While the bereaved parents were thus
hastening by forced marches to their own camp, a band
of Blackfeet was riding in another direction in quest
of buffalo, for their last supply of fresh meat had
been nearly consumed. Along with them they took
several women to dry the meat and otherwise prepare
it. Among these were poor Moonlight and her friend
Skipping Rabbit, also their guardian Umqua.
Ever since their arrival in camp Rushing
River had not only refrained from speaking to his
captives, but had carefully avoided them. Moonlight
was pleased at first but at last she began to wonder
why he was so shy, and, having utterly failed in her
efforts to hate him, she naturally began to feel a
little hurt by his apparent indifference.
Very different was the conduct of
Eaglenose, who also accompanied the hunting expedition.
That vivacious youth, breaking through all the customs
and peculiarities of Red Indian etiquette, frequently
during the journey came and talked with Moonlight,
and seemed to take special pleasure in amusing Skipping
Rabbit.
“Has the skipping one,”
he said on one occasion, “brought with her the
little man that jumps?” by which expression he
referred to the jumping-jack.
“Yes, he is with the pack-horses.
Does Eaglenose want to play with him?”
Oh, she was a sly and precocious little
rabbit, who had used well her opportunities of association
with Little Tim to pick up the ways and manners of
the pale-faces-to the surprise and occasional
amusement of her red relations, whom she frequently
scandalised not a little. Well did she know
how sensitive a young Indian brave is as to his dignity,
how he scorns to be thought childish, and how he fancies
that he looks like a splendid man when he struts with
superhuman gravity, just as a white boy does when
he puts a cigar between his unfledged lips. She
thought she had given a tremendous stab to the dignity
of Eaglenose; and so she had, yet it happened that
the dignity of Eaglenose escaped, because it was shielded
by a buckler of fun so thick that it could not easily
be pierced by shafts of ridicule.
“Yes; I want to play with him,”
answered the youth, with perfect gravity, but a twinkle
of the eyes that did not escape Skipping Rabbit; “I’m
fond of playing with him, because he is your little
husband, and I want to make friends with the husband
of the skipping one; he is so active, and kicks about
his arms and legs so well. Does he ever kick
his little squaw? I hope not.”
“Oh yes, sometimes,” returned
the child. “He kicked me last night because
I said he was so like Eaglenose.”
“The little husband did well.
A wooden chief so grand did not like to be compared
to a poor young brave who has only begun to go on the
war-path, and has taken no scalps yet.”
The mention of war-path and scalps
had the effect of quieting the poor child’s
tendency to repartee. She thought of her father
and Little Tim, and became suddenly grave.
Perceiving and regretting this, the
young Indian hastily changed the subject of conversation.
“The Blackfeet,” he said,
“have heard much about the great pale-faced
chief called Leetil Tim. Does the skipping one
know Leetil Tim?”
The skipping one, whose good humour
was quite restored at the mere mention of her friend’s
name, said that she not only knew him, but loved him,
and had been taught many things by him.
“I suppose he taught you to
speak and act like the pale-faced squaws?”
said Eaglenose.
“I suppose he did,” returned
the child, with a laugh, “and Moonlight helped
him. But perhaps it is also because I have white
blood in me. My mother was a pale-face.”
“That accounts for Skipping
Rabbit being so ready to laugh, and so fond of fun,”
said the youth.
“Was the father of Eaglenose
a pale-face?” asked the child.
“No; why?”
“Because Eaglenose is as ready
to laugh and as fond of fun as Skipping Rabbit.
If his father was not a pale-face, he could not I
think, have been very red.”
What reply the youth would have made
to this we cannot tell, for at that moment scouts
came in with the news that buffalo had been seen grazing
on the plain below.
Instantly the bustle of preparation
for the chase began. The women were ordered
to encamp and get ready to receive the meat.
Scouts were sent out in various directions, and the
hunters advanced at a gallop.
The region through which they were
passing at the time was marked by that lovely, undulating,
park-like scenery which lies in some parts between
the rugged slopes of the mountain range and the level
expanse of the great prairies. Its surface was
diversified by both kinds of landscape-groups
of trees, little knolls, stretches of forest, and
occasional cliffs, being mingled with wide stretches
of grassy plain, with rivulets here and there to add
to the wild beauty of the scene.
After a short ride over the level
ground the Blackfeet came to a fringe of woodland,
on the other side of which they were told by the scouts
a herd of buffalo had been seen browsing on a vast
sweep of open plain.
Riding cautiously through the wood,
they came to the edge of it and dismounted, while
Rushing River and Eaglenose advanced alone and on foot
to reconnoitre.
Coming soon to that outer fringe of
bushes, beyond which there was no cover, they dropped
on hands and knees and went forward in that manner
until they reached a spot whence a good view of the
buffalo could be obtained. The black eyes of
the two Indians glittered, and the red of their bronzed
faces deepened with emotion as they gazed. And
truly it was a sight well calculated to stir to the
very centre men whose chief business of life was the
chase, and whose principal duty was to procure food
for their women and children, for the whole plain away
to the horizon was dotted with groups of those monarchs
of the western prairies. They were grazing quietly,
as though such things as the rattle of guns, the whiz
of arrows, the thunder of horse-hoofs, and the yells
of savages had never sounded in their ears.
The chief and the young brave exchanged
impressive glances, and retired in serpentine fashion
from the scene.
A few minutes later, and the entire
band of horsemen-some with bows and a few
with guns-stood at the outmost edge of the
bushes that fringed the forest land. Beyond
this there was no cover to enable them to approach
nearer to the game without being seen, so preparation
was made for a sudden dash.
The huge rugged creatures on the plain
continued to browse peacefully, giving an occasional
toss to their enormous manes, raising a head now and
then, as if to make sure that all was safe, and then
continuing to feed, or giving vent to a soft low of
satisfaction. It seemed cruel to disturb so
much enjoyment and serenity with the hideous sounds
of war. But man’s necessities must be met.
Until Éden’s days return there is no deliverance
for the lower animals. Vegetarians may reduce
their theories to practice in the cities and among
cultivated fields, but vegetarians among the red men
of the Far West or the squat men of the Arctic zone,
would either have to violate their principles or die.
As Rushing River had no principles
on the subject, and was not prepared for voluntary
death, he gave a signal to his men, and in an instant
every horse was elongated, with ears flat nostrils
distended, and eyes flashing, while the riders bent
low, and mingled their black locks with the flying
manes.
For a few seconds no sound was heard
save the muffled thunder of the hoofs, at which the
nearest buffaloes looked up with startled inquiry in
their gaze. Another moment, and the danger was
appreciated. The mighty host went off with pig-like
clumsiness-tails up and manes tossing.
Quickly the pace changed to desperate agility as the
pursuing savages, unable to restrain themselves, relieved
their feelings with terrific yells.
As group after group of astonished
animals became aware of the attack and joined in the
mad flight the thunder on the plains swelled louder
and louder, until it became one continuous roar-like
the sound of a rushing cataract-a bovine
Niagara! At first the buffaloes and the horses
seemed well matched, but by degrees the superiority
of the latter became obvious, as the savages drew
nearer and nearer to the flying mass. Soon a
puff or two of smoke, a whistling bullet and a whizzing
arrow told that the action had begun. Here and
there a black spot struggling on the plain gave stronger
evidence. Then the hunters and hunted became
mixed up, the shots and whizzing were more frequent,
the yells more terrible, and the slaughter tremendous.
No fear now that Moonlight, and Skipping Rabbit,
and Umqua, and all the rest of them, big and little,
would not have plenty of juicy steaks and marrow-bones
for many days to come.
But all this was not accomplished
without some damage to the hunters. Here and
there a horse, having put his foot into a badger-hole,
was seen to continue his career for a short space
like a wheel or a shot hare, while his rider went
ahead independently like a bird, and alighted-
anyhow! Such accidents, however, seldom resulted
in much damage, red skin being probably tougher than
white, and savage bones less brittle than civilised.
At all events, nothing very serious occurred until
the plain was pretty well strewn with wounded animals.
Then it was that Eaglenose, in his
wild ambition to become the best hunter of the tribe,
as well as the best warrior, singled out an old bull,
and gave chase to him. This was wanton as well
as foolish, for bulls are dangerous and their meat
is tough. What cared Eaglenose for that?
The spirit of his fathers was awakened in him (a bad
spirit doubtless), and his blood was up. Besides,
Rushing River was close alongside of him, and several
emulous braves were close behind.
Eaglenose carried a bow. Urging
his steed to the uttermost he got close up to the
bull. Fury was in the creature’s little
eyes, and madness in its tail. When a buffalo
bull cocks its tail with a little bend in the middle
thereof, it is time to “look out for squalls.”
“Does Eaglenose desire to hunt
with his fathers in the happy hunting-grounds?”
muttered Rushing River.
“Eaglenose knows not fear,”
returned the youth boastfully.
As he spoke he bent his bow, and discharged
an arrow. He lacked the precision of Robin Hood.
The shaft only grazed the bull’s shoulder, but
that was enough. A Vesuvian explosion seemed
to heave in his capacious bosom, and found vent in
a furious roar. Round he went like an opera-dancer
on one leg, and lowered his shaggy head. The
horse’s chest went slap against it as might
an ocean-billow against a black rock, and the rider,
describing a curve with a high trajectory, came heavily
down upon his eagle nose.
It was an awful crash, and after it
the poor youth lay prone for a few minutes with his
injured member in the dust-literally, for
he had ploughed completely through the superincumbent
turf.
Fortunately for poor Eaglenose, Rushing
River carried a gun, with which he shot the bull through
the heart and galloped on. So did the other
Indians. They were not going to miss the sport
for the sake of helping a fallen comrade to rise.
When at last the unfortunate youth
raised his head he presented an appearance which would
have justified the change of his name to Turkeycocknose,
so severe was the effect of his fall.
Getting into a sitting posture, the
poor fellow at first looked dazed. Then observing
something between his eyes that was considerably larger
than even he had been accustomed to, he gently raised
his hand to his face and touched it. The touch
was painful, so he desisted. Then he arose,
remounted his steed, which stood close to him, looking
stupid after the concussion, and followed the hunt,
which by that time was on the horizon.
But something worse was in store for
another member of the band that day. After killing
the buffalo bull, as before described, the chief Rushing
River proceeded to reload his gun.
Now it must be known that in the days
we write of the firearms supplied to the Nor’-west
Indians were of very inferior quality. They were
single flint-lock guns, with blue-stained barrels of
a dangerously brittle character, and red-painted brass-mounted
stocks, that gave them the appearance of huge toys.
It was a piece of this description which Rushing
River carried, and which he proceeded to reload in
the usual manner-that is, holding the gun
under his left arm, he poured some powder from a horn
into his left palm; this he poured from his palm into
the gun, and, without wadding or ramming, dropped after
the powder a bullet from his mouth, in which magazine
he carried several bullets so as to be ready.
Then driving the butt of the gun violently against
the pommel of the saddle, so as to send the whole
charge home and cause the weapon to prime itself,
he aimed at the buffalo and fired.
Charges thus loosely managed do not
always go quite “home.” In this
case the ball had stuck half-way down, and when the
charge exploded the gun burst and carried away the
little finger of the chief’s left hand.
But it did more. A piece of the barrel struck
the chief on the head, and he fell from his horse
as if he had been shot.
This catastrophe brought the hunt
to a speedy close. The Indians assembled round
their fallen chief with faces graver, if possible,
than usual. They bound up his wounds as well
as they could, and made a rough-and-ready stretcher
out of two poles and a blanket, in which they carried
him into camp. During the greater part of the
short journey he was nearly if not quite unconscious.
When they at length laid him down in his tent, his
mother, although obviously anxious, maintained a stern
composure peculiar to her race.
Not so the captive Moonlight.
When she saw the apparently dead form of Rushing
River carried into his tent, covered with blood and
dust, her partially white spirit was not to be restrained.
She uttered a sharp cry, which slightly roused the
chief, and, springing to his side, went down on her
knees and seized his hand. The action was involuntary
and almost momentary. She recovered herself
at once, and rose quickly, as grave and apparently
as unmoved as the reddest of squaws. But
Rushing River had noted the fact, and divined the
cause. The girl loved him! A new sensation
of almost stern joy filled his heart. He turned
over on his side without a look or word to any one,
and calmly went to sleep.
We have already said, or hinted, that
Rushing River was a peculiar savage. He was
one of those men-perhaps not so uncommon
as we think- who hold the opinion that
women are not made to be mere beasts of burden, makers
of moccasins and coats, and menders of leggings, cookers
of food, and, generally, the slaves of men. One
consequence was that he could not bear the subdued
looks and almost cringing gait of the Blackfoot belles,
and had remained a bachelor up to the date of our
story.
He preferred to live with his mother,
who, by the way, was also an exception to the ordinary
class of squaws. She was rudely intellectual
and violently self-assertive, though kind-hearted withal.
That night when his mother chanced
to be alone in the tent, he held some important conversation
with her. Moonlight happened to be absent at
a jumping-jack entertainment with Skipping Rabbit
in the tent of Eaglenose, the youth himself being
the performer in spite of his nose! Most of the
other women in the camp were at the place where the
buffalo were being cut up and dried and converted
into pemmican.
“Mother,” said Rushing
River, who in reality had been more stunned than injured-excepting,
of course, the little finger, which was indeed gone
past recovery.
“My son,” said Umqua,
looking attentively in the chief’s eyes.
“The eagle has been brought
down at last. Rushing River will be the same
man no more. He has been hit in his heart.”
“I think not, my son,”
returned Umqua, looking somewhat anxious. “A
piece of the bad gun struck the head of Rushing River,
but his breast is sound. Perhaps he is yet stunned,
and had better sleep again.”
“I want not sleep, mother,”
replied the chief in figurative language; “it
is not the bursting gun that has wounded me, but a
spear of light-a moonbeam.”
“Moonlight!” exclaimed Umqua, with sudden
intelligence.
“Even so, mother; Rushing River has at last
found a mate in Moonlight.”
“My son is wise,” said Umqua.
“I will carry the girl to the
camp of mine enemy,” continued the chief, “and
deliver her to her father.”
“My son is a fool,” said Umqua.
“Wise, and a fool! Can
that be possible, mother?” returned the chief
with a slight smile.
“Yes, quite possible,”
said the woman promptly. “Man can be wise
at one time, foolish at another-wise in
one act, foolish in another. To take Moonlight
to your tent is wise. I love her. She has
brains. She is not like the young Blackfoot
squaws, who wag their tongues without ceasing
when they have nothing to say and never think-brainless
ones!- fools! Their talk is only
about each other behind-backs and of feeding.”
“The old one is hard upon the
young ones,” said the chief gravely; “not
long ago I heard the name of Umqua issue from a wigwam.
The voice that spoke was that of the mother of Eaglenose.
Rushing River listens not to squaws’ tales,
but he cannot stop his ears. The words floated
to him with the smoke of their fire. They were,
`Umqua has been very kind to me.’ I heard
no more.”
“The mother of Eaglenose is
not such a fool as the rest of them,” said Umqua,
in a slightly softer tone; “but why does my son
talk foolishness about going to the tents of his enemy,
and giving up a girl who it is easy to see is good
and wise and true, and a hard worker, and not
a fool?”
“Listen, mother. It is
because Moonlight is all that you say, and much more,
that I shall send her home. Besides, I have come
to know that the pale-face who was shot by one of
our braves is the preacher whose words went to my
heart when I was a boy. I must see him.”
“But Bounding Bull and Leetil
Tim will certainly kill you.”
“Leetil Tim is not like the
red men,” returned the chief; “he does
not love revenge. My enemy Bounding Bull hunts
with him much, and has taken some of his spirit.
I am a red man. I love revenge because my fathers
loved it; but there is something within me that is
not satisfied with revenge. I will go alone
and unarmed. If they kill me, they shall not
be able to say that Rushing River was a coward.”
“My son is weak; his fall has injured him.”
“Your son is strong, mother. His love
for Moonlight has changed him.”
“If you go you will surely die, my son.”
“I fear not death, mother.
I feel that within me which is stronger than death.”