Curious mingling of eagerness, hope,
and fear rendered Softswan for some minutes undecided
how to act as she gazed at the fallen man. His
garb was of a dark uniform grey colour, which she
had often heard described, but had not seen until
now. That he was wounded she felt quite sure,
but she knew that there would be great danger in descending
to aid him. Besides, if he were helpless, as
he seemed to be, she had not physical strength to
lift him, and would expose herself to easy capture
if the Blackfeet should be in ambush.
Still, the eager and indefinable hope
that was in her heart induced the girl to rise with
the intention of descending the path, when she observed
that the fallen man again moved. Rising on his
hands and knees, he crept forward a few paces, and
then stopped. Suddenly by a great effort, he
raised himself to a kneeling position, clasped his
hands, and looked up.
The act sufficed to decide the wavering
girl. Leaping lightly over the breastwork, she
ran swiftly down until she reached the man, who gazed
at her in open-mouthed astonishment. He was
a white man, and the ghastly pallor of his face, with
a few spots of blood on it and on his hands, told
that he had been severely wounded.
“Manitou seems to have sent
an angel of light to me in my extremity,” he
gasped in the Indian tongue.
“Come; me vill help you,”
answered Softswan, in her broken English, as she stooped
and assisted him to rise.
No other word was uttered, for even
with the girl’s assistance it was with the utmost
difficulty that the man reached the breastwork of the
hut, and when he had succeeded in clambering over it,
he lay down and fainted.
After Softswan had glanced anxiously
in the direction of the forest, and placed one of
the guns in a handy position, she proceeded to examine
the wounded stranger. Being expert in such matters,
she opened his vest, and quickly found a wound near
the region of the heart. It was bleeding steadily
though not profusely. To stanch this and bind
it up was the work of a few minutes. Then she
reclosed the vest. In doing so she found something
hard in a pocket near the wound. It was a little
book, which she gently removed as it might interfere
with the bandage. In doing so she observed that
the book had been struck by the bullet which it deflected,
so as to cause a more deadly wound than might otherwise
have been inflicted.
She was thus engaged when the patient
recovered consciousness, and, seizing her wrist, exclaimed,
“Take not the Word from me. It has been
my joy and comfort in all my-”
He stopped on observing who it was
that touched his treasure.
“Nay, then,” he continued,
with a faint smile, as he released his hold; “it
can come to no harm in thy keeping, child. For
an instant I thought that rougher hands had seized
it. But why remove it?”
Softswan explained, but, seeing how
eager the man was to keep it, she at once returned
the little Bible to the inner pocket in which it was
carried when not in use. Then running into the
hut she quickly returned with a rib of venison and
a tin mug of water.
The man declined the food, but drained
the mug with an air of satisfaction, which showed
how much he stood in need of water.
Much refreshed, he pulled out the
Bible again, and looked earnestly at it.
“Strange,” he said, in
the Indian tongue, turning his eyes on his surgeon-nurse;
“often have I heard of men saved from death by
bullets being stopped by Bibles, but in my case it
would seem as if God had made it a key to unlock the
gates of the better land.”
“Does my white father think
he is going to die?” asked the girl in her own
tongue, with a look of anxiety.
“It may be so,” replied
the man gently, “for I feel very, very
weak. But feelings are deceptive; one cannot
trust them. It matters little, however.
If I live, it is to work for Jesus. If I die,
it is to be with Jesus. But tell me, little
one, who art thou whom the Lord has sent to succour
me?”
“Me is Softswan, daughter of
the great chief Bounding Bull,” replied the
girl, with a look of pride when she mentioned her father,
which drew a slight smile from the stranger.
“But Softswan has white blood
in her veins,” he said; “and why does she
sometimes speak in the language of the pale-face?”
“My mother,” returned
the girl in a low, sad tone, “was pale-face womans
from the Saskatchewan. Me speaks English, for
my husban’ likes it.”
“Your husband-what is his name!”
“Big Tim.”
“What!” exclaimed the
wounded man with sudden energy, as a flush overspread
his pale face; “is he the son of Little Tim,
the brother-in-law of Whitewing the prairie chief?”
“He is the son of Leetil Tim, an’ this
be hims house.”
“Then,” exclaimed the
stranger, with a pleased look, “I have reached,
if not the end of my journey, at least a most important
point in it, for I had appointed to meet Whitewing
at this very spot, and did not know, when the Blackfoot
Indian shot me, that I was so near the hut. It
looked like a mere accident my finding the track which
leads to it near the spot where I fell, but it is
the Lord’s doing. Tell me, Softswan, have
you never heard Whitewing and Little Tim speak of the
pale-face missionary-the Preacher, they
used to call me?”
“Yes, yes, oftin,” answered
the girl eagerly. “Me tinks it bees you.
Me very glad, an’ Leetil Tim he-”
Her speech was cut short at this point
by a repetition of the appalling war-whoop which had
already disturbed the echoes of the gorge more than
once that day.
Naturally the attention of Softswan
had been somewhat distracted by the foregoing conversation,
and she had allowed the Indians to burst from the
thicket and rush up the track a few paces before she
was able to bring the big-bore gun to bear on them.
“Slay them not, Softswan,”
cried the preacher anxiously, as he tried to rise
and prevent her firing. “We cannot escape
them.”
He was too late. She had already
pressed the trigger, and the roar of the huge gun
was reverberating from cliff to cliff like miniature
thunder; but his cry had not been too late to produce
wavering in the girl’s wind, inducing her to
take bad aim, so that the handful of slugs with which
the piece had been charged went hissing over the assailants’
heads instead of killing them. The stupendous
hissing and noise, however, had the effect of momentarily
arresting the savages, and inducing each man to seek
the shelter of the nearest shrub.
“Com queek,” cried Softswan,
seizing the preacher’s hand. “You
be deaded soon if you not com queek.”
Feeling the full force of this remark,
the wounded man, exerting all his strength, arose,
and suffered himself to be led into the hut.
Passing quickly out by a door at the back, the preacher
and the bride found themselves on a narrow ledge of
rock, from one side of which was the precipice down
which Big Tim had made his perilous descent.
Close to their feet lay a great flat rock or natural
slab, two yards beyond which the ledge terminated
in a sheer precipice.
“No escape here,” remarked
the preacher sadly, as he looked round. “In
my present state I could not venture down such a path
even to save my life. But care not for me, Softswan.
If you think you can escape, go and-”
He stopped, for to his amazement the
girl stooped, and with apparent ease raised the ponderous
mass of rock above referred to as though it had been
a slight wooden trap-door, and disclosed a hole large
enough for a man to pass through. The preacher
observed that the stone was hinged on a strong iron
bar, which was fixed considerably nearer to one side
of it than the other. Still, this hinge did not
account for the ease with which a mere girl lifted
a ponderous mass which two or three men could not
have moved without the aid of levers.
But there was no time to investigate
the mystery of the matter, for another ringing war-whoop
told that the Blackfeet, having recovered from their
consternation, had summoned courage to renew the assault.
“Down queek!” said the
girl, looking earnestly into her companion’s
face, and pointing to the dark hole, where the head
of a rude ladder, dimly visible, showed what had to
be done.
“It does not require much faith
to trust and obey such a leader,” thought the
preacher, as he got upon the ladder, and quickly disappeared
in the hole. Softswan lightly followed.
As her head was about to disappear, she raised her
hand, seized hold of a rough projection on the under
surface of the mass of rock, and drew it gently down
so as to effectually close the hole, leaving no trace
whatever of its existence.
While this was going on the Blackfeet
were advancing up the narrow pathway with superlative
though needless caution, and no small amount of timidity.
Each man took advantage of every scrap of cover he
could find on the way up, but as the owner of the
hut had taken care to remove all cover that was removable,
they did not find much, and if the defenders had been
there, that little would have been found to be painfully
insufficient, for it consisted only of rugged masses
and projections of rock, none of which could altogether
conceal the figure of a full-grown man. Indeed,
it seemed inexplicable that these Indians should have
made this assault in broad day, considering that Indians
in general are noted for their care of “number
one,” are particularly unwilling to meet their
foes in fair open fight, and seldom if ever venture
to storm a place of strength except by surprise and
under the cover of night.
The explanation lay partly in the
fact that they were aware of the advance of friends
towards the place, but much more in this, that the
party was led by the great chief Rushing River, a man
possessed of that daring bulldog courage and reckless
contempt of death which is usually more characteristic
of white than of red men.
When the band had by galvanic darts
and rushes gained the last scrap of cover that lay
between them and the little fortress, Rushing River
gave vent to a whoop which was meant to thrill the
defenders with consternation to the very centre of
their being, and made a gallant rush, worthy of his
name, for the breastwork. Reaching it in gasping
haste, he and his braves crouched for one moment at
the foot of it, presumably to recover wind and allow
the first fire of the defenders to pass over their
heads.
But no first fire came, and Rushing
River rolled his great black eyes upward in astonishment,
perhaps thinking that his whoop had thrilled the defenders
off the face of the earth altogether!
Suspense, they say, is less endurable
than actual collision with danger. Probably Rushing
River thought it so, for next moment he raised his
black head quickly. Finding a hole in the defences,
he applied one of his black eyes to it and peeped
through. Seeing nothing, he uttered another
whoop, and vaulted over like a squirrel, tomahawk in
hand, ready to brain anybody or anything. Seeing
nobody and nothing in particular, except an open door,
he suspected an ambush in that quarter, darted round
the corner of the hut to get out of the doorway line
of fire, and peeped back.
Animated by a similar spirit, his
men followed suit. When it became evident that
no one meant to come out of the hut Rushing River resolved
to go in, and did so with another yell and a flourish
of his deadly weapon, but again was he doomed to expend
his courage and violence on air, for he possessed
too much of natural dignity to expend his wrath on
inanimate furniture.
Of course one glance sufficed to show
that the defenders had flown, and it needed not the
practised wit of a savage to perceive that they had
retreated through the back door. In his eagerness
to catch the foe, the Indian chief sprang after them
with such a rush that nothing but a stout willow,
which he grasped convulsively, prevented him from going
over the precipice headlong-changing, as
it were, from a River into a Fall-and ending
his career appropriately in the torrent below.
When the chief had assembled his followers
on the limited surface of the ledge, they all gazed
around them for a few seconds in silence. On
one side was a sheer precipice. On another side
was, if we may so express it, a sheerer precipice
rising upward. On the third side was the steep
and rugged path, which looked sufficiently dangerous
to arrest all save the mad or the desperate.
On the fourth side was the hut.
Seeing all this at a glance, Rushing
River looked mysterious and said, “Ho!”
To which his men returned, “How!”
“Hi!” and “Hee!” or some other
exclamation indicative of bafflement and surprise.
Standing on the trap-door rock as
on a sort of pulpit, the chief pointed with his finger
to the precipitous path, and said solemnly-
“Big Tim has gone down there.
He has net the wings of the hawk, but he has the
spirit of the squirrel, or the legs of the goat.”
“Or the brains of the fool,”
suggested a follower, with a few drops of white blood
in his veins, which made him what boys call “cheeky.”
“Of course,” continued
Rushing River, still more solemnly, and scorning to
notice the remark, “of course Rushing River and
his braves could follow if they chose. They
could do anything. But of what use would it
be? As well might we follow the moose-deer when
it has got a long start.”
“Big Tim has got the start,
as Rushing River wisely says,” remarked the
cheeky comrade, “but he is hampered with his
squaw, and cannot go fast.”
“Many pale-faces are hampered
by their squaws, and cannot go fast,” retorted
the chief, by which reply he meant to insinuate that
the few drops of white blood in the veins of the cheeky
one might yet come through an experience to which
a pure Indian would scorn to submit. “But,”
continued the chief, after a pause to let the stab
take full effect, “but Softswan is well known.
She is strong as the mountain sheep and fleet as
the mustang. She will not hamper Big Tim.
Enough! We will let them go, and take possession
of their goods.”
Whatever the chief’s followers
might have thought about the first part of his speech,
there was evidently no difference of opinion as to
the latter part. With a series of assenting
“Ho’s,” “How’s,”
“Hi’s,” and “Hee’s,”
they returned with him into the hut, and began to appropriate
the property, commencing with a cold haunch of venison
which they discovered in the larder, and to which
they did ample justice, sitting in a circle on the
floor in the middle of the little room.
Leaving them there, we will return
to Softswan and her new friend.
“The place is very dark,”
remarked the preacher, groping cautiously about after
the trap-door was closed as above described.
“Stan’ still; I vill strik light,”
said Softswan.
In a few moments sparks were seen
flying from flint and steel, and after one or two
unsuccessful efforts a piece of tinder was kindled.
Then the girl’s pretty little nose and lips
were seen of a fiery red colour as she blew some dry
grass and chips into a flame, and kindled a torch
therewith.
The light revealed a small natural
cavern of rock, not much more than six feet high and
ten or twelve wide, but of irregular shape, and extending
into obscurity in one direction. The only objects
in the cave besides the ladder by which they entered
it were a few barrels partially covered with deerskin,
an unusually small table, rudely but strongly made,
and an enormous mass of rock enclosed in a net of strong
rope which hung from an iron hook in the roof.
The last object at once revealed the
mystery of the trap-door. It formed a ponderous
counterpoise attached to the smaller section of the
stone slab, and so nearly equalised the weight on the
hinge that, as we have seen, Softswan’s weak
arm was sufficient to turn the scale.
The instant the torch flared up the
girl stuck it into a crevice in the wall, and quickly
grasping the little table, pushed it under the pendent
rock. It reached to within half an inch of the
mass. Picking up two broad wooden wedges that
lay on the floor, she thrust them between the rock
and the table, one on either side, so as to cause it
to rest entirely on the table, and thus by removing
its weight from the iron hook, the slab was rendered
nearly immovable. She was anxiously active in
these various operations, for already the Indians had
entered the hut and their voices could be distinctly
heard overhead.
“Now,” she whispered,
with a sigh of relief, “six mans not abil to
move the stone, even if he knowed the hole is b’low
it.”
“It is an ingenious device,”
said the preacher, throwing his exhausted form on
a heap of pine branches which lay in a corner.
“Who invented it-your husband?”
“No; it was Leetil Tim,”
returned the girl, with a low musical laugh.
“Big Tim says hims fadder be great at ’ventions.
He ’vent many t’ings. Some’s
good, some’s bad, an’ some’s funny.”
The preacher could not forbear smiling
at this account of his old friend, in spite of his
anxiety lest the Indians who were regaling themselves
overhead should discover their retreat. He had
begun to put some questions to Softswan in a low voice
when he was rendered dumb and his blood seemed to
curdle as he heard stumbling footsteps approaching
from the dark end of the cavern. Then was heard
the sound of some one panting vehemently. Next
moment a man leaped into the circle of light, and
seized the Indian girl in his arms.
“Thank God!” he exclaimed
fervently; “not too late! I had thought
the reptiles had been too much for thee, soft one.
Ah me! I fear that some poor pale-face has-”
He stopped abruptly, for at that moment Big Tim’s
eye fell upon the wounded man. “What!”
he exclaimed, hastening to the preacher’s side;
“you have got here after all?”
“Ay, young man, through the
goodness of God I have reached this haven of rest.
Your words seem to imply that you had half expected
to find me, though how you came to know of my case
at all is to me a mystery.”
“My white father,” returned
Big Tim, referring as much to the preacher’s
age and pure white hair as to his connection with the
white men, “finds mystery where the hunter and
the red man see none. I went out a-purpose to
see that it was not my daddy the Blackfoot reptiles
had shot and soon came across your tracks, which showed
me as plain as a book that you was badly wounded.
I followed the tracks for a bit, expectin’ to
find you lyin’ dead somewheres, when the whoops
of the reptiles turned me back. But tell me,
white father, are you not the preacher that my daddy
and Whitewing used to know some twenty years agone?”
“I am, and fain would I meet
with my former friends once more before I die.”
“You shall meet with them, I
doubt not,” replied the young hunter, arranging
the couch of the wounded man more comfortably.
“I see that my soft one has bandaged you up,
and she’s better than the best o’ sawbones
at such work. I’ll be able to make you
more comfortable when we drive the reptiles out o’-”
“Call them not reptiles,”
interrupted the preacher gently. “They
are the creatures of God, like ourselves.”
“It may be so, white father;
nevertheless, they are uncommon low, mean, sneakin’,
savage critters, an’ that’s all that I’ve
got to do with.”
“You say truth, Big Tim,”
returned the preacher, “and that is also all
that I have got to do with; but you and I take different
methods of correcting the evil.”
“Every man must walk in the
ways to which he was nat’rally born,”
rejoined the young hunter, with a dark frown, as the
sound of revelry in the hut overhead became at the
moment much louder; “my way wi’ them may
not be the best in the world, but you shall see in
a few minutes that it is a way which will cause the
very marrow of the rep-of the dear
critters-to frizzle in their bones.”