Soon after the arrival of the Selkirk
settlers at Pembina, the people of the place set about
preparing for the great fall buffalo hunt, and they
cordially invited the Scots to join them.
The latter accepted the kind invitation
eagerly, and all the men who had a little money to
spare purchased guns and ammunition from the store-keepers.
For days the settlement and the Scotch
camp were full of bustle. Ponies had to be provided
for all the hunters, provisions prepared, as they
would be away probably for ten days or so, and a number
of other things attended to.
Mr. Macrae, having decided to go himself,
at first wanted Hector to remain behind with his mother,
but the boy pleaded so earnestly to be taken, and
the loving, self-sacrificing mother, though she dreaded
some mishap, so warmly supported his plea, that, to
his abounding joy, his father consented.
It was an odd-looking cavalcade that
set forth from Pembina on a bright, bracing October
morning. The Scotsmen looked very awkward as,
mounted upon Indian ponies, some of which were so small
that the long legs of the riders almost touched the
ground, they strove to carry their guns and keep their
seats with some sort of dignity.
The Pembina folk, whether white or
half-breed, were all good riders, and, having taken
the pick of the ponies, as was only natural, looked
remarkably well, while half-a-score Indians who were
to act as guides galloped hither and thither, whooping
and brandishing their guns by way of showing off.
Hector was delighted with the pony
that fell to him, a sturdy, piebald creature, in quite
good condition and full of life, but not at all vicious.
No knight of old sallying forth in full armour could
have felt prouder than did the Scotch laddie, as,
with Dour and Dandy barking and pretending to bite
the pony’s nose, he took his place in the motley
procession.
‘Eh, father, but isn’t
this just grand!’ he cried, enthusiastically,
as he cantered beside his father, whose stalwart frame
looked bigger than ever as he rode solemnly upon a
steed that, assuredly, had never carried so weighty
a rider before. ’See what a fine horse
I have, and he’s that good, too! Oh, but
I hope we’ll be sure to find the buffalo!’
‘Ye need na fash yersel’,
laddie,’ responded Mr. Macrae, with one of his
wise, kind smiles. ’Ye’ll have plenty
of riding upon your little horse, and we’re
likely enough to find the buffalo, for these folk ken
just where to look for them. So be patient an’
ye’ll have your desire.’
They travelled for two days due west,
and then made camp on a lovely spot beside a clear
flowing stream, where a clump of trees afforded them
both shade and firewood. Farther west stretched
the prairie where roamed the noble animal of whom
they were in quest.
Soon after dawn the next morning the
whole camp was astir, and after a hurried meal everybody
got ready for the day’s business. The weather
was all that could be wished, and spirits ran high.
‘Ye’ll keep as near to
me as ye can, eh, laddie?’ said Mr. Macrae to
Hector. ‘There’ll be mony ways o’
getting hurt, e’en though ye may be careful.’
‘Yes, father, I’ll try,’
answered Hector promptly, but in his heart he felt
that once the chase really began his speedy pony, with
only his light weight to carry, must soon run away
from the scarcely larger animal that had his father’s
two hundred pounds upon his back.
A veteran hunter, nick-named Buffalo
Carter, took entire charge of the hunt, and under
his short, sharp commands the party was divided up,
and sent off in different directions.
There were six in the party to which
Mr. Macrae and Hector were assigned, and their captain so
to speak was a shrewd, good-humoured half-breed,
Narcisse by name, who had killed many score of buffalo
in the course of his career. He had taken a
liking to Hector, and he greatly admired Dour and
Dandy, who, having vented their superfluous spirits,
were now trotting quietly along beside Hector’s
pony, and he said to him in a sort of aside:
’You keep close to me, eh! mon petit ami.
Kill big buffalo for sure, eh!’
Hector responded with a grateful smile.
’I will that if I can, but your fine horse
will likely run away from my pony.’
‘Non-non that’s
all right,’ laughed Narcisse, pleased at the
compliment to his steed. ‘You keep so near
me as possible.’
The different groups of riders being
about a quarter of a mile apart, the whole party covered
a pretty wide stretch of prairie, as they steered
due west at a leisurely lope.
The leader’s plan of campaign
was that, on a herd of buffalo being sighted, every
effort should be made to surround it without stampeding
it, and to this end instructions had been given to
the captains of each band that not a shot should be
fired until the signal was given by Carter himself.
On they loped over the billowy prairie,
the tensity of eagerness growing with each mile covered.
Suddenly, Carter, who was a little in advance of
all the others, pulled up on the hither side of a swale,
and gave the signal agreed upon for a general halt.
It passed from band to band almost instantaneously
and the hunters became as motionless as statues.
Carter, slipping from his horse, went
forward cautiously on foot some little distance, and
then, dropping on all fours, peered over the top of
a big swale beyond which, perhaps, was the big game
they sought.
’He see ’em! Buffalo
near now!’ exclaimed Narcisse to Hector, as he
tightened rein and grasped his gun more firmly.
‘You be ready, eh?’ Hector was too excited
to do more than nod assent, as he kept his eyes following
every movement of Carter.
The latter, evidently satisfied with
his scrutiny, made haste back to his horse, and, having
remounted, by making a sort of semaphore of himself,
waving his arms in rapid fashion, signalled to the
captains of each band.
They caught his meaning, and the next
instant, all were in motion closing in toward their
leader. When they were near enough he signalled
for them to spread out in a single line, then, waving
his gun above his head as a final signal for them
to do likewise, he dashed forward at the full speed
of his swift steed.
As they swept over the swale, the
buffalo came in sight a fine herd, numbering
several hundred, grazing on the rich grass in utter
unconsciousness of the human cyclone rushing upon them.
The wind blew from them towards the
hunters, thus giving the latter, whose ponies’
hoofs made scarcely any sound upon the thick turf,
the opportunity to get quite close ere an old bull
threw up his head, caught sight of the charging cavalcade,
and instantly gave vent to a thundering bellow of
warning, that caused the whole herd to cease grazing
and huddle together nervously.
Only for a moment did they thus hesitate.
Then, moving as one huge black mass, they were off
in full flight, with the hunters not a hundred yards
behind.
Hector was amazed that such heavy,
clumsy-looking creatures could get up such speed,
and his excitement rose to its highest pitch as, urging
his pony on by voice and heel, he strove to reach the
rear of the panic-stricken herd.
Dour and Dandy, in no less a state
of excitement, were already snapping at the heels
of the buffalo, and enjoying themselves immensely.
Little by little Hector’s clever
pony, to which, by the way, he had given the appropriate
name of Joseph, because his coat was of many colours,
caught up to the herd, until, at last, with an extra
spurt, he charged right into it, and Hector, not altogether
to his comfort, found himself wedged in between two
great shaggy animals, whose bloodshot eyes made them
look very fierce, even if they were fleeing for their
lives.
He did his best to check the speed
of his pony, pulling upon the reins with all his might.
But Joseph had got the bit in his teeth, and being
in a regular frenzy of excitement, all Hector’s
efforts were fruitless. Not only so, but as the
tremendous pace began to tell upon the buffalo, and
their speed slackened, Joseph, who showed no signs
of tiring, made his way deeper into the herd, until
presently Hector was completely surrounded by the
huge animals.
His situation was one of great peril,
for, although the buffalo were too intent upon flight
to pay him any attention, yet if by chance his pony
were to stumble or put his foot in a gopher hole, bringing
down himself and his rider, they would both infallibly
be trampled out of all semblance of life under the
hoofs of the mighty creatures.
But not for a moment did the boy lose
his wits. Holding hard to the saddle he watched
keenly for his chance of deliverance.