A week after the events narrated in
the last chapter, Jasper Derry was sitting beside
the stove in the hall at Fort Erie, smoking his pipe
and conversing with his father-in-law about his intention
of going to Lake Winnipeg with the brigade in spring
and proceeding thence to Canada in a bark canoe.
“Of course,” said he,
“I will take Marie with me, and if you’ll
take my advice, father, you’ll come too.”
“No, my son, not yet a while,”
said old Laroche, shaking his head; “I have
a year yet to serve the Company before my engagement
is out. After that I may come, if I’m
spared; but you know that the Indians are not safe
just now, and some of them, I fear, bear me a grudge,
for they’re a revengeful set.”
“That’s true, father,
but supposin’ that all goes well with you, will
ye come an’ live with Marie and me?”
“We shall see, lad; we shall
see,” replied Laroche, with a pleased smile;
for the old guide evidently enjoyed the prospect of
spending the evening of life in the land of his fathers,
and under the roof-tree of his son and daughter.
At that moment the report of a gun
was heard outside the house. One of the window-panes
was smashed and at the same instant Laroche fell heavily
forward on the floor.
Jasper sprang up and endeavoured to
raise him, but found that he was insensible.
He laid him carefully on his back, and hastily opened
the breast of his coat. A few drops of blood
showed where he had been wounded. Meanwhile
several of the men who had been attracted by the gunshot
so close to the house burst into the room.
“Stand back, stand back, give
him air,” cried Jasper; “stay, O God help
us! the old man is shot clean through the heart!”
For one moment Jasper looked up with
a bewildered glance in the faces of the men, then,
uttering a wild cry of mingled rage and agony, he sprang
up, dashed them aside, and catching up his gun and
snow-shoes rushed out of the house.
He soon found a fresh track in the
snow, and the length of the stride, coupled with the
manner in which the snow was cast aside, and the smaller
bushes were broken and trodden down, told him that
the fugitive had made it. In a moment, he was
following the track, with the utmost speed, of which
he was capable. He never once halted, or faltered,
or turned aside, all that day. His iron frame
seemed to be incapable of fatigue. He went with
his body bent forward, his brows lowering, and his
lips firmly compressed; but he was not successful.
The murderer had got a sufficiently long start of
him to render what sailors call a stern chase a long
one. Still Jasper never thought of giving up
the pursuit, until he came suddenly on an open space,
where the snow had been recently trodden down by a
herd of buffaloes, and by a band of Indians who were
in chase of them.
Here he lost the track, and although
he searched long and carefully he could not find it.
Late that night the baffled hunter returned to the
fort.
“You have failed - I
see by your look,” said Mr Pemberton, as Jasper
entered.
“Ay, I have failed,” returned
the other gloomily. “He must have gone
with the band of Indians among whose tracks I lost
his footsteps.”
“Have you any idea who can have
done this horrible deed?” said Pemberton.
“It was Darkeye,” said Jasper in a stern
voice.
Some of the Indians who chanced to
be in the hall were startled, and rose on hearing
this.
“Be not alarmed, friends,”
said the fur-trader. “You are the guests
of Christian men. We will not punish you for
the deeds of another man of your tribe.”
“How does the white man know
that this was done by Darkeye?” asked a chief
haughtily.
“I know it,”
said Jasper angrily; “I feel sure of it; but
I cannot prove it - of course. Does
Arrowhead agree with me?”
“He does!” replied the
Indian, “and there may be proof. Does Jasper
remember the trading store and the bitten bullet?”
A gleam of intelligence shot across
the countenance of the white hunter as his comrade
said this. “True, Arrowhead, true.”
He turned, as he spoke, to the body
of his late father-in-law, and examined the wound.
The ball, after passing through the heart, had lodged
in the back, just under the skin.
“See,” said he to the
Indians, “I will cut out this ball, but before
doing so I will tell how I think it is marked.”
He then related the incident in the
trading store, with which the reader is already acquainted,
and afterwards extracted the ball, which, although
much flattened and knocked out of shape, showed clearly
the deep marks made by the Indian’s teeth.
Thus, the act which had been done slyly but boastfully
before the eyes of a comrade, probably as wicked as
himself, became the means whereby Darkeye’s guilt
was clearly proved.
At once a party of his own tribe were
directed by their chief to go out in pursuit of the
murderer.
It were vain for me to endeavour to
describe the anguish of poor Marie on being deprived
of a kind and loving father in so awful and sudden
a manner. I will drop a veil over her grief,
which was too deep and sacred to be intermeddled with.
On the day following the murder, a
band of Indians arrived at Fort Erie with buffalo
skins for sale. To the amazement of every one
Darkeye himself was among them. The wily savage - knowing
that his attempting to quit that part of the country
as a fugitive would be certain to fix suspicion on
him as the murderer - resolved to face the
fur-traders as if he were ignorant of the deed which
had been done. By the very boldness of this
step he hoped to disarm suspicion; but he forgot the
bitten ball.
It was therefore a look of genuine
surprise that rose to Darkeye’s visage, when,
the moment he entered the fort, Mr Pemberton seized
him by the right arm, and led him into the hall.
At first he attempted to seize the
handle of his knife, but a glance at the numbers of
the white men, and the indifference of his own friends,
showed him that his best chance lay in cunning.
The Indians who had arrived with him
were soon informed by the others of the cause of this,
and all of them crowded into the hall to watch the
proceedings. The body of poor Laroche was laid
on a table, and Darkeye was led up to it. The
cunning Indian put on a pretended look of surprise
on beholding it, and then the usual expression of stolid
gravity settled on his face as he turned to Mr Pemberton
for information.
“Your hand did this,” said the
fur-trader.
“Is Darkeye a dog that he should slay an old
man?” said the savage.
“No, you’re not a dog,”
cried Jasper fiercely; “you are worse - a
cowardly murderer?”
“Stand back, Jasper,”
said Mr Pemberton, laying his hand on the shoulder
of the excited hunter, and thrusting him firmly away.
“This is a serious charge. The Indian
shall not be hastily condemned. He shall have
fair play, and justice.”
“Good!” cried several
of the Indians on hearing this. Meanwhile the
principal chief of the tribe took up his stand close
beside the prisoner.
“Darkeye,” said Mr Pemberton,
while he looked steadfastly into the eyes of the Indian,
who returned the look as steadily - “Darkeye,
do you remember a conversation you had many weeks
ago in the trading store at Jasper’s House?”
The countenance of the Indian was
instantly troubled, and he said with some hesitation,
“Darkeye has had many conversations in that store;
is he a medicine-man [a conjurer] that he should know
what you mean?”
“I will only put one other question,”
said the fur-trader. “Do you know this
bullet with the marks of
teeth in it?”
Darkeye’s visage fell at once.
He became deadly pale, and his limbs trembled.
He was about to speak when the chief, who had hitherto
stood in silence at his side, suddenly whirled his
tomahawk in the air, and, bringing it down on the
murderer’s skull, cleft him to the chin!
A fierce yell followed this act, and
several scalping knives reached the dead man’s
heart before his body fell to the ground. The
scene that followed was terrible. The savages
were roused to a state of frenzy, and for a moment
the white men feared an attack, but the anger of the
Indians was altogether directed against their dead
comrade, who had been disliked by his people, while
his poor victim Laroche had been a universal favourite.
Seizing the body of Darkeye, they carried it down
to the banks of the river, hooting and yelling as they
went; hacked and cut it nearly to pieces, and then,
kindling a large fire, they threw the mangled corpse
into it, and burned it to ashes.
It was long before the shadow of this
dark cloud passed away from Fort Erie; and it was
longer still before poor Marie recovered her wonted
cheerfulness. But the presence of Mr Wilson did
much to comfort her. Gradually time softened
the pang and healed the wound.
And now, little remains to be told.
Winter passed away and spring came, and when the
rivers and lakes were sufficiently free from ice, the
brigade of boats left Fort Erie, laden with furs, for
the sea-coast.
On arriving at Lake Winnipeg, Jasper
obtained a small canoe, and, placing his wife and
Heywood in the middle of it, he and Arrowhead took
the paddles, seated themselves in the bow and stern,
and guided their frail bark through many hundreds
of miles of wilderness - over many a rough
portage, across many a beautiful lake, and up many
a roaring torrent, until, finally, they arrived in
Canada.
Here Jasper settled. His farm
prospered - his family increased. Sturdy
boys, in course of time, ploughed the land and blooming
daughters tended the dairy. Yet Jasper Derry
did not cease to toil. He was one of those men
who feel that they were made to work, and that
much happiness flows from working. He often
used to say that if it was God’s will, he would
“like to die in harness.”
Jasper’s only weakness was the
pipe. It stuck to him and he stuck to it to
the last. Marie, in course of time, came to tolerate
it, and regularly filled it for him every night.
Evening was the time when the inmates
of Erie Cottage (as their residence was named) enjoyed
themselves most; for it was then that the stalwart
sons and the blooming daughters circled round the great
fire of wood that roared, on winter nights, up the
chimney; and it was then that Jasper received his
pipe from his still good-looking, though rather stout,
Marie, and began to spin yarns about his young days.
At this time, too, it was, that the door would frequently
open, and a rugged old Indian would stalk in like
a mahogany ghost, and squat down in front of the fire.
He was often followed by a tall thin old gentleman,
who was extremely excitable, but good-humoured.
Jasper greeted these two remarkable looking men by
the names of Arrowhead and Heywood.
And glad were the young people when
they saw their wrinkled faces, for then, they knew
from experience, their old father would become more
lively than usual, and would go on for hours talking
of all the wonders and dangers that he had seen and
encountered long, long ago, when he and his two friends
were away in the wilderness.