<h3>CHAPTER XXI.</h3><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>Wolves attack the horses, and Cameron circumvents the<br/>
wolves</i>--<i>A bear-hunt, in which Henri shines <br/>
conspicuous</i>--<i>Joe and the "Natter-list</i>"--<i>An<br/>
alarm</i>--<i>A surprise and a capture</i>.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
We must now return to the camp where Walter<br/>
Cameron still guarded the goods, and the men<br/>
pursued their trapping avocations.<br/>
<br/>
Here seven of the horses had been killed in one night<br/>
by wolves while grazing in a plain close to the camp,<br/>
and on the night following a horse that had strayed<br/>
was also torn to pieces and devoured. The prompt and<br/>
daring manner in which this had been done convinced<br/>
the trader that white wolves had unfortunately scented<br/>
them out, and he set several traps in the hope of capturing<br/>
them.<br/>
<br/>
White wolves are quite distinct from the ordinary<br/>
wolves that prowl through woods and plains in large<br/>
packs. They are much larger, weighing sometimes as<br/>
much as a hundred and thirty pounds; but they are<br/>
comparatively scarce, and move about alone, or in small<br/>
bands of three or four. Their strength is enormous,<br/>
and they are so fierce that they do not hesitate, upon<br/>
occasions, to attack man himself. Their method of<br/>
killing horses is very deliberate. Two wolves generally<br/>
undertake the cold-blooded murder. They approach<br/>
their victim with the most innocent-looking and frolicsome<br/>
gambols, lying down and rolling about, and<br/>
frisking presently, until the horse becomes a little<br/>
accustomed to them. Then one approaches right in<br/>
front, the other in rear, still frisking playfully, until<br/>
they think themselves near enough, when they make<br/>
a simultaneous rush. The wolf which approaches in<br/>
rear is the true assailant; the rush of the other is a<br/>
mere feint. Then both fasten on the poor horse's<br/>
haunches, and never let go till the sinews are cut and<br/>
he is rolling on his side.<br/>
<br/>
The horse makes comparatively little struggle in<br/>
this deadly assault; he seems paralyzed, and soon falls<br/>
to rise no more.<br/>
<br/>
Cameron set his traps towards evening in a circle<br/>
with a bait in the centre, and then retired to rest.<br/>
Next morning he called Joe Blunt, and the two went<br/>
off together.<br/>
<br/>
"It is strange that these rascally white wolves should<br/>
be so bold when the smaller kinds are so cowardly,"<br/>
remarked Cameron, as they walked along.<br/>
<br/>
"So 'tis," replied Joe; "but I've seed them other<br/>
chaps bold enough too in the prairie when they were<br/>
in large packs and starvin'."<br/>
<br/>
"I believe the small wolves follow the big fellows,<br/>
and help them to eat what they kill, though they<br/>
generally sit round and look on at the killing."<br/>
<br/>
"Hist!" exclaimed Joe, cocking his gun; "there he<br/>
is, an' no mistake."<br/>
<br/>
There he was, undoubtedly. A wolf of the largest<br/>
size with one of his feet in the trap. He was a terrible-looking<br/>
object, for, besides his immense size and naturally<br/>
ferocious aspect, his white hair bristled on end and<br/>
was all covered with streaks and spots of blood from<br/>
his bloody jaws. In his efforts to escape he had bitten<br/>
the trap until he had broken his teeth and lacerated his<br/>
gums, so that his appearance was hideous in the extreme.<br/>
And when the two men came up he struggled with all<br/>
his might to fly at them.<br/>
<br/>
Cameron and Joe stood looking at him in a sort of<br/>
wondering admiration.<br/>
<br/>
"We'd better put a ball in him," suggested Joe after<br/>
a time. "Mayhap the chain won't stand sich tugs long."<br/>
<br/>
"True, Joe; if it break, we might get an ugly nip<br/>
before we killed him."<br/>
<br/>
So saying Cameron fired into the wolf's head and<br/>
killed it. It was found, on examination, that four<br/>
wolves had been in the traps, but the rest had escaped.<br/>
Two of them, however, had gnawed off their paws and<br/>
left them lying in the traps.<br/>
<br/>
After this the big wolves did not trouble them again.<br/>
The same afternoon a bear-hunt was undertaken, which<br/>
well-nigh cost one of the Iroquois his life. It happened<br/>
thus:--<br/>
<br/>
While Cameron and Joe were away after the white<br/>
wolves, Henri came floundering into camp tossing his<br/>
arms like a maniac, and shouting that "seven bars wos<br/>
be down in de bush close by!" It chanced that this<br/>
was an idle day with most of the men, so they all leaped<br/>
on their horses, and taking guns and knives sallied forth<br/>
to give battle to the bears.<br/>
<br/>
Arrived at the scene of action, they found the seven<br/>
bears busily engaged in digging up roots, so the men<br/>
separated in order to surround them, and then closed in.<br/>
The place was partly open and partly covered with<br/>
thick bushes into which a horseman could not penetrate.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
The moment the bears got wind of what was going<br/>
forward they made off as fast as possible, and then commenced<br/>
a scene of firing, galloping, and yelling that<br/>
defies description! Four out of the seven were shot<br/>
before they gained the bushes; the other three were<br/>
wounded, but made good their retreat. As their places<br/>
of shelter, however, were like islands in the plain, they<br/>
had no chance of escaping.<br/>
<br/>
The horsemen now dismounted and dashed recklessly<br/>
into the bushes, where they soon discovered and killed<br/>
two of the bears; the third was not found for some<br/>
time. At last an Iroquois came upon it so suddenly<br/>
that he had not time to point his gun before the bear<br/>
sprang upon him and struck him to the earth, where it<br/>
held him down.<br/>
<br/>
Instantly the place was surrounded by eager men; but<br/>
the bushes were so thick, and the fallen trees among<br/>
which the bear stood were so numerous, that they could<br/>
not use their guns without running the risk of shooting<br/>
their companion. Most of them drew their knives and<br/>
seemed about to rush on the bear with these; but the<br/>
monster's aspect, as it glared around, was so terrible that<br/>
they held back for a moment in hesitation.<br/>
<br/>
At this moment Henri, who had been at some distance<br/>
engaged in the killing of one of the other bears, came<br/>
rushing forward after his own peculiar manner.<br/>
"Ah! fat is eet--hay? de bar no go under yit?"<br/>
<br/>
Just then his eye fell on the wounded Iroquois with<br/>
the bear above him, and he uttered a yell so intense in<br/>
tone that the bear himself seemed to feel that something<br/>
decisive was about to be done at last. Henri<br/>
did not pause, but with a flying dash he sprang like a<br/>
spread eagle, arms and legs extended, right into the<br/>
bear's bosom. At the same moment he sent his long<br/>
hunting-knife down into its heart. But Bruin is proverbially<br/>
hard to kill, and although mortally wounded,<br/>
he had strength enough to open his jaws and close them<br/>
on Henri's neck.<br/>
<br/>
There was a cry of horror, and at the same moment<br/>
a volley was fired at the bear's head; for the trappers<br/>
felt that it was better to risk shooting their comrades<br/>
than see them killed before their eyes. Fortunately<br/>
the bullets took effect, and tumbled him over at once<br/>
without doing damage to either of the men, although<br/>
several of the balls just grazed Henri's temple and<br/>
carried off his cap.<br/>
<br/>
Although uninjured by the shot, the poor Iroquois<br/>
had not escaped scathless from the paw of the bear.<br/>
His scalp was torn almost off, and hung down over his<br/>
eyes, while blood streamed down his face. He was<br/>
conveyed by his comrades to the camp, where he lay<br/>
two days in a state of insensibility, at the end of which<br/>
time he revived and recovered daily. Afterwards when<br/>
the camp moved he had to be carried; but in the course<br/>
of two months he was as well as ever, and quite as fond<br/>
of bear-hunting!<br/>
<br/>
Among other trophies of this hunt there were two<br/>
deer and a buffalo, which last had probably strayed from<br/>
the herd. Four or five Iroquois were round this animal<br/>
whetting their knives for the purpose of cutting it up<br/>
when Henri passed, so he turned aside to watch them<br/>
perform the operation, quite regardless of the fact that<br/>
his neck and face were covered with blood which flowed<br/>
from one or two small punctures made by the bear.<br/>
<br/>
The Indians began by taking off the skin, which<br/>
certainly did not occupy them more than five minutes.<br/>
Then they cut up the meat and made a pack of it, and<br/>
cut out the tongue, which is somewhat troublesome, as<br/>
that member requires to be cut out from under the jaw<br/>
of the animal, and not through the natural opening of<br/>
the mouth. One of the fore legs was cut off at the<br/>
knee joint, and this was used as a hammer with which<br/>
to break the skull for the purpose of taking out the<br/>
brains, these being used in the process of dressing and<br/>
softening the animal's skin. An axe would have been<br/>
of advantage to break the skull, but in the hurry of<br/>
rushing to the attack the Indians had forgotten their<br/>
axes; so they adopted the common fashion of using the<br/>
buffalo's hoof as a hammer, the shank being the handle.<br/>
The whole operation of flaying, cutting up, and packing<br/>
the meat did not occupy more than twenty minutes.<br/>
Before leaving the ground these expert butchers treated<br/>
themselves to a little of the marrow and warm liver in<br/>
a raw state!<br/>
<br/>
Cameron and Joe walked up to the group while they<br/>
were indulging in this little feast.<br/>
<br/>
"Well, I've often seen that eaten, but I never could<br/>
do it myself," remarked the former.<br/>
"No!" cried Joe in surprise; "now that's oncommon<br/>
cur'us. I've <i>lived</i> on raw liver an' marrow-bones for<br/>
two or three days at a time, when we wos chased by the<br/>
Camanchee Injuns an' didn't dare to make a fire; an' it's<br/>
ra'al good, it is. Won't ye try it <i>now</i>?"<br/>
<br/>
Cameron shook his head.<br/>
<br/>
"No, thankee; I'll not refuse when I can't help it,<br/>
but until then I'll remain in happy ignorance of how<br/>
good it is."<br/>
<br/>
"Well, it <i>is</i> strange how some folk can't abide anything<br/>
in the meat way they ha'n't bin used to. D'ye<br/>
know I've actually knowed men from the cities as<br/>
wouldn't eat a bit o' horseflesh for love or money.<br/>
Would ye believe it?"<br/>
<br/>
"I can well believe that, Joe, for I have met with<br/>
such persons myself; in fact, they are rather numerous.<br/>
What are you chuckling at, Joe?"<br/>
<br/>
"Chucklin'? If ye mean be that 'larfin in to myself,'<br/>
it's because I'm thinkin' o' a chap as once comed out to<br/>
the prairies."<br/>
<br/>
"Let us walk back to the camp, Joe, and you can<br/>
tell me about him as we go along."<br/>
<br/>
"I think," continued Joe, "he comed from Washington,<br/>
but I never could make out right whether he wos<br/>
a Government man or not. Anyhow, he wos a pheelosopher--a<br/>
natter-list I think he call his-self--"<br/>
<br/>
"A naturalist," suggested Cameron.<br/>
<br/>
"Ay, that wos more like it. Well, he wos about six<br/>
feet two in his moccasins, an' as thin as a ramrod, an' as<br/>
blind as a bat--leastways he had weak eyes an' wore<br/>
green spectacles. He had on a gray shootin' coat an'<br/>
trousers an' vest an' cap, with rid whiskers an' a long<br/>
nose as rid at the point as the whiskers wos."<br/>
<br/>
"Well, this gentleman engaged me an' another hunter<br/>
to go a trip with him into the prairies, so off we sot one<br/>
fine day on three hosses, with our blankets at our backs--we<br/>
wos to depend on the rifle for victuals. At first I<br/>
thought the natter-list one o' the cruellest beggars as<br/>
iver went on two long legs, for he used to go about<br/>
everywhere pokin' pins through all the beetles an' flies<br/>
an' creepin' things he could sot eyes on, an' stuck them<br/>
in a box. But he told me he comed here a-purpose to<br/>
git as many o' them as he could; so says I, 'If that's it,<br/>
I'll fill yer box in no time.'<br/>
<br/>
"'Will ye?' says he, quite pleased like.<br/>
<br/>
"'I will,' says I, an' galloped off to a place as was<br/>
filled wi' all sorts o' crawlin' things. So I sets to work,<br/>
an' whenever I seed a thing crawlin' I sot my fut on it<br/>
an' crushed it, an' soon filled my breast pocket. I<br/>
cotched a lot o' butterflies too, an' stuffed them into my<br/>
shot-pouch, an' went back in an hour or two an' showed<br/>
him the lot. He put on his green spectacles an' looked<br/>
at them as if he'd seen a rattlesnake.<br/>
<br/>
"'My good man,' says he, 'you've crushed them all<br/>
to pieces!'<br/>
<br/>
"'They'll taste as good for all that,' says I; for<br/>
somehow I'd taken't in me head that he'd heard o' the<br/>
way the Injuns make soup o' the grasshoppers, an' wos<br/>
wantin' to try his hand at a new dish!<br/>
<br/>
"He laughed when I said this, an' told me he wos<br/>
collectin' them to take home to be <i>looked</i> at. But that's<br/>
not wot I was goin' to tell ye about him," continued<br/>
Joe; "I wos goin' to tell ye how we made him eat<br/>
horseflesh. He carried a revolver, too, this natter-list<br/>
did, to load wi' shot as small as dust a'most, an' shoot<br/>
little birds with. I've seed him miss birds only three<br/>
feet away with it. An' one day he drew it all of a suddent an' let fly<br/>
at a<br/>
big bum-bee that wos passin',<br/>
yellin' out that it wos the finest wot he had iver seed.<br/>
He missed the bee, of coorse, 'cause it wos a flyin' shot,<br/>
he said, but he sent the whole charge right into Martin's<br/>
back--Martin was my comrade's name. By good luck<br/>
Martin had on a thick leather coat, so the shot niver<br/>
got the length o' his skin."<br/>
<br/>
"One day I noticed that the natter-list had stuffed<br/>
small corks into the muzzles of all the six barrels of his<br/>
revolver. I wondered what they wos for, but he wos<br/>
al'ays doin' sich queer things that I soon forgot it.<br/>
'Maybe,' thought I, jist before it went out o' my mind--'maybe<br/>
he thinks that'll stop the pistol from goin'<br/>
off by accident;' for ye must know he'd let it off three<br/>
times the first day by accident, an' well-nigh blowed<br/>
off his leg the last time, only the shot lodged in the<br/>
back o' a big toad he'd jist stuffed into his breeches<br/>
pocket. Well, soon after we shot a buffalo bull, so<br/>
when it fell, off he jumps from his horse an' runs up to<br/>
it. So did I, for I wasn't sure the beast was dead,<br/>
an' I had jist got up when it rose an' rushed at the<br/>
natter-list.<br/>
<br/>
"'Out o' the way,' I yelled, for my rifle was empty;<br/>
but he didn't move, so I rushed for'ard an' drew the<br/>
pistol out o' his belt and let fly in the bull's ribs jist<br/>
as it ran the poor man down. Martin came up that<br/>
moment an' put a ball through its heart, an' then we<br/>
went to pick up the natter-list. He came to in a<br/>
little, an' the first thing he said was, 'Where's my revolver?'<br/>
When I gave it to him he looked at it, an' said<br/>
with a solemcholy shake o' the head, 'There's a whole<br/>
barrel-full lost!' It turned out that he had taken to<br/>
usin' the barrels for bottles to hold things in, but he<br/>
forgot to draw the charges, so sure enough I had fired<br/>
a charge o' bum-bees an' beetles an' small shot into<br/>
the buffalo!<br/>
<br/>
"But that's not what I wos goin' to tell ye yit. We<br/>
corned to a part o' the plains where we wos well-nigh<br/>
starved for want o' game, an' the natter-list got so<br/>
thin that ye could a'most see through him, so I offered<br/>
to kill my horse, an' cut it up for meat; but you niver<br/>
saw sich a face he made. 'I'd rather die first,' says he,<br/>
'than eat it;' so we didn't kill it. But that very day<br/>
Martin got a shot at a wild horse an' killed it. The<br/>
natter-list was down in the bed o' a creek at the time<br/>
gropin' for creepers, an' he didn't see it.<br/>
<br/>
"'He'll niver eat it,' says Martin.<br/>
<br/>
"'That's true,' says I.<br/>
<br/>
"'Let's tell him it's a buffalo,' says he.<br/>
<br/>
"'That would be tellin' a lie,' says I.<br/>
<br/>
"So we stood lookin' at each other, not knowin' what<br/>
to do.<br/>
<br/>
"'I'll tell ye what,' cries Martin; 'we'll cut it up,<br/>
and take the meat into camp an' cook it without <i>sayin'<br/>
a word</i>.'<br/>
<br/>
"'Done,' says I, 'that's it;' for ye must know the<br/>
poor critter wos no judge o' meat. He couldn't tell one kind from<br/>
another,<br/>
an' he niver axed questions.<br/>
In fact he niver a'most spoke to us all the trip. Well,<br/>
we cut up the horse, an' carried the flesh an' marrowbones<br/>
into camp, takin' care to leave the hoofs an' skin<br/>
behind, an' sot to work an' roasted steaks an' marrowbones."<br/>
<br/>
"When the natter-list came back ye should ha' seen<br/>
the joyful face he put on when he smelt the grub, for<br/>
he was all but starved out, poor critter."<br/>
<br/>
"'What have we got here?' cried he, rubbin' his<br/>
hands an' sittin' down."<br/>
<br/>
"'Steaks an' marrow-bones,' says Martin."<br/>
<br/>
"'Capital!' says he. 'I'm <i>so</i> hungry.'"<br/>
<br/>
"So he fell to work like a wolf. I niver seed a man<br/>
pitch into anything like as that natter-list did into that<br/>
horseflesh."<br/>
<br/>
"'These are first-rate marrow-bones,' says he, squintin'<br/>
with one eye down the shin-bone o' the hind leg to see if<br/>
it was quite empty."<br/>
<br/>
"'Yes, sir, they is,' answered Martin, as grave as a judge."<br/>
<br/>
"'Take another, sir,' says I."<br/>
<br/>
"'No, thankee,' says he with a sigh, for he didn't<br/>
like to leave off."<br/>
<br/>
"Well, we lived for a week on horseflesh, an' first-rate<br/>
livin' it wos; then we fell in with buffalo, an' niver<br/>
ran short again till we got to the settlements, when<br/>
he paid us our money an' shook hands, sayin' we'd had<br/>
a nice trip, an' he wished us well. Jist as we wos<br/>
partin' I said, says I, 'D'ye know what it wos we lived<br/>
on for a week arter we wos well-nigh starved in the<br/>
prairies?'"<br/>
<br/>
"'What,' says he, 'when we got yon capital marrowbones?'"<br/>
<br/>
"'The same,' says I. 'Yon wos <i>horse</i> flesh,' says I;<br/>
'an' I think ye'll surely niver say again that it isn't<br/>
first-rate livin'.'"<br/>
<br/>
"'Ye're jokin',' says he, turnin' pale."<br/>
<br/>
"'It's true, sir; as true as ye're standin' there.'"<br/>
<br/>
"Well, would ye believe it, he turned--that natter-list<br/>
did--as sick as a dog on the spot wot he wos<br/>
standin' on, an' didn't taste meat again for three days!"<br/>
<br/>
Shortly after the conclusion of Joe's story they<br/>
reached the camp, and here they found the women and<br/>
children flying about in a state of terror, and the few<br/>
men who had been left in charge arming themselves in<br/>
the greatest haste.<br/>
<br/>
"Hallo! something wrong here," cried Cameron,<br/>
hastening forward, followed by Joe. "What has happened,<br/>
eh?"<br/>
<br/>
"Injuns comin', monsieur; look dere," answered a<br/>
trapper, pointing down the valley.<br/>
<br/>
"Arm and mount at once, and come to the front of<br/>
the camp," cried Cameron in a tone of voice that silenced<br/>
every other, and turned confusion into order.<br/>
<br/>
The cause of all this outcry was a cloud of dust seen<br/>
far down the valley, which was raised by a band of<br/>
mounted Indians who approached the camp at full<br/>
speed. Their numbers could not be made out, but they<br/>
were a sufficiently formidable band to cause much<br/>
anxiety to Cameron, whose men, at the time, were<br/>
scattered to the various trapping-grounds, and only ten<br/>
chanced to be within call of the camp. However, with<br/>
these ten he determined to show a bold front to the<br/>
savages, whether they came as friends or foes. He<br/>
therefore ordered the women and children within the<br/>
citadel formed of the goods and packs of furs piled<br/>
upon each other, which point of retreat was to be defended<br/>
to the last extremity. Then galloping to the<br/>
front he collected his men and swept down the valley at<br/>
full speed. In a few minutes they were near enough to<br/>
observe that the enemy only numbered four Indians,<br/>
who were driving a band of about a hundred horses<br/>
before them, and so busy were they in keeping the<br/>
troop together that Cameron and his men were close<br/>
upon them before they were observed.<br/>
<br/>
It was too late to escape. Joe Blunt and Henri had<br/>
already swept round and cut off their retreat. In this<br/>
extremity the Indians slipped from the backs of their<br/>
steeds and darted into the bushes, where they were<br/>
safe from pursuit, at least on horseback, while the<br/>
trappers got behind the horses and drove them towards<br/>
the camp.<br/>
<br/>
At this moment one of the horses sprang ahead of<br/>
the others and made for the mountain, with its mane<br/>
and tail flying wildly in the breeze.<br/>
<br/>
"Marrow-bones and buttons!" shouted one of the<br/>
men, "there goes Dick Varley's horse."<br/>
<br/>
"So it am!" cried Henri, and dashed off in pursuit,<br/>
followed by Joe and two others.<br/>
<br/>
"Why, these are our own horses," said Cameron in<br/>
surprise, as they drove them into a corner of the hills<br/>
from which they could not escape.<br/>
<br/>
This was true, but it was only half the truth, for,<br/>
besides their own horses, they had secured upwards of<br/>
seventy Indian steeds; a most acceptable addition to<br/>
their stud, which, owing to casualties and wolves, had<br/>
been diminishing too much of late. The fact was that<br/>
the Indians who had captured the horses belonging to<br/>
Pierre and his party were a small band of robbers who<br/>
had travelled, as was afterwards learned, a considerable<br/>
distance from the south, stealing horses from various<br/>
tribes as they went along. As we have seen, in an evil<br/>
hour they fell in with Pierre's party and carried off<br/>
their steeds, which they drove to a pass leading from<br/>
one valley to the other. Here they united them with<br/>
the main band of their ill-gotten gains, and while the<br/>
greater number of the robbers descended farther into<br/>
the plains in search of more booty, four of them were<br/>
sent into the mountains with the horses already procured.<br/>
These four, utterly ignorant of the presence of<br/>
white men in the valley, drove their charge, as we have<br/>
seen, almost into the camp.<br/>
<br/>
Cameron immediately organized a party to go out in<br/>
search of Pierre and his companions, about whose fate<br/>
he became intensely anxious, and in the course of half-an-hour<br/>
as many men as he could spare with safety were<br/>
despatched in the direction of the Blue Mountains.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
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