<h3>CHAPTER XXVII.</h3><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>Rejoicings</i>--<i>The feast at the block-house</i>--<i>Grumps and<br/>
Crusoe come out strong</i>--<i>The closing scene</i>.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
The day of Dick's arrival with his companions was<br/>
a great day in the annals of the Mustang Valley,<br/>
and Major Hope resolved to celebrate it by an impromptu<br/>
festival at the old block-house; for many hearts in the<br/>
valley had been made glad that day, and he knew full<br/>
well that, under such circumstances, some safety-valve<br/>
must be devised for the escape of overflowing excitement.<br/>
<br/>
A messenger was sent round to invite the population<br/>
to assemble without delay in front of the block-house.<br/>
With backwoods-like celerity the summons was obeyed;<br/>
men, women, and children hurried towards the central<br/>
point, wondering, yet more than half suspecting, what<br/>
was the major's object in calling them together.<br/>
<br/>
They were not long in doubt. The first sight that<br/>
presented itself, as they came trooping up the slope in<br/>
front of the log-hut, was an ox roasting whole before<br/>
a gigantic bonfire. Tables were being extemporized on<br/>
the broad level plot in front of the gate. Other fires<br/>
there were, of smaller dimensions, on which sundry<br/>
steaming pots were placed, and various joints of wild<br/>
horse, bear, and venison roasted, and sent forth a savoury<br/>
odour as well as a pleasant hissing noise. The<br/>
inhabitants of the block-house were self-taught brewers,<br/>
and the result of their recent labours now stood displayed<br/>
in a row of goodly casks of beer--the only<br/>
beverage with which the dwellers in these far-off regions<br/>
were wont to regale themselves.<br/>
<br/>
The whole scene, as the cooks moved actively about<br/>
upon the lawn, and children romped round the fires,<br/>
and settlers came flocking through the forests, might<br/>
have recalled the revelry of merry England in the olden<br/>
time, though the costumes of the far west were perhaps<br/>
somewhat different from those of old England.<br/>
<br/>
No one of all the band assembled there on that day<br/>
of rejoicing required to ask what it was all about. Had<br/>
any one been in doubt for a moment, a glance at the<br/>
centre of the crowd assembled round the gate of the<br/>
western fortress would have quickly enlightened him.<br/>
For there stood Dick Varley, and his mild-looking mother,<br/>
and his loving dog Crusoe. There, too, stood Joe Blunt,<br/>
like a bronzed warrior returned from the fight, turning<br/>
from one to another as question poured in upon question<br/>
almost too rapidly to permit of a reply. There, too,<br/>
stood Henri, making enthusiastic speeches to whoever<br/>
chose to listen to him--now glaring at the crowd with<br/>
clenched fists and growling voice, as he told of how Joe<br/>
and he had been tied hand and foot, and lashed to poles,<br/>
and buried in leaves, and threatened with a slow death<br/>
by torture; at other times bursting into a hilarious laugh<br/>
as he held forth on the predicament of Mahtawa, when<br/>
that wily chief was treed by Crusoe in the prairie.<br/>
Young Marston was there, too, hanging about Dick,<br/>
whom he loved as a brother and regarded as a perfect<br/>
hero. Grumps, too, was there, and Fan. Do you<br/>
think, reader, that Grumps looked at any one but<br/>
Crusoe? If you do, you are mistaken. Grumps on<br/>
that day became a regular, an incorrigible, utter, and<br/>
perfect nuisance to everybody--not excepting himself,<br/>
poor beast! Grumps was a dog of one idea, and that<br/>
idea was Crusoe. Out of that great idea there grew one<br/>
little secondary idea, and that idea was that the only<br/>
joy on earth worth mentioning was to sit on his haunches,<br/>
exactly six inches from Crusoe's nose, and gaze steadfastly<br/>
into his face. Wherever Crusoe went Grumps went.<br/>
If Crusoe stopped, Grumps was down before him in an<br/>
instant. If Crusoe bounded away, which in the exuberance<br/>
of his spirits he often did, Grumps was after him<br/>
like a bundle of mad hair. He was in everybody's<br/>
way, in Crusoe's way, and being, so to speak, "beside<br/>
himself," was also in his own way. If people trod upon<br/>
him accidentally, which they often did, Grumps uttered<br/>
a solitary heart-rending yell proportioned in intensity<br/>
to the excruciating nature of the torture he endured,<br/>
then instantly resumed his position and his fascinated<br/>
stare. Crusoe generally held his head up, and gazed<br/>
over his little friend at what was going on around him;<br/>
but if for a moment he permitted his eye to rest on the<br/>
countenance of Grumps, that creature's tail became<br/>
suddenly imbued with an amount of wriggling vitality<br/>
that seemed to threaten its separation from the body.<br/>
<br/>
It was really quite interesting to watch this unblushing,<br/>
and disinterested, and utterly reckless display of<br/>
affection on the part of Grumps, and the amiable way<br/>
in which Crusoe put up with it. We say put up with<br/>
it advisedly, because it must have been a very great<br/>
inconvenience to him, seeing that if he attempted to<br/>
move, his satellite moved in front of him, so that his<br/>
only way of escaping temporarily was by jumping over<br/>
Grumps's head.<br/>
<br/>
Grumps was everywhere all day. Nobody, almost,<br/>
escaped trampling on part of him. He tumbled over<br/>
everything, into everything, and against everything.<br/>
He knocked himself, singed himself, and scalded himself,<br/>
and in fact forgot himself altogether; and when,<br/>
late that night, Crusoe went with Dick into his mother's<br/>
cottage, and the door was shut, Grumps stretched his<br/>
ruffled, battered, ill-used, and dishevelled little body<br/>
down on the door-step, thrust his nose against the<br/>
opening below the door, and lay in humble contentment<br/>
all night, for he knew that Crusoe was there.<br/>
<br/>
Of course such an occasion could not pass without<br/>
a shooting-match. Rifles were brought out after the<br/>
feast was over, just before the sun went down into its<br/>
bed on the western prairies, and "the nail" was soon<br/>
surrounded by bullets, tipped by Joe Blunt and Jim<br/>
Scraggs, and of course driven home by Dick Varley,<br/>
whose "silver rifle" had now become in its owner's hand<br/>
a never-failing weapon. Races, too, were started, and<br/>
here again Dick stood pre-eminent; and when night<br/>
spread her dark mantle over the scene, the two best<br/>
fiddlers in the settlement were placed on empty beer-casks,<br/>
and some danced by the light of the monster fires,<br/>
while others listened to Joe Blunt as he recounted their<br/>
adventures on the prairies and among the Rocky Mountains.<br/>
<br/>
There were sweethearts, and wives, and lovers at the<br/>
feast, but we question if any heart there was so full of<br/>
love, and admiration, and gratitude, as that of the<br/>
Widow Varley as she watched her son Dick throughout<br/>
that merry evening.<br/>
<br/>
* * * * *<br/>
<br/>
Years rolled by, and the Mustang Valley prospered.<br/>
Missionaries went there, and a little church was built,<br/>
and to the blessings of a fertile land were added the<br/>
far greater blessings of Christian light and knowledge.<br/>
One sad blow fell on the Widow Varley's heart. Her<br/>
only brother, Daniel Hood, was murdered by the Indians.<br/>
Deeply and long she mourned, and it required all Dick's<br/>
efforts and those of the pastor of the settlement to<br/>
comfort her. But from the first the widow's heart was<br/>
sustained by the loving Hand that dealt the blow, and<br/>
when time blunted the keen edge of her feelings her<br/>
face became as sweet and mild, though not so lightsome,<br/>
as before.<br/>
<br/>
Joe Blunt and Henri became leading men in the<br/>
councils of the Mustang Valley; but Dick Varley preferred<br/>
the woods, although, as long as his mother lived,<br/>
he hovered round her cottage--going off sometimes for<br/>
a day, sometimes for a week, but never longer. After<br/>
her head was laid in the dust, Dick took altogether to<br/>
the woods, with Crusoe and Charlie, the wild horse, as<br/>
his only companions, and his mother's Bible in the<br/>
breast of his hunting-shirt. And soon Dick, the bold<br/>
hunter, and his dog Crusoe became renowned in the<br/>
frontier settlements from the banks of the Yellowstone<br/>
River to the Gulf of Mexico.<br/>
<br/>
Many a grizzly bear did the famous "silver rifle" lay<br/>
low, and many a wild, exciting chase and adventure did<br/>
Dick go through; but during his occasional visits to the<br/>
Mustang Valley he was wont to say to Joe Blunt and<br/>
Henri--with whom he always sojourned--that "nothin'<br/>
he ever felt or saw came up to his <i>first</i> grand dash over<br/>
the western prairies into the heart of the Rocky Mountains."<br/>
And in saying this, with enthusiasm in his eye<br/>
and voice, Dick invariably appealed to, and received a<br/>
ready affirmative glance from, his early companion and<br/>
his faithful loving friend, the dog Crusoe.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
THE END.
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