<h3>CHAPTER XXVI.</h3><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>Anxious fears followed by a joyful surprise--Safe home at last, and<br/>
happy hearts</i>.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
One fine afternoon, a few weeks after the storm of<br/>
which we have given an account in the last<br/>
chapter, old Mrs. Varley was seated beside her own<br/>
chimney corner in the little cottage by the lake, gazing<br/>
at the glowing logs with the earnest expression of one<br/>
whose thoughts were far away. Her kind face was<br/>
paler than usual, and her hands rested idly on her knee,<br/>
grasping the knitting-wires to which was attached a half-finished<br/>
stocking.<br/>
<br/>
On a stool near to her sat young Marston, the lad to<br/>
whom, on the day of the shooting-match, Dick Varley<br/>
had given his old rifle. The boy had an anxious look<br/>
about him, as he lifted his eyes from time to time to the<br/>
widow's face.<br/>
<br/>
"Did ye say, my boy, that they were <i>all</i> killed?"<br/>
inquired Mrs. Varley, awaking from her reverie with<br/>
a deep sigh.<br/>
<br/>
"Every one," replied Marston. "Jim Scraggs, who<br/>
brought the news, said they wos all lying dead with<br/>
their scalps off. They wos a party o' white men."<br/>
<br/>
Mrs. Varley sighed again, and her face assumed an<br/>
expression of anxious pain as she thought of her son<br/>
Dick being exposed to a similar fate. Mrs. Varley was<br/>
not given to nervous fears, but as she listened to the<br/>
boy's recital of the slaughter of a party of white men,<br/>
news of which had just reached the valley, her heart<br/>
sank, and she prayed inwardly to Him who is the husband<br/>
of the widow that her dear one might be protected<br/>
from the ruthless hand of the savage.<br/>
<br/>
After a short pause, during which young Marston<br/>
fidgeted about and looked concerned, as if he had something<br/>
to say which he would fain leave unsaid, Mrs.<br/>
Varley continued,--<br/>
<br/>
"Was it far off where the bloody deed was done?"<br/>
<br/>
"Yes; three weeks off, I believe. And Jim Scraggs<br/>
said that he found a knife that looked like the one wot<br/>
belonged to--to--" the lad hesitated.<br/>
<br/>
"To whom, my boy? Why don't ye go on?"<br/>
<br/>
"To your son Dick."<br/>
<br/>
The widow's hands dropped by her side, and she<br/>
would have fallen had not Marston caught her.<br/>
<br/>
"O mother dear, don't take on like that!" he cried,<br/>
smoothing down the widow's hair as her head rested on<br/>
his breast.<br/>
<br/>
For some time Mrs. Varley suffered the boy to fondle<br/>
her in silence, while her breast laboured with anxious<br/>
dread.<br/>
<br/>
"Tell me all," she said at last, recovering a little.<br/>
"Did Jim see--Dick?"<br/>
<br/>
"No," answered the boy. "He looked at all the<br/>
bodies, but did not find his; so he sent me over here to<br/>
tell ye that p'r'aps he's escaped."<br/>
<br/>
Mrs. Varley breathed more freely, and earnestly<br/>
thanked God; but her fears soon returned when she<br/>
thought of his being a prisoner, and recalled the tales<br/>
of terrible cruelty often related of the savages.<br/>
<br/>
While she was still engaged in closely questioning<br/>
the lad, Jim Scraggs himself entered the cottage, and<br/>
endeavoured in a gruff sort of way to reassure the widow.<br/>
<br/>
"Ye see, mistress," he said, "Dick is an oncommon<br/>
tough customer, an' if he could only git fifty yards' start,<br/>
there's not an Injun in the West as could git hold o' him<br/>
agin; so don't be takin' on."<br/>
<br/>
"But what if he's been taken prisoner?" said the<br/>
widow.<br/>
<br/>
"Ay, that's jest wot I've comed about. Ye see it's<br/>
not onlikely he's bin took; so about thirty o' the lads<br/>
o' the valley are ready jest now to start away and give<br/>
the red riptiles chase, an' I come to tell ye; so keep up<br/>
heart, mistress."<br/>
<br/>
With this parting word of comfort, Jim withdrew,<br/>
and Marston soon followed, leaving the widow to weep<br/>
and pray in solitude.<br/>
<br/>
Meanwhile an animated scene was going on near the<br/>
block-house. Here thirty of the young hunters of the<br/>
Mustang Valley were assembled, actively engaged in<br/>
supplying themselves with powder and lead, and tightening<br/>
their girths, preparatory to setting out in pursuit<br/>
of the Indians who had murdered the white men; while<br/>
hundreds of boys and girls, and not a few matrons,<br/>
crowded round and listened to the conversation, and to<br/>
the deep threats of vengeance that were uttered ever<br/>
and anon by the younger men.<br/>
<br/>
Major Hope, too, was among them. The worthy<br/>
major, unable to restrain his roving propensities, determined<br/>
to revisit the Mustang Valley, and had arrived<br/>
only two days before.<br/>
<br/>
Backwoodsmen's preparations are usually of the shortest<br/>
and simplest. In a few minutes the cavalcade was<br/>
ready, and away they went towards the prairies, with<br/>
the bold major at their head. But their journey was<br/>
destined to come to an abrupt and unexpected close.<br/>
A couple of hours' gallop brought them to the edge of<br/>
one of those open plains which sometimes break up the<br/>
woodland near the verge of the great prairies. It<br/>
stretched out like a green lake towards the horizon, on<br/>
which, just as the band of horsemen reached it, the sun<br/>
was descending in a blaze of glory.<br/>
<br/>
With a shout of enthusiasm, several of the younger<br/>
members of the party sprang forward into the plain<br/>
at a gallop; but the shout was mingled with one of a<br/>
different tone from the older men.<br/>
<br/>
"Hist!--hallo!--hold on, ye catamounts! There's<br/>
Injuns ahead!"<br/>
<br/>
The whole band came to a sudden halt at this cry,<br/>
and watched eagerly, and for some time in silence, the<br/>
motions of a small party of horsemen who were seen in<br/>
the far distance, like black specks on the golden sky.<br/>
<br/>
"They come this way, I think," said Major Hope,<br/>
after gazing steadfastly at them for some minutes.<br/>
<br/>
Several of the old hands signified their assent to this<br/>
suggestion by a grunt, although to unaccustomed eyes<br/>
the objects in question looked more like crows than<br/>
horsemen, and their motion was for some time scarcely<br/>
perceptible.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
"I sees pack-horses among them," cried young Marston<br/>
in an excited tone; "an' there's three riders; but<br/>
there's som'thin' else, only wot it be I can't tell."<br/>
<br/>
"Ye've sharp eyes, younker," remarked one of the<br/>
men, "an' I do b'lieve ye're right."<br/>
<br/>
Presently the horsemen approached, and soon there<br/>
was a brisk fire of guessing as to who they could be.<br/>
It was evident that the strangers observed the cavalcade<br/>
of white men, and regarded them as friends, for they<br/>
did not check the headlong speed at which they approached.<br/>
In a few minutes they were clearly made out<br/>
to be a party of three horsemen driving pack-horses<br/>
before them, and <i>somethin</i>' which some of the hunters<br/>
guessed was a buffalo calf.<br/>
<br/>
Young Marston guessed too, but his guess was different.<br/>
Moreover, it was uttered with a yell that would<br/>
have done credit to the fiercest of all the savages.<br/>
"Crusoe!" he shouted, while at the same moment he<br/>
brought his whip heavily down on the flank of his little<br/>
horse, and sprang over the prairie like an arrow.<br/>
<br/>
One of the approaching horsemen was far ahead of<br/>
his comrades, and seemed as if encircled with the flying<br/>
and voluminous mane of his magnificent horse.<br/>
<br/>
"Ha! ho!" gasped Marston in a low tone to himself,<br/>
as he flew along. "Crusoe! I'd know ye, dog,<br/>
among a thousand! A buffalo calf! Ha! git on with<br/>
ye!"<br/>
<br/>
This last part of the remark was addressed to his<br/>
horse, and was followed by a whack that increased the<br/>
pace considerably.<br/>
<br/>
The space between two such riders was soon devoured.<br/>
<br/>
"Hallo! Dick--Dick Varley!"<br/>
<br/>
"Eh! why, Marston, my boy!"<br/>
<br/>
The friends reined up so suddenly that one might<br/>
have fancied they had met like the knights of old in the<br/>
shock of mortal conflict.<br/>
<br/>
"Is't yerself, Dick Varley?"<br/>
<br/>
Dick held out his hand, and his eyes glistened, but he<br/>
could not find words.<br/>
<br/>
Marston seized it, and pushing his horse close up,<br/>
vaulted nimbly off and alighted on Charlie's back behind<br/>
his friend.<br/>
<br/>
"Off ye go, Dick! I'll take ye to yer mother."<br/>
<br/>
Without reply, Dick shook the reins, and in another<br/>
minute was in the midst of the hunters.<br/>
<br/>
To the numberless questions that were put to him he<br/>
only waited to shout aloud, "We're all safe! They'll<br/>
tell ye all about it," he added, pointing to his comrades,<br/>
who were now close at hand; and then, dashing onward,<br/>
made straight for home, with little Marston clinging to<br/>
his waist like a monkey.<br/>
<br/>
Charlie was fresh, and so was Crusoe, so you may be<br/>
sure it was not long before they all drew up opposite<br/>
the door of the widow's cottage. Before Dick could<br/>
dismount, Marston had slipped off, and was already in<br/>
the kitchen.<br/>
<br/>
"Here's Dick, mother!"<br/>
<br/>
The boy was an orphan, and loved the widow so much<br/>
that he had come at last to call her mother.<br/>
<br/>
Before another word could be uttered, Dick Varley<br/>
was in the room. Marston immediately stepped out and<br/>
softly shut the door. Reader, we shall not open it!<br/>
<br/>
Having shut the door, as we have said, Marston ran<br/>
down to the edge of the lake and yelled with delight--usually<br/>
terminating each paroxysm with the Indian war-whoop,<br/>
with which he was well acquainted. Then he<br/>
danced, and then he sat down on a rock, and became<br/>
suddenly aware that there were other hearts there, close<br/>
beside him, as glad as his own. Another mother of the<br/>
Mustang Valley was rejoicing over a long-lost son.<br/>
<br/>
Crusoe and his mother Fan were scampering round<br/>
each other in a manner that evinced powerfully the<br/>
strength of their mutual affection.<br/>
<br/>
Talk of holding converse! Every hair on Crusoe's<br/>
body, every motion of his limbs, was eloquent with<br/>
silent language. He gazed into his mother's mild eyes<br/>
as if he would read her inmost soul (supposing that she<br/>
had one). He turned his head to every possible angle,<br/>
and cocked his ears to every conceivable elevation, and<br/>
rubbed his nose against Fan's, and barked softly, in<br/>
every imaginable degree of modulation, and varied these<br/>
proceedings by bounding away at full speed over the<br/>
rocks of the beach, and in among the bushes and out<br/>
again, but always circling round and round Fan, and<br/>
keeping her in view!<br/>
<br/>
It was a sight worth seeing, and young Marston sat<br/>
down on a rock, deliberately and enthusiastically, to<br/>
gloat over it. But perhaps the most remarkable part<br/>
of it has not yet been referred to. There was yet<br/>
another heart there that was glad--exceeding glad that<br/>
day. It was a little one too, but it was big for the<br/>
body that held it. Grumps was there, and all that<br/>
Grumps did was to sit on his haunches and stare at Fan<br/>
and Crusoe, and wag his tail as well as he could in so<br/>
awkward a position! Grumps was evidently bewildered<br/>
with delight, and had lost nearly all power to express<br/>
it. Crusoe's conduct towards him, too, was not calculated<br/>
to clear his faculties. Every time he chanced to pass<br/>
near Grumps in his elephantine gambols, he gave him<br/>
a passing touch with his nose, which always knocked<br/>
him head over heels; whereat Grumps invariably got<br/>
up quickly and wagged his tail with additional energy.<br/>
Before the feelings of those canine friends were calmed,<br/>
they were all three ruffled into a state of comparative<br/>
exhaustion.<br/>
<br/>
Then young Marston called Crusoe to him, and<br/>
Crusoe, obedient to the voice of friendship, went.<br/>
<br/>
"Are you happy, my dog?"<br/>
<br/>
"You're a stupid fellow to ask such a question; however<br/>
it's an amiable one. Yes, I am."<br/>
<br/>
"What do <i>you</i> want, ye small bundle o' hair?"<br/>
<br/>
This was addressed to Grumps, who came forward<br/>
innocently, and sat down to listen to the conversation.<br/>
<br/>
On being thus sternly questioned the little dog put<br/>
down its ears flat, and hung its head, looking up at the<br/>
same time with a deprecatory look, as if to say, "Oh<br/>
dear, I beg pardon. I--I only want to sit near Crusoe,<br/>
please; but if you wish it, I'll go away, sad and lonely,<br/>
with my tail <i>very</i> much between my legs; indeed I will,<br/>
only say the word, but--but I'd <i>rather</i> stay if I might."<br/>
<br/>
"Poor bundle!" said Marston, patting its head, "you<br/>
can stay then. Hooray! Crusoe, are you happy, I<br/>
say? Does your heart bound in you like a cannon ball<br/>
that wants to find its way out, and can't, eh?"<br/>
Crusoe put his snout against Marston's cheek, and in<br/>
the excess of his joy the lad threw his arms round the<br/>
dog's neck and hugged it vigorously--a piece of impulsive<br/>
affection which that noble animal bore with characteristic<br/>
meekness, and which Grumps regarded with idiotic<br/>
satisfaction.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
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