On reaching the neighbourhood of the
Blackfoot camp, Whitewing, and his companions crept
to the top of the eminence which overlooked it, taking
care, however, to keep as far away as possible from
the sentinel who still watched there.
Brighteyes proved herself to be quite
as expert as her male companions in advancing like
a snake through the long grass, though encumbered with
a blanket wrapped round her shoulders. The use
of this blanket soon became apparent. As the
three lay prone on their faces looking down at the
camp, from which the sound of voices still arose in
subdued murmurs, the young chief said to his sister-
“Let the signal be a few notes
of the song Brighteyes learned from the white preacher.
Go.”
Without a word of reply, the girl
began to move gently forward, maintaining her recumbent
position as she went, and gradually, as it were, melted
away.
The moon was still shining brightly,
touching every object with pale but effective lights,
and covering hillocks and plains with correspondingly
dark shadows. In a few minutes Brighteyes had
crept past the young sentinel, and lay within sight-almost
within ear shot of the camp.
Much to her satisfaction she observed
that the Indians had not bound their captives.
Even the missionary’s hands were free.
Evidently they thought, and were perhaps justified
in thinking, that escape was impossible, for the horses
of the party were all gathered together and hobbled,
besides being under a strong guard; and what chance
could women and children have, out on the plains on
foot, against mounted men, expert to follow the faintest
trail? As for the white man, he was a man of
peace and unarmed, as well as ignorant of warriors’
ways. The captives were therefore not only unbound,
but left free to move about the camp at will, while
some of their captors slept, some fed, and others
kept watch.
The missionary had just finished singing
a hymn, and was about to begin to read a portion of
God’s Word when one of the women left the group,
and wandered accidentally close to the spot where Brighteyes
lay. It was Lightheart.
“Sister,” whispered Brighteyes.
The girl stopped abruptly, and bent
forward to listen, with intense anxiety depicted on
every feature of her pretty brown face.
“Sister,” repeated Brighteyes,
“sink in the grass and wait.”
Lightheart was too well trained in
Indian ways to speak or hesitate. At once, but
slowly, she sank down and disappeared. Another
moment, and Brighteyes was at her side.
“Sister,” she said, “Manitou
has sent help. Listen. We must be wise
and quick.”
From this point she went on to explain
in as few words as possible that three fleet horses
were ready close at hand to carry off three of those
who had been taken captive, and that she, Lightheart,
must be one of the three.
“But I cannot, will not, escape,”
said Lightheart, “while the others and, the
white preacher go into slavery.”
To this Brighteyes replied that arrangements
had been made to rescue the whole party, and that
she and two others were merely to be, as it were,
the firstfruits of the enterprise. Still Lightheart
objected; but when her companion added that the plan
had been arranged by her affianced husband, she acquiesced
at once with Indian-like humility.
“I had intended,” said
Brighteyes, “to enter the Blackfoot camp as if
I were one of the captives, and thus make known our
plans; but that is not now necessary. Lightheart
will carry the news; she is wise, and knows how to
act. Whitewing and Leetil Tim are hid on yonder
hillock like snakes in the grass. I will return
to then, and let Lightheart, when she comes, be careful
to avoid the sentinel there-”
She stopped short, for at the moment
a step was heard near them. It was that of a
savage warrior, whose sharp eye had observed Lightheart
quit the camp, and who had begun to wonder why she
did not return.
In another instant Brighteyes flung
her blanket round her, whispered to her friend, “Lie
close,” sprang up, and, brushing swiftly past
the warrior with a light laugh-as though
amused at having been discovered- ran into
camp, joined the group round the missionary, and sat
down. Although much surprised, the captives were
too wise to express their feelings. Even the
missionary knew enough of Indian tactics to prevent
him from committing himself. He calmly continued
the reading in which he had been engaged, and the
Blackfoot warrior returned to his place, congratulating
himself, perhaps, on having interrupted the little
plan of one intending runaway.
Meanwhile Lightheart, easily understanding
her friend’s motives, crept in a serpentine
fashion to the hillock, where she soon found Whitewing-
to the intense but unexpressed joy of that valiant
red man.
“Will Leetil Tim go back with
Lightheart to the horses and wait, while his brother
remains here?” said the young chief.
“No, Little Tim won’t,”
growled the trapper, in a tone of decision that surprised
his red friend. “Brighteyes is in the Blackfoot
camp,” he continued, in growling explanation.
“True,” returned the Indian,
“but Brighteyes will escape; and even if she
fails to do so now, she will be rescued with the others
at last.”
“She will be rescued with us,
just now,” returned Little Tim in a tone
so emphatic that his friend looked at him with an expression
of surprise that was unusually strong for a redskin
warrior. Suddenly a gleam of intelligence broke
from his black eyes, and with the soft exclamation,
“Wah!” he sank flat on the grass again,
and remained perfectly still.
Brighteyes found that it was not all
plain sailing when she had mingled with her friends
in the camp. In the first place, the missionary
refused absolutely to quit the captives. He would
remain with them, he said, and await God’s will
and leading. In the second place, no third person
had been mentioned by her brother, whose chief anxiety
had been for his bride and the white man, and it did
not seem to Brighteyes creditable to quit the camp
after all her risk and trouble without some trophy
of her prowess. In this dilemma she put to herself
the question, “Whom would Lightheart wish me
to rescue?”
Now, there were two girls among the
captives, one of whom was a bosom friend of Lightheart;
the other was a younger sister. To these Brighteyes
went, and straightway ordered them to prepare for flight.
They were of course quite ready to obey. All
the preparation needed was to discard the blankets
which Indian women are accustomed to wear as convenient
cloaks by day. Thus unhampered, the two girls
wandered about the camp, as several of the others
had occasionally been doing. Separating from
each other, they got into the outskirts in different
directions. Meanwhile a hymn had been raised,
which facilitated their plans by attracting the attention
of the savage warriors. High above the rest,
in one prolonged note, the voice of Brighteyes rang
out like a silver flute.
“There’s the signal,”
said Little Tim, as the sweet note fell on his listening
ear.
Rising as he spoke, the trapper glided
in a stooping posture down the side of the hillock,
and round the base of it, until he got immediately
behind the youthful sentinel. Then lying down,
and creeping towards him with the utmost caution,
he succeeded in getting so near that he could almost
touch him. With one cat-like bound, Little Tim
was on the Indian’s back, and had him in his
arms, while his broad horny hand covered his mouth,
and his powerful forefinger and thumb grasped him
viciously by the nose.
It was a somewhat curious struggle
that ensued. The savage was much bigger than
the trapper, but the trapper was much stronger than
the savage. Hence the latter made fearful and
violent efforts to shake the former off; while the
former made not less fearful, though seemingly not
quite so violent, efforts to hold on. The red
man tried to bite, but Tim’s hand was too broad
and hard to be bitten. He tried to shake his
nose free, but unfortunately his nose was large, and
Tim’s grip of it was perfect. The savage
managed to get just enough of breath through his mouth
to prevent absolute suffocation, but nothing more.
He had dropped his tomahawk at the first onset, and
tried to draw his knife, but Tim’s arms were
so tight round him that he could not get his hand to
his back, where the knife reposed in his belt.
In desperation he stooped forward, and tried to throw
his enemy over his head; but Tim’s legs were
wound round him, and no limpet ever embraced a rock
with greater tenacity than did Little Tim embrace
that Blackfoot brave. Half choking and wholly
maddened, the savage suddenly turned heels over head,
and fell on Tim with a force that ought to have burst
him. But Tim didn’t burst! He was
much too tough for that. He did not even complain!
Rising again, a sudden thought seemed
to strike the Indian, for he began to run towards
the camp with his foe on his back. But Tim was
prepared for that. He untwined one leg, lowered
it, and with an adroit twist tripped up the savage,
causing him to fall on his face with tremendous violence.
Before he could recover, Tim, still covering the mouth
and holding tight to the nose, got a knee on the small
of the savage’s back and squeezed it smaller.
At the same time he slid his left hand up to the
savage’s windpipe, and compressed it. With
a violent heave, the Blackfoot sprang up. With
a still more violent heave, the trapper flung him
down, bumped his head against a convenient stone, and
brought the combat to a sudden close. Without
a moment’s loss of time, Tim gagged and bound
his adversary. Then he rose up with a deep inspiration,
and wiped his forehead, as he contemplated him.
“All this comes o’ your
desire not to shed human blood, Whitewing,” he
muttered. “Well, p’raps you’re
right-what would ha’ bin the use o’
killin’ the poor critturs. But it was a
tough job!”-saying which, he lifted
the Indian on his broad shoulders, and carried him
away.
While this fight was thus silently
going on, hidden from view of the camp by the hillock,
Whitewing crept forward to meet Brighteyes and the
two girls, and these, with Lightheart, were eagerly
awaiting the trapper. “My brother is strong,”
said Whitewing, allowing the faintest possible smile
to play for a moment on his usually grave face.
“Your brother is tough,”
returned Little Tim, rubbing the back of his head
with a rueful look; “an’ he’s bin
bumped about an’ tumbled on to that extent that
it’s a miracle a whole bone is left in his carcass.
But lend a hand, lad; we’ve got no time to waste.”
Taking the young Blackfoot between
them, and followed by the silent girls, they soon
reached the thicket where the horses had been left.
Here they bound their captive securely to a tree, and
gave him a drink of water with a knife pointed at
his heart to keep him quiet, after which they re-gagged
him. Then Whitewing led Lightheart through the
thicket towards his horse, and took her up behind him.
Little Tim took charge of Brighteyes. The young
sister and the bosom friend mounted the third horse,
and thus paired, they all galloped away.
But the work that our young chief
had cut out for himself that night was only half accomplished.
On reaching the rendezvous which he had appointed,
he found the braves of his tribe impatiently awaiting
him.
“My father sees that we have
been successful,” he said to Bald Eagle, who
had been unable to resist the desire to ride out to
the rendezvous with the fighting men. “The
great Manitou has given us the victory thus far, as
the white preacher said he would.”
“My son is right. Whitewing
will be a great warrior when Bald Eagle is in the
grave. Go and conquer; I will return to camp
with the women.”
Thus relieved of his charge, Whitewing,
who, however, had little desire to achieve the fame
prophesied for him, proceeded to fulfil the prophecy
to some extent. He divided his force into four
bands, with which he galloped off towards the Blackfoot
camp. On nearing it, he so arranged that they
should attack the camp simultaneously at four opposite
points. Little Tim commanded one of the bands,
and he resolved in his own mind that his band should
be the last to fall on the foe.
“Bloodshed may be avoided,”
he muttered to himself; “an’ I hope it
will, as Whitewing is so anxious about it. Anyhow,
I’ll do my best to please him.”
Accordingly, on reaching his allotted
position, Tim halted his men, and bided his time.
The moon still shone over prairie
and hill, and not a breath of air stirred blade or
leaf. All in nature was peace, save in the hearts
of savage man. The Blackfoot camp was buried
in slumber. Only the sentinels were on the alert.
Suddenly one of these-like the war-horse,
who is said to scent the battle from afar-pricked
his ears, distended his nostrils, and listened.
A low, muffled, thunderous sort of pattering on the
plain in front. It might be a herd of buffaloes.
The sentinel stood transfixed. The humps of
buffaloes are large, but they do not usually attain
to the size of men! The sentinel clapped his
hand to his mouth, and gave vent to a yell which sent
the blood spirting through the veins of all, and froze
the very marrow in the bones of some! Prompt
was the reply and turn-out of the Blackfoot warriors.
Well used to war’s alarms, there was no quaking
in their bosoms. They were well named “braves.”
But the noise in the camp prevented
them from hearing or observing the approach of the
enemy on the other side till almost too late.
A whoop apprised the chief of the danger. He
divided his forces, and lost some of his self-confidence.
“Here comes number three,”
muttered Little Tim, as he observed the third band
emerge from a hollow on the left.
The Blackfoot chief observed it too,
divided his forces again, and lost more of his self-confidence.
None of the three bands had as yet
reached the camp, but they all came thundering down
on it at the same time, and at the same whirlwind pace.
“Now for number four,”
muttered Little Tim. “Come boys, an’
at ’em!” he cried, unconsciously paraphrasing
the Duke of Wellington’s Waterloo speech.
At the some time he gave utterance
to what he styled a Rocky Mountain trapper’s
roar, and dashed forward in advance of his men, who,
in trying to imitate the roar, intensified and rather
complicated their own yell.
It was the last touch to the Blackfoot
chief, who, losing the small remnant of his self-confidence,
literally “sloped” into the long grass,
and vanished, leaving his men to still further divide
themselves, which they did effectually by scattering
right and left like small-shot from a blunderbuss.
Great was the terror of the poor captives
while this brief but decisive action lasted, for although
they knew that the assailants were their friends,
they could not be certain of the issue of the combat.
Naturally, they crowded round their only male friend,
the missionary.
“Do not fear,” he said,
in attempting to calm them; “the good Manitou
has sent deliverance. We will trust in Him.”
The dispersion of their foes and the
arrival of friends almost immediately followed these
words. But the friends who arrived were few
in number at first, for Whitewing had given strict
orders as to the treatment of the enemy. In
compliance therewith, his men chased them about the
prairie in a state of gasping terror; but no weapon
was used, and not a man was killed, though they were
scattered beyond the possibility of reunion for at
least some days to come.
Before that eventful night was over
the victors were far from the scene of victory on
their way home.
“It’s not a bad style
o’ fightin’,” remarked Little Tim
to his friend as they rode away; “lots o’
fun and fuss without much damage. Pity we can’t
do all our fightin’ in that fashion.”
“Waugh!” exclaimed Whitewing;
but as he never explained what he meant by “waugh,”
we must leave it to conjecture. It is probable,
however, that he meant assent, for he turned aside
in passing to set free the Blackfoot who had been
bound to a tree. That red man, having expected
death, went off with a lively feeling of surprise,
and at top speed, his pace being slightly accelerated
by a shot-wide of the mark and at long
range-from Little Tim.
Three weeks after these events a number
of Indians were baptised by our missionary.
Among them were the young chief Whitewing and Lightheart,
and these two were immediately afterwards united in
marriage. Next day the trapper, with much awkwardness
and hesitation, requested the missionary to unite
him and Brighteyes. The request was complied
with, and thenceforward the white man and the red
became more inseparable than ever. They hunted
and dwelt together-to the ineffable joy
of Whitewing’s wrinkled old mother, whose youth
seemed absolutely to revive under the influence of
the high-pressure affection brought to bear on a colony
of brown and whitey-brown grand-children by whom she
was at last surrounded.
The doubts and difficulties of Whitewing
were finally cleared away. He not only accepted
fully the Gospel for himself, but became anxious to
commend it to others as the only real and perfect guide
in life and comfort in death. In the prosecution
of his plans, he imitated the example of his “white
father,” roaming the prairie and the mountains
far and wide with his friend the trapper, and even
venturing to visit some of the lodges of his old foes
the Blackfoot Indians, in his desire to run earnestly,
yet with patience, the race that had been set before
him-“looking unto Jesus.”
Full twenty years rolled by, during
which no record, was kept of the sayings or doings
of those whose fortunes we have followed thus far.
At the end of that period, however, striking incidents
in their career brought the most prominent among them
again to the front-as the following chapters
will show.