Not until he had become embedded as
it were in the panic-stricken mass of buffalo did
Mr. Macrae observe his son’s peril.
At almost the same moment Narcisse
caught sight of the boy, and, with a characteristic
exclamation of horror, at once drove his horse into
the herd, that he might, if possible, get to Hector’s
side.
‘Take care! Take care!’
he shouted with all his might, not recking that his
voice was utterly lost in the thunder of the countless
hoofs. ‘Keep hold, eh!’
Mr. Macrae followed his example, and
the two men plunged into the mob of terrified monsters,
steering as best they could for the imperilled boy.
Meanwhile, Hector, who had kept both
his head and his seat wonderfully, not forgetting
the purpose of the whole affair, pointed his gun behind
the shoulder of a fine fat buffalo and fired.
The muzzle of the gun was so close
to the buffalo that the discharge burned the animal’s
hide, and the recoil almost knocked Hector out of
his saddle.
But the bullet found its way to the
great creature’s heart, and, a moment later,
down it went, to the delight of the young huntsman.
The loud report was not without effect upon the buffalo
that hemmed in Hector. They swerved off to right
and left, giving him more room and thereby enabling
Narcisse and his father to reach his side.
‘Ah, laddie!’ cried his
father. ’I was in great fear for ye.
Ye should na have gone into such danger.
Be carefu’ now, for ye’re not yet out
of harm’s way.’
Hector nodded gaily in reply.
He was so exultant over his success that he could
think of nothing else for the moment.
As neither Narcisse nor Mr. Macrae
had yet bagged their buffalo, they left Hector to
stay beside his prize while they went on after the
fleeing herd, upon whom the tremendous pace was beginning
to tell.
The reports of the guns followed fast
upon each other, as the different members of the hunting
party, choosing a fine fat cow, or a prime young bull,
brought down their victim with unerring aim.
At last the pursuit of the herd ended,
and the hunters returned to take stock of results.
These were certainly satisfactory: nearly a score
of buffalo, all in the best of condition, had been
secured, and a supply of food that would keep the
whole settlement for many weeks was ensured.
Very proud and content was Buffalo
Carter, and all the other members of the party, particularly
Hector, whose buffalo was as fine a specimen as any
of the others.
‘Eh, but it was a warm, stirrin’
experience,’ remarked Mr. Macrae, with emphasis.
’I never expected to see the like of it.
’Tis a wonderful country, this, and there’s
a powerful lot to be learned. But I’m right
glad I’ve come, laddie,’ he went on, laying
his hand fondly upon Hector’s shoulder, ’and
with the favour of God we shall yet do better here
than e’er we could in the land we left.’
This was a good deal for him to say,
but the excitement of the hunt had for the time swept
away his reserve, and he was in almost as high spirits
as Hector.
So soon as they had rested a little,
the buffalo hunters set to work to skin the buffalo,
and to cut the rich meat into long strips, which,
after being dried in the sun, were then minced as small
as possible, and so made into ‘pemmican,’
which was then packed away for use in the winter.
Of course, there was great feasting
meanwhile, and the special tit-bits, such as the tongues
and the humps, were cooked and eaten with the keenest
relish.
Dour and Dandy were so well supplied
with bits of juicy steak, or well-covered bones, that
they were in danger of overfeeding, and Mr. Macrae
had to limit their allowance.
It took several days to prepare the
pemmican, and then, laden with it and with the buffalo-skins
which would at leisure be made into the warmest of
robes, the whole party moved slowly back to Pembina.
‘Eh! but I’m glad I killed
one myself,’ said Hector to his father as they
rode along together, ’for now I’ll have
a buffalo robe of my own, and that will be fine when
the winter comes, won’t it, father?’
So indeed it proved. There was
many a night during the long cold winter at Pembina,
when Hector, lying snug and warm under his buffalo-robe,
had reason to be thankful for the success of his shot.
The reception of the hunting-party
at Pembina was a royal one, and the feasting that
followed was shared in by all. Then the remainder
of the meat was stored away for the winter.
As already mentioned, Mr. Macrae had
taken more pains and spent somewhat more money upon
the hut that sheltered his family, and now, having
got everything fixed to his satisfaction, with that
fore-thought which was one of his distinguishing traits,
he resolved to secure a supply of firewood for the
winter.
A fine ‘bunch of timber,’
as it was called locally, stood not more than a mile
away, and, hiring a horse and cart from one of the
residents, Mr. Macrae, accompanied by his whole family for
it was beautiful weather, being the so-called Indian
summer began his attack upon the trees.
‘I’ll cut them doon, laddie,’
he said to Hector, ’and ye’ll chop off
the branches, and so we’ll just divide the wark
between us.’
This arrangement suited Hector, and
he did his part faithfully, lopping off the branches
so that the trunk itself could be cut up into suitable
lengths.
None of the trees were large.
The country is not favourable to forest giants, and
the wood was fairly soft, so that Hector’s task
was by no means beyond his powers.
The work went on steadily from day
to day, and Mrs. Macrae viewed with the approval and
satisfaction of a good housewife the growing pile of
fuel that would be right at hand through the long winter.
‘Ye always were a good provider,
Andrew,’ she said, giving her stalwart husband
a look of ineffable love and pride. ‘Nane
o’ yer charge will ever want while ye’re
aboot.’
From under his shaggy brows, Andrew
Macrae returned the look of love and pride; for to
him there was no woman so bonnie or so wise as his
gude wife, but he pretended to make light of the compliment,
saying he was but doing his duty.
The wood-pile at the hut had grown
big enough, and they were making their last trip to
the timber. Mrs. Macrae had not accompanied them,
but little Ailie would not be left at home. She
enjoyed too much the ride out on the empty cart, and
then back again, perched triumphantly on top of the
load, to lose the last chance for it. So father
had to yield to her pretty pleadings, although he
would have preferred her remaining with her mother.
The father and son worked very hard
that day, and during the afternoon got so engrossed
in the completion of their task, that they quite forgot
the little girl.
Then, left to her own resources, Ailie,
as sturdy a child for her years as ever stepped, wandered
off over the prairie in the opposite direction to
home, her little head filled with some foolish notion
of getting nearer to the sunset.
On and on she went, forgetful of everything
but the beauty of the western sky, which had so fascinated
her, and it was because her blue eyes were intent
upon this, and not upon what was under her feet, that
she did not notice the coulee, or break in the prairie,
into which she fell with a sharp cry of fright.
Happily it was soft earth at the bottom
of the coulee, and Ailie was not injured in the least
by her fall. But she was terrified beyond measure
at her situation, and screamed for her father and brother
with the full strength of her lungs.
But, lying as she was at the bottom
of the coulee, a dozen feet or more below the surface
of the prairie, her most vigorous efforts could not
have been heard many yards away.
There the poor little lonely frightened
girl wept and wailed and cried out for her father
and Hector, until at last, in sheer exhaustion, she
lapsed into a sort of stupor and knew no more.