Mr. Macrae allowed Hector to take
Dour and Dandy, and, as Narcisse had two good dogs
of his own, they were well provided. The only
other member of the party was Narcisse’s half-brother,
Baptiste, not equal to him in intelligence and experience,
but a strong and good-natured fellow, who would take
his share of work or danger.
They took a horse apiece, not to ride,
for of course they travelled on snowshoes, but to
carry their blankets, buffalo-robes, cooking gear,
etc.
Hector was a very happy boy as he
set forth on a superb winter morning clad in the warmest
of clothing, and striding along upon his snow-shoes,
in the use of which he had become quite expert.
His mother watched with eyes in which
there was anxiety as well as admiration and love,
but all she said was: ‘Be verrà
carefu’, laddie, and do whatever Narcisse bids
you.’
They steered north-east from Pembina
and travelled all day without interruption, except
for the necessary mid-day meal.
The country now appeared to change
somewhat. The deep woods had given place to
rolling prairie, broken at the sky-line by low poplar
bluffs. By nightfall they had reached the frozen
marshy borders of the Roseau River. East from
its waters there stretched hundreds of miles of spruce
forest, home of the moose, caribou, and the great timber
wolf. A rough camp was quickly made, and in the
morning the hunters pursued their way again through
the deep evergreens. In a short time more they
would have reached the hunting-ground, when an accident
occurred, that almost caused them to turn back empty-handed.
Narcisse, on his snow-shoes, in stepping
over a half-burned log, fell forward, wrenching his
knee so badly that on rising he could scarcely walk.
All thought of the hunt had now to be given up, but
as they were sadly retracing their steps, they espied
the smoke of a tepee at the end of a small clearing.
A few minutes later, and to their
joy they were in the broad tepee of their former friend,
Wikonaie, who was himself, at that moment, preparing
to start on a hunt.
Failing Narcisse, nothing would have
suited Hector better than to have Wikonaie accompany
them. Narcisse was left in Wikonaie’s tepee
in charge of the young Indians, and the horses were
also left at the camp, as well as Narcisse’s
two dogs, who answered ill to orders from any one
except their master. Then the party eagerly set-out.
The hours were passing without any
sign of game, when Wikonaie gave a cry of joy.
‘See!’ he cried, ’you know what
that means? Eh, I will show you a great moose
soon.’
Their eyes followed the direction
of his finger, and there, plainly printed in the snow,
which was softer here, was the great footprint which,
from its size, could be no other than that of the quarry
they sought. They exchanged exclamations of
surprise and delight, and then Wikonaie, bidding them
tighten their belts, for there would be no dinner
that day, gave out his plan of campaign.
The moose was ahead of him, perhaps
only a mile or two; they must push forward with utmost
speed and at the same time utmost caution. For
this purpose, Wikonaie would lead the way, Baptiste
follow, and Hector bring up the rear, keeping Dour
and Dandy at heel until their services should be required.
Thus, in Indian file, they went on
for quite another mile, when Wikonaie, with a low
exclamation of warning, suddenly sank to his knees,
at the same time pointing to something under the tree
that his sharp eyes at that moment caught.
Coming up to him, the others imitated
his attitude, and peered in the direction indicated,
until presently they also made out a great dark mass,
half-obscured by the tree-trunks, but manifestly not
motionless.
‘We come up to heem behind,’
said Wikonaie, in a dramatic whisper, ’not in
front, but on de side. You follow me!’
With the infinite care of the experienced
hunter, Wikonaie made his way in a sort of semi-circle
which, at the end, brought him within firing distance
of the moose, and almost straight behind him.
As the wind blew straight from the moose towards
the hunters, things seemed very much in their favour.
‘Ah, now, we must be ver’
careful, ver’ careful, not make no noise,’
whispered Wikonaie to his companions, who nodded eager
assent. Yard by yard they crept upon their unconscious
prey. The giant creature had struck a small
bunch of particularly young and juicy trees, and he
was enjoying them to his heart’s content.
When Wikonaie deemed they were sufficiently
near, he gave the signal for them to be ready to fire.
The next moment the woods rang out with a strange
wild shout, which would have startled anything in the
way of man or beast: and the moose, thus rudely
interrupted in his rich repast, flung up his head
with a snort, partly of fear and partly of defiance.
This was the moment for which Wikonaie
was waiting. ‘Now fire!’ he cried,
drawing the trigger of his own gun as he spoke.
Almost as one, the three reports startled
the echoes of the woods, and the moose, suddenly wheeling
round, the incarnation of fury and of fright, was
met by the two dogs, Dour and Dandy, who sprang gallantly
at him, barking and leaping for his great nose.
Bewildered by this novel attack, he thought flight
the best thing, and sped off into the woods at an
amazing pace. Indeed, he went so fast that Hector,
who had fully expected to see the great creature drop
instantly, began to fear lest he might not be mortally
wounded after all, and they should lose him in the
woods. Wikonaie’s countenance showed no
such anxiety. True the moose had disappeared
with the dogs at his heels, but he left on the spotless
snow the sure sign of a stricken animal great
splashes of red, which told that he could not go very
far.
‘We follow heem now, eh?’
cried Wikonaie, rapidly reloading his gun, the others
doing the same. Off they set along the blood-marked
trail, and, about the end of a mile, Wikonaie gave
a shout of joy, for there, just ahead of him, fallen
at the foot of an unusually large tree, was their
quarry, to all appearances dead. Now, for the
first time, Wikonaie showed a rashness which he had
not before; for dropping his gun, and drawing his
hunting-knife, he went triumphantly up to the fallen
monarch, and waved the keen steel above his massive
antlers in token of victory.
The next instant, with a roar of startling
ferocity, the moose sprang to his feet, hurling Wikonaie
over on his back, right in front of him, where a single
stroke from one of his tremendous forelegs would have
made of the Indian a bleeding lifeless hulk.
Fortunate indeed was the presence
of the dogs, Dour and Dandy, as they, realizing the
crisis, sprang at the moose’s head with utter
fearlessness, and one of them succeeded in securing
a temporary hold upon the thick neck. This bewildered
the monster for a moment, and that gave Hector an
opportunity, to which the boy, all of a tremble as
he was, happily proved equal.
To free himself from the dogs the
moose tossed his head high in the air, thereby flinging
Dour to one side, but at the same time exposing in
the completest way his magnificent breast. Hardly
pausing to take aim, Hector fired, and the bullet
went straight to the heart of the noble creature.
With a despairing bellow, almost like
a great human groan, he once more sank at the foot
of the tree, this time to rise no more.
How those three rejoiced over their
great triumph, Baptiste claiming that his first shot
had been fatal; Wikonaie proud of his little Ti-ti-pu,
now a strong young brave, skilled in the chase, and
a man to be feared in war: and Hector, thankful
for the opportunity which had enabled him to save
his Indian friend.
Late as the hour was, they decided
to return to Wikonaie’s tepee, where half the
night was spent in extolling Ti-ti-pu’s prowess
and further cementing the friendship so strangely
begun.
And not alone was Hector benefited,
but Wikonaie was able to promise that the settlers
could return unmolested to their farms in the summer,
partly because of his own feeling, and partly because
the North-Westers had ceased to bribe the Indians
to make trouble, and they required little persuading
to follow the leadership of Wikonaie, their chief.
But the settlers still had a desperately
hard time of it, sometimes being reduced to no other
food than the wild turnip found in great quantities
in that locality, and at the end of the second summer,
nearly all of them returned to Pembina for the winter.
This sort of thing went on for several
years, until finally, having received further reinforcements
from Lord Selkirk, they really began to take root,
and a comfortable, self-sustaining settlement grew
up, which in large part realized the hopes which had
drawn them from the Old World to the New.
Through it all, Hector was a loyal,
obedient son. He shared in all his father’s
toil, did his best to brighten little Ailie’s
play hours, and altogether bore himself with infinite
credit.
None of the Scotch settlers struck
deeper roots into the country than did the Macraes,
but this story cannot follow them any farther.
Suffice it to say, their descendants are some of the
finest men and women, not to mention boys and girls,
in the Canadian North-West.