chilling clasp. Some distance below he noticed
the creek narrowed and made a curve. At this point
he hoped to draw it in shore with a stick, and he
lost no time in hurrying to the point. Arrived
there, the trapper stood on the very margin of the
water, with a long stick in hand, waiting for the
opportune moment. He naturally kept his eye upon
the floating bird, as any animal watches the prey
that he is confident is coming directly into his clutches.
From the opposite bank projected a
large, overhanging bush, and such was the bird’s
position in the water, that it was compelled to float
within a foot, at least, of this. Tim’s
eyes happened to be fixed intently upon it at this
moment, and, at the very instant it was at the point
named, he saw a person’s hand flash out, seize
the ptarmigan by the neck, and bring it in to shore
in a twinkling.
Indignation upon the part of the trapper
was perhaps as great as his surprise. He raised
his rifle, and had it already sighted at the point
where he was confident the body of the thief must be
concealed, when a second thought caused him to lower
his piece, and hurry up-stream, to a spot directly
opposite where the bird had disappeared.
Here he searched the shore narrowly,
but could detect no sign of the presence of any person.
That there was, or had at least been, one there, needed
no further confirmation. The trapper was in no
mood to put up with the loss of his dinner, and he
considered it rather a point of honor that he should
bring the offending savage to justice. That it
was an Indian he did not doubt, but he never once suspected,
what was true, that it was the identical one he had
been following, and who had passed his camp-fire.
In a few moments he found a shallow
portion of the creek across which he immediately waded
and made his way down the bank, to where the Indian
had first manifested his presence. Here the keen
eye of Tim at once detected moccasin prints, and he
saw that the savage had departed with his prize.
There was no difficulty in following
the trail, and the trapper did so, with his long,
loping, rapid walk. It happened to lead straight
to the northward, so that he felt it was no loss of
time for him to do so.
It was morally certain the savage
could be at no great distance; hence the pursuer was
cautious in his advance. The American Indian would
rather seek than avoid an encounter, and he was no
foe to be despised in a hand-to-hand contest.
The trapper was in that mood that he would not have
hesitated to encounter two of them in deadly combat
for the possession of the bird which was properly
his own, and which he was not willing to yield until
compelled to do so by physical force.
About a hundred rods brought the trapper
to a second creek of larger size than the first.
The trail led directly into this, so he followed without
hesitation. Before doing so, he took the precaution
to sling his rifle to his back, so that his arms should
be disencumbered in any sudden emergency.
The creek proved to be of considerable
depth, but not sufficient to cause him to swim.
Near the center, when it was up to his armpits, and
he was feeling every foot of the way as he advanced,
he chanced by accident to raise his head. As
he did so, he caught a movement among the undergrowth,
and more from habit than anything else, dodged his
head.
The involuntary movement allowed the
bullet that was discharged at that moment to pass
harmlessly over his crown and bury itself in the bank
beyond. The next instant the trapper dashed through
the water, reaching the shore before the savage could
reload. To his disappointment and chagrin, the
Indian was gone.
Tim, however, was not to be baffled
in this manner, and dashed on as impetuously as before.
He was so close that he could hear the fugitive as
he fled, but the nature of the ground prevented rapid
progress upon the part of either, and it was impossible
to tell for a time who it was that was gaining.
“There’s got to be an
end to this race some time,” muttered
Tim, “or I’ll chase you up the north pole.
You’ve stole my dinner, and tried to steal my
topknot, and now you shall have it or I shall have
yours.”
For some time this race (which in
many respects resembled that of Teddy and the strange
hunter) continued, until the trapper found it was
himself that was really losing ground, and he sullenly
came down to a walk again. Still, he held to
the trail with the unremitting perseverance of the
bloodhound, confident that, sooner or later, he must
come up with the fugitive.
All at once, something upon the ground
caught his eye. It was the ptarmigan, and he
sprung exultingly forward and picked it up. It
was unharmed by the Indian, and he looked upon it
as a tacit surrender, on the part of his adversary,
of the matter of dispute between them.
At first Tim was disposed to keep
up the pursuit; but, on second thought, he concluded
to partake of his dinner, and then continue his search
for his human game. In order to enjoy his dinner
it was necessary to have it cooked, and he busied
himself for a few moments in collecting a few dried
sticks, and plucking the feathers from the fowl and
dressing it.
While thus occupied, he did not forget
to keep his eyes about him, and to be prepared for
the Indian in case he chose to come back. He
discovered nothing suspicious, however, and came to
believe there was no danger at all.
At length, when the afternoon was
well advanced, the trapper’s dinner was prepared.
He took the fowl from the blaze, and cutting a piece
with his hunting-knife, was in the very act of placing
it in his mouth, when the sharp crack of a rifle broke
the stillness, and he fell backward, pierced through
the body by the bullet of the Indian whom he had been
pursuing.
“It’s all up!” muttered
the dying man. “I am wiped out at last,
and must go under!”
The Lost Trail had been the means
of Tim, the trapper, discovering what proved to him
the trail of death!