<h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
<h3>"JUST TURNED AROUND, AND WENT AWAY!"</h3>
<p>It was certainly a time for quick thinking, and
speedy action, if the boys expected to avoid a
tragedy. Naturally enough, Kracker and his one
remaining companion, hearing the cries of the fallen
Waffles, would think that they were being actually
set upon by their enemies, and that no matter what
followed, they must fight.</p>
<p>It was to offset this that Thad first of all turned
his attention. A collision must be averted at all
hazards. It would be a terrible thing if the scouts
became embroiled in a fight with such men, and
either received wounds, or were compelled to give
them.</p>
<p>And so Thad, acting instantly on impulse, darted
forward the very second he saw what was happening.
Fortunately for all parties, the big man having
been so dazed by his late baiting did not seem able
to grasp the situation quickly enough to draw a
weapon before Thad was upon him.</p>
<p>The only thing the boy did was to snatch the big
six-shooter from the hand of Kracker, now trembling
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Page 114]</SPAN></span>
with various emotions, in which fear may
have had as much space as anger.</p>
<p>"Surround the other, and don't let him raise a
hand, boys!" shouted the scoutmaster to those who
had followed close at his heels when he thus rushed
forward.</p>
<p>With the words he turned to where Waffles was
still sprawling on the ground; but there was now
more reason than ever why the fellow could not
get up, because some one was sitting astride his
body, and threatening him with a knife. Of course
it was the Fox; and he seemed to have a storm of
passion in his dark face.</p>
<p>But while Thad had been prompt to knock the
revolver from the hand of Kracker, he was just as
quick to leap alongside the young Crow boy, and
grasp his wrist.</p>
<p>"Give me that knife, Fox!" he said sternly.</p>
<p>The Indian looked up in his face; for a moment
it seemed as though he might be about to mutiny,
and positively refuse the order; then his whim
changed, and opening his fingers he allowed the
shining blade to fall to the ground.</p>
<p>"Ugh! hunt him long time; now find, make give
up what snake in the grass steal away from teepee
in reservation!" he grunted, disconsolately.</p>
<p>"Oh! well, if he's got anything that belongs to
you, or your people, why you've my full permission
to search him, and get it back," Thad went on to
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Page 115]</SPAN></span>
say, quickly; "only we want no violence here, if
we can help it. We scouts generally manage to
reach our ends without that, you know, Fox. Go
ahead and see. We'll keep his friends quiet meanwhile,
eh, boys?"</p>
<p>"That's what we will, Thad," said Giraffe, who
was standing close by, with his gun poking almost
into the ribs of the big man with the purple face.
"We c'n do it to beat the band, I tell you. And
here comes Allan in, to have a hand in the game.
Didn't he keep a bead on the colonel here all the
while; and if you hadn't jumped in, and snatched
that gun away from him, I warrant Allan was just
on the point of making him a one-armed man for
a while."</p>
<p>But Thad was not paying much attention to what
the talkative Giraffe said, his attention being taken
up with other matters. The Fox had heard him
give permission to search the pockets of the short
rascal he was holding down, after having caught
him in the loop of Bumpus' rope, taken slily from
the limb of the tree where the fat scout carefully
kept it while in camp. The light that flashed
athwart the mahogany colored face of the young
Crow told how pleased he was with this chance that
was offered.</p>
<p>He immediately started to rummage through the
various pockets of Waffles. Quite naturally the
lesser bully objected to such liberties being taken
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Page 116]</SPAN></span>
with his person; and it must have galled him more
than a little to realize that it was an <i>Indian</i>, and a
boy at that, who was subjecting him to such
indignities; for like most men along the border,
Waffles undoubtedly held Indians in contempt.</p>
<p>But when he raised his voice in stormy protest
Thad told him to hush up; besides, the Fox leaned
over and glared in his eyes with such a suggestive
look that Waffles, being a coward at heart, gradually
subsided, his protests taking the safer form of
groans, and grunts, and wriggles, all of which were
alike unavailing.</p>
<p>Presently the Crow uttered a cry of joy.</p>
<p>"Found what you were looking for?" asked
Thad.</p>
<p>"Ugh! it is well!" and as he said this the Fox
held something up.</p>
<p>Thad may have thought that the Indian boy was
making a mountain out of a mole-hill, for if it had
been left to him, he did not know that he would
have willingly paid more than a dollar, at the most,
for the object the Fox now gripped with such evident
delight. But then, at the same time Thad
realized that associations often have a great deal to
do with the value of things. That peculiar strip of
deerskin, decorated with colored beads that formed
all sorts of designs, must have come down from
some of the Fox's ancestors. Perhaps it was a
species of wampum similar to that in use as currency
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Page 117]</SPAN></span>
during the earlier days, when men like Daniel Boone
were trying to settle along the Ohio River. And
then again, it might be that the fore-fathers of the
Fox always wore this strip of beaded leather when
they were invested with the office of chief to the
tribe.</p>
<p>At any rate, Waffles had apparently known of its
value, and had stolen it, possibly hoping at some
time to receive a rich reward for its safe return;
for surely he could not have fancied it because he
had any love for beauty, or meant to start a collection
of Indian relics.</p>
<p>"Are you satisfied, Fox, now that you've recovered
your property—if that is all he took from
your home?" Thad asked.</p>
<p>"Huh! much like mark thief on him cheek, so
know where belong!" grunted the Crow boy, longingly.</p>
<p>"Don't you let him!" almost shrieked the
wretched Waffles, doubtless fearing that he was
going to be tortured, as a penalty for his shortcomings.
"Them Injuns jest like to mark a man
all up, when they gits the chanct. Tell him to git
off'n me! I ain't a goin' to stand fur it! If he so
much as puts the p'int of his knife on me I'll vow
to——"</p>
<p>"Keep still, you cowardly thief!" said Thad,
sternly; and even Waffles seemed influenced by the
hidden power in the scoutmaster's tone, for he broke
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Page 118]</SPAN></span>
off in the middle of a sentence, and finished it by
mumbling to himself.</p>
<p>Speaking to the Indian boy Thad went on:</p>
<p>"Run your hand over him again, and hand me
any weapon you find. He's in a state where he
might lose his head, and get us all into a fight, if we
let him go armed."</p>
<p>Willingly the Crow boy did as he was told. The
search revealed a big revolver that was apparently
the mate of the one Thad had knocked from the
hand of Kracker.</p>
<p>"Now get that other fellow's rifle, Allan," continued
the patrol leader, who had mapped out his
plan of campaign quickly.</p>
<p>He did not trust these men further than he could
see them. They were quite unscrupulous; and
after having been held up to scorn by this parcel of
boys, there was every reason in the world to believe
that they would plan a hasty revenge. And
the fewer deadly weapons they had in their possession
the better the chances would be for peace in
that mountain valley.</p>
<p>The rifle in particular Thad wanted to hold back.
With it, damage might be done at a much greater
distance than with the smaller arms. And knowing
that the boys had long distance modern rifles, possibly
Kracker and his followers might keep out of
range.</p>
<p>Besides, there was that business of Aleck's concerning
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Page 119]</SPAN></span>
the hidden mine; they had promised to stand
back of him until he had secured full possession;
and that was apt to keep them in the neighborhood
for some time, always subjected to annoyance from
these anxious ones, who longed to secure the prize
that had tantalized their species for so long.</p>
<p>So the rifle, and what ammunition Dickey Bird
happened to be carrying in a belt slung over his
shoulder, fell into the hands of the boys. They
also retained possession of one of the heavy revolvers;
not that any one fancied the clumsy weapon
in the least; but as Thad said, "to cut the wings of
the party as much as possible."</p>
<p>"Let Waffles get up, now, Fox," said Thad,
when all these matters had been adjusted, much to
the admiration of the other scouts, who thought
their leader must be just "IT" when it came to
doing things.</p>
<p>The shorter rascal was not slow to gain his feet.
He was still boiling over with a sense of insult
added to injury, and ready to vent his wrath in
offensive words; but Thad cut all this short.</p>
<p>"Listen to me, Waffles," he said, sternly again;
"We don't care to hear your opinion of anything.
Take a lesson from the colonel here, who knows
when silence is golden. You don't hear him swearing
around, and threatening to break a blood-vessel
in his mad feeling. He's taking it all as cool as a
cucumber. He knows when it's a time to laugh,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Page 120]</SPAN></span>
and when it's a time to cry. Now, the sooner you
gentlemen give us your room, the better we'll be
pleased; and be sure to make it plenty of room, too;
because we're all going to be ready to take snapshots
at any of you we see, after half an hour has
gone by."</p>
<p>Kracker moved his lips, but strange to say not a
sound proceeded from them. The man was so completely
overpowered by his emotions that for the
time being he had actually lost all power of speech.
For this Thad was pleased, because he believed that
had the big prospector been able to say one half
that was bubbling through his mind, they must have
been treated to an awful exhibition of hard words.</p>
<p>So the three men turned their backs on their tormentors,
and walked away; but it was certainly true
that their retreat did not smack in the least of the
jaunty and threatening manner of their late advance.
They had, as Giraffe crowed jubilantly,
"the wind taken from their sails, and just turned
around, and went away."</p>
<p>"Wonder if we'll see anything more of 'em
again?" remarked Bumpus, who had really carried
himself quite handsomely through it all; though
most of the time his eyes had seemed to be fairly
bulging from his head, and he could be heard saying
words over and over to himself to indicate surprise.</p>
<p>"I hope not," remarked Thad; "but it wouldn't
surprise me if they bobbed up again later on. You
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Page 121]</SPAN></span>
see, it's perhaps the biggest stake Kracker ever
played for; and for years now this hidden mine has
kept dancing before him, beckoning him on. He
won't give it up easily, I'm afraid. There, look at
him turn, and shake his fat fist at us! That shows
how he feels about it. He'd just like to have us
tied up right now, so he could lay on the whip, good
and hard. But boys, after this, it's for us to keep
a good lookout all the time. Such fellows as
Kracker and the others wouldn't hesitate at anything,
if only they saw a chance to win out."</p>
<p>And at his words Giraffe and his mates nodded
their heads; but there was no loud demonstration;
for somehow they seemed to realize the gravity of
the game they were now playing, with the long lost
mine as the stake.</p>
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