And now ’tis still I no sound to
wake
The primal forest’s
awful shade;
And breathless lies the covert brake,
Where many an ambushed
form is laid.
I see the red-man’s gleaming eye,
Yet all so hushed, the
gloom profound,
That summer birds flit heedlessly,
And mocking nature smiles
around. LUNT.
Five years have passed. It is
the summer of 1825. In that comparatively brief
period, what vast changes have taken place! How
many have come upon and departed from the stage of
life! How many plans, intentions and resolutions
have been formed and either failed or succeeded!
How many governments have toppled to the earth, and
followed by “those that in their turn shall follow
them.” What a harvest it has been for Death!
The missionary’s cabin stands
on the Clearing where it was first erected, and there
is little change in its outward appearance, save that
perhaps it has been more completely isolated from the
wood. The humble but rather massive structure
is almost impervious to the touch of time. It
is silent and deserted within. Around the door
plays a little boy, the image of his mother, while
some distance away, under the shadow of the huge tree,
sits the missionary himself. One leg is thrown
over the other, an open book turned with its face downward
upon his lap, while his hands are folded upon it,
and he is looking off toward the wood in deep abstraction
of thought. Time has not been so gentle with
Harvey Richter. There are lines upon his face,
and a sad, wearied expression that does not properly
belong there. It would have required full fifteen
years, in the ordinary course of events, to have bowed
him in this manner.
The young man for he is
still such and his little boy are the only
ones who now dwell within the cabin. No tidings
or rumors have reached him of the fate of his wife,
who was so cruelly taken from him four years before.
The faithful Teddy is still searching for her.
The last two winters he has spent at home, but each
summer he has occupied in wandering hither and thither
through the great wilderness, in his vain searching
for the lost trail. Cast down and dejected, he
has never yet entirely abandoned hope of finding traces
of her. He had followed out the suggestion of
the trapper, and visited the Indians that dwelt further
north, where he was informed that nothing whatever
was known of the missing woman. Since that time
his search had been mostly of an aimless character,
which, as we have already stated, could be productive
of no definite results.
The missionary had become, in a degree,
resigned to his fate; and yet, properly speaking,
he could not be said to be resigned, for he was not
yet convinced that she was entirely lost to him.
All traces of the strange hunter seemed irrecoverably
gone, but Richter still devoutly believed the providence
of God would adjust everything in due time. It
is true, at seasons, he was filled with doubt and misgiving;
but his profession, his devotedness to his work, brought
him in such close communion with his divine Master
that he trusted fully in his providences.
On this summer afternoon, thoughts
of his wife and of the strange hunter occupied his
mind more exclusively than they had for a year past.
So constant and preoccupying, indeed, were they, that
he once or twice believed he was on the eve of learning
something regarding her. While engaged in reading,
the figures of his wife and the hunter would obtrude
themselves; he found it impossible to dismiss them,
so he had laid down the book and gone off into this
absorbing reverie.
An additional fear or presentiment
at times haunted the mind of the missionary.
He believed this hunter who could resort to such diabolical
means to revenge himself, would seek to inflict further
injury upon him, and he instinctively looked upon his
boy as the vulnerable point where the blow would be
likely to fall. For over a year, while Teddy
was absent, Richter had taken the boy with him, when
making his daily visits to the village, and made it
a point never to lose sight of him. During these
years of loneliness, also, Harvey Richter had hunted
a great deal in the woods and had attained remarkable
skill in the use of the rifle an accomplishment
for which he had reason to be thankful for the remainder
of his life, as we shall presently see. On a
pleasant afternoon, he frequently employed himself
in shooting at a target, or at small game in the lofty
trees around him, until his aim became so unerring
that not a warrior among the Sioux could excel him.
It may seem singular, but our readers will understand
us when we say that this added to his popularity and,
in a manner, paved a way for reaching many a heart
that hitherto had remained unmoved by his appeals.
The year preceding, an Indian had
presented the missionary with a goat, to the neck
of which was attached a large cow-bell, that probably
had been obtained of some trader. Where the animal
came from, however, he had never been able to tell.
It was a very acceptable present, as it became a companion
for his Charley, who spent many and many an hour in
sporting with it. It also afforded for a while
a much-valued luxury in the shape of milk, so that
the missionary came to regard the animal as an indispensable
requirement in his household.
The goat acquired a troublesome habit
of wandering off in the woods, with an inclination
not to return for several days. From this cause
the bell became useful as a signal to indicate the
animal’s whereabouts. It rarely wandered
beyond hearing, and caused no more trouble than would
have resulted from a cow under the same circumstances.
For the last few weeks it had been the duty, or rather
privilege, of Charley to bring his playmate home, and
the child had become so expert that the father had
little hesitation in permitting him to go out for
it. The parent had misgivings, however, in allowing
him to leave the house, so near dark, to go beyond
his sight if not beyond his hearing; and for some
time he had strenuously refused to permit the boy
to go upon his errand; but the little fellow plead
so earnestly, and the father’s ever-present
apprehensions having gradually dulled by their want
of realization, he had given his reluctant consent,
until it came to be considered the special province
of the boy to bring in the goat every evening just
before nightfall.
The afternoon wore away, and still
the missionary sat with folded hands, gazing absently
off in the direction of the wood. The boy at
length aroused him by running up and asking:
“Father, it is getting late.
Isn’t it time to bring Dolly home?”
“Yes, my son; do you hear the bell?”
“Listen!”
The pleasant tink-a-link came
with faint distinctness over the still summer air.
“It isn’t far away, my
son; so run as fast as you can and don’t play
or loiter on the way.”
The child ran rapidly across the Clearing
in the direction of the sound, shot into the wood,
and, a moment later, had disappeared from his father’s
sight.
The father still sat in his seat,
and was looking absently toward the forest, when a
startled expression flashed over his face and he sprung
to his feet. What thus alarmed him? It was
the sound of the goat-bell.
All of my readers who have heard the
sound of an ordinary cow-bell suspended to the neck
of an animal, have observed that the natural sound
is an irregular one that is, there
is no system or regularity about the sound made by
an animal in cropping the grass or herbage. There
is the clapper’s tink-a-link, tink-a-link an
interval of silence then the occasional
tink, tink, tink, to be followed, perhaps, by a repetition
of the first-named sounds, varied occasionally by
a compound of all, caused by the animal flinging its
head to free itself from troublesome flies or mosquitoes.
The bell in question, however, gave no such sounds
as these, and it was this fact which filled
the missionary with a sudden, terrible dread.
Suppose a person take one of these
bells in his hand, and give a steady, uninterrupted
motion. The consequence must be a regular, unvarying,
monotonous sound, which any ear can distinguish from
the natural one caused by the animal itself.
It was a steady tink, tink, tink, that the bell in
question sent forth.
The missionary stood but a moment;
then dashing into the house, he took down his ever-loaded
rifle and ran in the direction of the sound.
In his hurry, he forgot powder-horn and bullet, and
had, as a consequence, but a single charge in his
rifle. He had gone scarcely a hundred yards,
when he encountered the goat returning home. One
glance showed there was no bell to its neck,
while that ominous tink, tink, tink, came through
the woods as uninterruptedly as before.
The father now broke into a swifter
run, almost losing his presence of mind from his great,
agonizing fear. The picture of the Indian, whom
he had felled to the floor, when he insulted his wife
years before, rose before him, and he saw his child
already struggling in the savage’s merciless
grasp. Nearer and nearer he approached the sound,
until he suddenly paused, conscious that it was but
a short distance away. Hurrying stealthily but
rapidly several rods to the right, the whole thing
was almost immediately made plain to him.
Two trees, from some cause or other,
had fallen to the ground in a parallel direction and
within a yard of each other. Between the trunks
of these an Indian was crouched, who held the goat-bell
in his left hand, and caused the sound which so startled
the father. The savage had his back turned toward
the missionary, and appeared to be looking in the
opposite direction, as if he were waiting the appearance
of some one.
While the father stood gazing at this,
he saw his boy come to view about fifty feet the other
side of the Indian, and, as if wearied with his unusual
hunt, seat himself upon a log. As soon as the
boy was visible, the savage whom Richter
recognized at once as the same man that he had felled
to the floor of his cabin, four years before called
into use a little common sense, which, if it had been
practised somewhat sooner, must have completely deluded
the father and accomplished the design meditated.
If, instead of giving the bell the monotonous tink,
the Indian had shaken the clapper irregularly, it
would have resulted in the certain capture of the child,
beyond the father’s power of aid or rescue.
The missionary, we say, penetrated
the design of the Indian almost instantly. Although
he saw nothing but the head and top of one shoulder,
he recognized, with a quick instinct, the villain who
had felt the weight of his hand years before, and
who had now come in the fullness of time, to claim
his revenge. Directly in front of the savage
rose a small bush, which, while it gave him a view
of the boy, concealed himself from the child’s
observation.
The object of the Indian seemed to
be to lure the boy within his reach, so as to secure
him without his making an outcry or noise. If
he could draw him close to the logs, he would spring
upon him in an instant, and prevent any scream, which
assuredly must reach the father, who, with his unerring
rifle would have been upon the ground in a few moments.
It was an easy matter for the savage to slay the boy.
It would not have done to shoot his rifle, but he could
have tomahawked him in an instant; hence it was plain
that he desired only to take him prisoner. He
might have sprung upon his prey in the woods, but
there he ran the risk of being seen by the child soon
enough for him to make an outcry, which would not
fail of bringing immediate assistance. His plan,
therefore, was, to beguile the little fellow on until
he had walked directly into the snare, as a fly is
lured into the web of a spider.
This, we say, was the plan of the
Indian. It had never entered into his calculations
that the goat, after being robbed of her bell, might
go home and tell a tale, or that there were other ways
in which the boy could be secured, without incurring
half the peril he already had incurred.
The moment the father comprehended
what we have endeavored to make plain, he raised his
rifle, with the resolve to shoot the savage through
the head. As he did so, he recalled the fact that
he had but a single charge, and that, as a consequence,
a miss would be the death-warrant of himself as well
as of his child. But he knew his eye and hand
would never fail him. His finger already pressed
the trigger, when he was restrained by an unforeseen
impediment.
While the deadly rifle was poised,
the boy stretched himself up at full length, a movement
which made known to the father that his child was
exactly in range with the Indian himself, and that
a bullet passing through the head of the savage could
not fail to bury itself in the little fellow’s
body. This startling circumstance arrested the
pressure of the trigger at the very moment the ball
was to be sped upon its errand of death.
The missionary sunk down upon one
knee, with the intention of bringing the head of the
savage so high as to carry the bullet over the body
of his boy, but this he found could not be done without
too seriously endangering his aim. He drew a
bead from one side of the tree, and then from the
other, but from both stand-points the same dreadful
danger threatened. The ground behind the tree
was somewhat elevated, and was the only spot from
which he could secure a fair view of the bronze head
of the relentless enemy.
Two resorts were at the command of
Richter. He could leave the tree altogether,
and pass around so as to come upon the savage from
a different direction; but this involved delay during
which his boy might fall into the Indian’s power
and be dispatched, as he would be sure to do when
he found that the father was close at hand; and from
the proximity of the two men, it could hardly fail
to precipitate a collision between them. The
Indian, finding himself at bay, could not fail to
prove a most troublesome and dangerous customer, unarmed,
as Richter was, with weapons for a close encounter.
The father might also wait until the
boy should pass out of range. Still, there was
the possibility of his proceeding directly up to the
spot where the savage lurked, thus keeping in range
all the while. Then the attempted rescue would
have to be deferred until the child was in the hands
of the savage. These considerations, passing through
Richter’s brain much more rapidly than we have
narrated them, decided him to abandon both plans,
and to resort to what, beyond question, was a most
desperate expedient.
The Indian held the bell in his left
hand. It was suspended by the string which had
clasped the neck of the goat, and, as it swayed gently
back and forth, this string slowly twisted and untwisted
itself, the bell, of course, turning back and forth.
The father determined to slay the Indian and save
his son by shooting this bell!
It is not necessary to describe the
shape and make of the common cow-bell in general use
throughout our country; but it is necessary that the
reader should bear them in mind in order to understand
the manner in which the missionary proposed to accomplish
this result. His plan was to strike the bell
when in the proper position, and glance the bullet
into the head of the savage!
The desperate nature of this expedient
will be seen at once. Should the gun be discharged
when the flat side of the bell was turned toward him,
the ball would pass through, and most probably kill
his child without endangering the life of the Indian.
If it struck the narrow side, it accomplished neither
harm nor good; while, if fired at the precise moment,
and still aimed but an inch too low, the bell would
most likely be perforated. Consequently, it was
requisite that the rifle be discharged at the precise
instant of time when the signal brass was in the correct
position, and that the aim should be infallibly true.
All this Richter realized only too
painfully; but, uttering an inward prayer, he raised
his rifle with a nerve that knew no faltering or fear,
holding it pointed until the critical moment should
arrive. That moment would be when the string
was wound up, and was turning, to unwind. Then,
as it was almost stationary, he fired.
No sound or outcry betrayed the result;
but, clubbing his rifle, the father bounded forward,
over the trees, to the spot where the Indian was crouching.
There he saw him in his death-struggle upon the ground
the bell still held fast in his hand. In that
critical moment, Harvey Richter could not forbear
glancing at it. Its top was indented, and sprinkled
with white by the glancing passage of the lead.
The blood, oozing down the face of the savage, plainly
showed how unerringly true had been the aim.
Something in the upward look of the
dying man startled the missionary.
“Harvey Richter don’t you know
me?” he gasped.
“I know you as a man who has
sought to do me a wrong that only a fiend could have
perpetrated. Great Heaven! Can it be?
Is this you, Brazey Davis?”
“Yes; but you’ve finished
me, so there isn’t much left.”
“Are you the man, Brazey, who
has haunted me ever since we came in this country?
Are you the person who carried away poor, dear Cora?”
“Yes yes!” answered the man,
with fainting weariness.
Such, indeed, was the case. The
strange hunter and the Indian known as Mahogany were
one and the same person.
“Brazey, why have you haunted
me thus, and done me this great wrong?”
“I cannot tell. When I
thought how you took her from me, it made me crazy
when I thought about it. I wanted to take her
from you, but I wouldn’t have dared to do that
if you hadn’t struck me. I wanted revenge
then.”
“What have you done with her?”
“She is gone, I haven’t
seen her since the day after I seized her, when a
band of Indians took her from me, and went up north
with her. They have got her yet, I know, for
I have kept watch over her, and she is safe, but is
a close prisoner.” This he said with great
difficulty.
“Brazey, you are dying.
I forgive you. But does your heart tell you you
are at peace with Him whom you have offended so grievously?”
“It’s too late to talk
of that now. It might have done years ago, when
I was an honest man like yourself, and before I became
a vagabond, bent on injuring one who had never really
injured me.”
“It is never too late for God to forgive ”
“Too late too late,
I tell you! There!” He rose upon his elbow,
his eyes burning with insane light and his hand extended.
“I see her she is coming, her white
robes floating on the air. Oh, God, forgive me
that I did her the great wrong! But, she smiles
upon me she forgives me! I thank thee,
angel of good ”
He sunk slowly backward, and Harvey
Richter eased the head softly down upon the turf.
Brazey Davis was no more.