Heart leaps to heart the sacred
flood
That warms us is the same;
That good old man his honest
blood
Alike we frankly claim. SPRAGUE.
The missionary gazed sadly upon the
inanimate form before him. He saw the playmate
of his childhood stricken down in death by his own
hand, which never should have taken human life, and
although the act was justifiable under the circumstances,
the good man could but mourn the painful necessity
that occasioned it. The story, although possessing
tragic interest, was a brief one. Brazey Davis,
as he had always been termed, was a few years older
than himself, and a native of the same neighborhood.
He was known in childhood as one possessing a vindictive
spirit that could never forgive an injury as
a person who would not hesitate at any means to obtain
revenge. It so happened that he became desperately
enamored of the beautiful Cora Brandon, but becoming
aware, at length, that she was the betrothed of Harvey
Braisted, the young missionary in embryo, the disappointed
lover left the country, and was never heard of by
the missionary until he made himself known in the
singular manner that we have related at the opening
of our narrative. He had, in fact, come to be
a sort of monomaniac, who delighted in annoying his
former rival, and in haunting his footsteps as if
he were his evil shadow. The abduction of his
wife had not been definitely determined upon until
that visit to the cabin, in the garb and paint of
an Indian, when he received the tremendous blow that
almost drove the life from his body. Davis then
resolved to take the revenge which would “cut”
the deepest. How well he succeeded, the reader
has learned.
The missionary’s child stood
pleading for an explanation of the strange scene before
him. Loosening the bell from the grasp of the
dead man, the minister took the little hand, and, with
a heart overflowing with emotion, set out for his
cabin. It was his wish to give the hunter a Christian
burial; but, for the present, it was impossible.
These dying words rung in his ears: “The
Indians took her from me, and went up north with her,
where she now is, and safe!” Blessed
thought! She was then living, and was yet to be
restored to his arms. The shadow of death passed
away, and a great light illuminated his very being.
The lost was found!
When the missionary came to be more
collected, he concluded that this must be the tribe
of which Teddy had once spoken, but which had been
visited by him without success. The prize was
too great to be intrusted in the hands of another,
and Harvey determined to make the search in person,
to settle, if possible, once and forever, the fate
of his beloved wife.
He soon proceeded to the Indian village,
where he left his boy and gave notice that he should
not be back for several days. He then called
one of the most trusty and skillful warriors aside,
and asked for his company upon the eventful journey.
The savage cheerfully complied, and the two set out
at once. It was a good distance to the northward,
and when night came down upon them, many miles yet
remained to be passed. There was little fear
of disturbance from enemies, and both lay down and
slept until daylight, when they were immediately on
their way again.
This journey through the northern
wilderness was unvaried by any event worthy of record,
and the details would be uninteresting to the reader.
Suffice it to say that, just as the fourth day was
closing in, they struck a small stream, which pursued
a short distance, brought them directly upon the village
for which they had been searching.
The advent of the Indian and missionary
among them created considerable stir, but they were
treated with respect and consideration. Harvey
Richter asked immediately for the chief or leading
man, and shortly stood in his presence. He found
him a short, thick-set half-breed, whose age must
have been well-nigh three-score years, and who, to
his astonishment, was unable to speak English, although
many of his subjects spoke it quite intelligibly.
He understood Sioux, however, and the missionary’s
companion acted as interpreter.
Our friend made a full statement of
his wife’s abduction, years before, and of the
assertion of the dying man that she had been taken
from him by members of this tribe, who had retained
her ever since. The chief waited sometime before
replying; he seemed debating with himself as to the
proper course to pursue. Finally he said he must
consult with one of his warriors, and departed abruptly
from the lodge.
Ten minutes later, while the missionary,
with a painfully-throbbing heart, was gazing around
the lodge, with that minute scrutiny of the most trifling
objects peculiar to us at such times, he caught the
sound of returning footsteps, and turned to the lodge
door. There stood the Indian, and, directly beside
him, his own lost Cora!
The next day at noon, a camp-fire
might have been seen some miles south of the northern
village of which we have made mention. An Indian
was engaged in cooking a piece of meat, while the missionary
and his reclaimed jewel, sitting side by side, her
head reclining upon his shoulder and his hand dallying
with her hair, were holding delightful communion.
She looked pale and somewhat emaciated, for these years
of absence had indeed been fraught with suffering;
but the old sweet look had never departed. It
was now changed into an expression of perfect joy.
The wife’s great anxiety was
to reach home and see the child she had left an infant,
but who was now a frolicksome boy, and she could hardly
consent to pause even when night overtook them, and
her lagging limbs told her husband how exhausted she
had become. Cora never had suspected the identity
of the Indian and the hunter, until on that sad day
when he sprung from behind the cabin and hurried her
off into the wood. There was something, however,
in his look, when he first felt the weight of her
husband’s blow, that never left her remembrance.
While hurrying her swiftly through the wood he said
nothing at all, and at night, while she pretended to
sleep, he watched by the camp-fire. It was the
light of this fire which had puzzled Teddy so much.
On the succeeding day the abductor reached the river
and embarked in his canoe. A half-hour later he
leaned over the canoe and washed the paint from his
face and made himself known in his true character,
as Brazey Davis, her former lover. He had scarcely
done so, when an Indian canoe rounded a bend in the
river, and, despite his earnest protestations, the
savages took the captive from him, and carried her
with them to their village, where she had been ever
since. Retained very closely, as all prisoners
among Indians are, she had heard nothing of Teddy’s
visit. She was treated with kindness, as the
destined wife of a young chief; but the suit for her
consent never was pressed by the chief, as it is in
an Indian’s code of honor never to force a woman
to a distasteful marriage. The young brave, with
true Indian pertinacity, could wait his time, confident
that his kindness and her long absence from home would
secure her consent to the savage alliance. She
was denied nothing but her liberty, and her prayers
to be returned to her husband and child.
At this point in her narration, an
exclamation from the Indian arrested attention.
All listened and heard but a short distance away:
“Begorrah, Teddy, it’s
yerself that’s entitled to a wee bit of rist,
as yees have been on a mighty long tramp, and hasn’t
diskivered anything but a country that is big enough
to hide the Atlantic ocean in, wid Ireland on its
bosom as a jewel. The chances are small of yees
iver gitting another glimpse of heaven that
is, of Miss Cora’s face. The darlint; if
she’s gone to heaven, then Teddy McFadden don’t
care how soon somebody else wears out his breeches that
is, on the presumption that St. Peter will say, ‘Teddy,
me lad, ye can inter an’ make yerself at home,
to be sure!’”
The husband and wife glanced at each
other significantly as the fellow rattled on.
“Wait a moment,” said
Harvey, rising to his feet, and carefully making his
way in the direction of the sound.
It was curious that the Irishman should
have paused for his noonday rest in such close proximity
to our friends; but, he had learned from a trader
who had recently visited the Red River country, that
there was a white woman, beyond all question,
among the tribe in the north, and he was on his way
to make them a second visit.
The missionary found his servant seated
by a tree. Teddy looked up as he heard a footstep.
It seemed as if his eyes would drop from their sockets.
His mouth opened wide, and he seemed, for the moment,
confounded. Then he recovered his presence of
mind in a measure, and proceeded to scratch his head
vigorously. That, with him, ever was a sign of
the clearing up of his ideas.
“How do you do, Teddy?”
at length the missionary said, after having enjoyed
the poor fellow’s confusion.
“Faith, but ye sent the cold
shivers over me. Is it yerself, Mister Harvey,
out in these woods, or is it yer ghost on the s’arch
for Misthress Cora? I sometimes thinks me own
ghost is out on the s’arch without me body,
an’ I shouldn’t be surprised to maat it
some day. But I’m mighty glad it’s
yerself an’ not yer ghost, for, to till the
thruth, I don’t jist like ghosts they
makes a body feel so quare in the stomach.”
“Come with me; I have an Indian
as company, and you may as well join us.”
The Hibernian followed, a few paces
behind, continually expressing his astonishment at
seeing his master so far away from home. He did
not look up until they were within a few paces of
the camp-fire, when Richter stepped from before him.
“Save us! save us! but if there
isn’t the ghowst of Miss Cora come to haunt
me for not finding her afore!” exclaimed Teddy,
retreating a step or two in genuine terror. “Saint
Patherick, Saint Pether, Saint Virgin Mary, protict
me! I didn’t mane to get dhrunk that day,
ye know, nor to make a frind of ”
“I am no ghost but my own self,
Teddy, restored to my husband in safety. Can
you not welcome me?”
“Oorah! Oorah!” and
he danced a moment in uncontrollable joy. Then
he exclaimed: “God bliss yer own swate
self!” taking her in his brawny arms. “God
bliss you! No ghost, but yer own swate self.
Oh, I feel like a blast of powder ready to go off!”
And again he danced a singular commixture of the jig
and cotillion, much to the Indian’s amazement,
for he thought him crazy. “I knew that I
should look upon your face again; but, till me where
it is yees have come from?” he finally subsided
enough to ask.
Teddy was soon made to understand
all that related to the return of the young wife.
When he learned that Mahogany, with whom he had so
often drank and “hobnobbed,” was only the
hunter disguised, who was thus plotting his crime,
the Irishman’s astonishment can hardly be described.
He was irritated, also, at his own stupidity.
“That Teddy McFadden iver should have been so
desaved by that rascal of purgatory!” he exclaimed;
but, as the evil man had gone to the great tribunal
above, there was no disposition, even in Teddy’s
heart, to heap curses on his memory.
A few days more, and the three whites
passed through the Indian village on their way to
the Clearing. The joy of the savages at the return
of their sweet, pale-faced sister was manifested in
many ways, and she once feared they would never allow
her to leave them and go to her own humble home.
Finally, however, they reached the Clearing, and,
as they walked side by side across it, opened the door
and sat down within the cabin, and the fond mother
took the darling boy in her lap, the wife and husband
looked in each other’s faces with streaming
eyes, and murmured “Thank God! thank God!”