Tied to A tree
When Ben and his friend Bradley left
the cabin in search of Ki Sing, they were puzzled
to fix upon the direction in which it was best to go.
There was no particular reason to decide in favor of
any one against the others.
“Shall we separate, Jake, or
shall we go together?” asked Ben.
“I think we had better stick
together, Ben. Otherwise, if one succeeds he
won’t have any way of letting the other know.”
“That’s true.”
“Besides, we may need each other’s help,”
added Bradley.
“You mean in case Ki Sing has met with an accident?”
“Well, no; I don’t exactly mean that,
Ben.”
“Perhaps,” said Ben, laughing,
“you think two pairs of eyes better than one.”
“That’s true, Ben; but you haven’t
caught my idea.”
“Then, suppose you catch it for me and give
me the benefit of it.”
“I think,” said Bradley,
not smiling at this sally of Ben’s, “that
our Chinese friend has fallen in with some rough fellows
who have done him harm.”
“I hope not,” said Ben, sobered by this
suggestion.
“So do I. Ki Sing is a good
fellow, if he is a heathen, and I’d like to
scalp the man that ill-treats him.”
“There are not many travellers among these mountains.”
“No, but there are some.
Some men are always pulling up stakes and looking
for better claims. Besides, we are here, and why
shouldn’t others come here as well?”
“That is so.”
“I think, Ben, we’ll keep
along in this direction,” said Bradley, indicating
a path on the eastern slope of the hill. “I
haven’t any particular reason for it, but I’ve
got a sort of idea that this is the right way.”
“All right, Jake; I will be
guided by you. I hope you’re mistaken about
Ki Sing’s fate. Why couldn’t he have
fallen and sprained his ankle, like Mr. Dewey?”
“Of course he could, but it isn’t likely
he has.”
“Why not?”
“Because Chinamen, I have always
noticed, are cautious and supple. They are some
like cats; they fall on their feet. They are not
rash like white men, but know better how to take care
of their lives and limbs. That’s why I
don’t think Ki Sing has tumbled down or hurt
himself in any way.”
“Of course he wouldn’t leave us without
notice,” said Ben, musingly.
“Certainly not: that isn’t
Ki Sing’s way. He’s faithful to Dick
Dewey, and won’t leave him as long as Dick is
laid up. I never had much idea of Chinamen before,
and I don’t know as I have now, but Ki Sing is
a good fellow, whatever you may say of his countrymen.
They’re not all honest. I was once robbed
by a Chinaman, but I’ll bet something on Ki Sing.
He might have robbed Dick when he was helpless and
dependent, before we came along, but he didn’t
do it. There are plenty of white men you couldn’t
say that of.”
“For instance, the gentlemen who stole our horses.”
“It makes me mad whenever I
think of that little transaction,” said Bradley.
“As for that braggart, Mosely, he’ll come
to grief some of these days. He’ll probably
die with his boots on and his feet some way from the
ground. Before that happens I’d like a little
whack at him myself.”
“I owe him a debt too,”
said Ben. “His running off with my mustang
cost me a good many weary hours. But hark! what’s
that?” said Ben, suddenly.
“What’s what?”
“I thought I heard a cry.”
“Where away?”
“To the left.”
Jake Bradley halted and inclined his ear to listen.
“Ben,” said he, looking
up, “I believe we’re on the scent.
That cry came either from a Chinaman or a cat.”
Ben couldn’t help laughing,
in spite of the apprehensions which the words of his
companion suggested. “Let us push on, then,”
he said.
Three minutes later the two came in
sight of poor Ki Sing, chafing in his forced captivity
and making ineffectual attempts to release himself
from his confinement.
“That’s he, sure enough,”
exclaimed Jake Bradley, excited. “The poor
fellow’s regularly treed.”
The Chinaman had not yet seen the
approach of his friends, for he happened to be looking
in another direction.
“Ki Sing!” called Ben.
An expression of relief and joy overspread
the countenance of the unfortunate captive when he
saw our hero and Bradley.
“How came you here, Ki Sing?”
asked Bradley. “Did you tie yourself to
the tree?”
“No, no,” replied the
Chinaman, earnestly. “Velly bad men tie
Ki Sing.”
“How many of them bad men were there?”
queried Bradley.
“Two.”
“That’s one apiece for
us, Ben,” said Bradley. “There a job
ahead for us.”
At the same time he busied himself
in cutting the cord that confined the poor Chinaman
to the tree, and Ki Sing, with an expression of great
relief and contentment, stretched his limbs and chafed
his wrists and ankles, which were sore from the cutting
of the cord.
“Now, Ki Sing, tell us a little
more about them men. What did they look like?”
The Chinaman, in the best English
he had at command, described the two men who had perpetrated
the outrage.
“Did you hear either of them
call the other by name?” inquired Bradley.
“One Billee; the other Tommee,”
answered Ki Sing, who remembered the way in which
they addressed each other.
“Why, those are the names of
the men who stole our horses!” said Ben, in
surprise.
“That’s so!” exclaimed
Bradley, in excitement. “It would be just
like them scamps to tie up a poor fellow like Ki Sing. I
say, Ki, did them fellows have horses?”
“Yes,” answered the Chinaman.
“I believe they’re the
very fellows,” cried Bradley. “I hope
they are, for there’s a chance of overhauling
them. Why did they tie you, Ki Sing?”
Ki Sing explained that they had tried
to induce him to guide them to Richard Dewey’s
cabin, but that he was sure they wanted to steal his
gold, and he had led them astray.
“That’s the sort of fellow
Ki Sing is,” said Bradley, nodding to Ben; “you
see, he wouldn’t betray his master.”
“So they tie me to tlee,”
continued the poor fellow. “I thought I
stay here all night.”
“You didn’t take us into
the account, Ki Sing. When these scoundrels left
you where did they go?”
Ki Sing pointed.
“And you think they went in search of the cabin?”
“Yes they say so.”
“Did they know we were there Ben
and I?”
“No; me only say Dickee Dewey.”
“Did you say that Dewey was sick?”
“Yes.”
“It is clear,” said Bradley,
turning to Ben, “that them rascals were bent
on mischief. From what Ki Sing told them they
concluded that Dewey would be unable to resist them,
and that they would have a soft thing stealing his
gold-dust.”
“They may have found the cabin and be at work
there now,” suggested Ben.
“So they may,” answered
Bradley, hastily. “What a fool I am to be
chattering here when Dick may be in danger! Stir
your stumps, Ki Sing. We’re goin’
back to the cabin as fast as our legs can carry us.
I only hope we’ll be in time to catch the scoundrels.”
Not without anxiety the three friends
retraced their steps toward the little mountain-hut
which was at present their only home.