<h2 id="c7"><span class="small">CHAPTER VII.</span> <br/>OVERBOARD.</h2>
<p>The surprise of the occupants of the log-cabin by the
river was sudden and complete, when at a late hour the
house was surrounded by a motley group headed by a man
who, in spite of his paint and feathers, could not hide from
so acute a scout as Samuel Wescott that he was a white man
in disguise. The rush was so sudden that they had been
overthrown before they had fairly time to reach their weapons,
and the captured men were at once hurried to their
horses, and the band made off at a rapid rate up the stream.
Mr. Wescott was wounded, but in spite of that the savage
white leader urged him on, threatening him with the point of
his knife if he faltered or turned aside. They reached the
river, when, to the surprise of all, a flat-boat shot out from
the western bank and made toward the eastern shore. The
men who held the poles were either white men or showed a
marvelous aptitude for flat-boating, an accomplishment rarely
to be looked for in an Indian who is not in love with manual
labor. The bow of the flat grated on the low beach, when
the party went on board, horses and all, and they pushed out
into the stream.</p>
<p>“This boat belonged to Captain Hughes’ father,” whispered
Sadie. “Is it possible that these wretches have murdered
him and his crew?”</p>
<p>“He ought to have come down some days ago,” said
Mr. Wescott, in an uneasy tone. “I am afraid that the good
old man has indeed fallen. Be careful what you say, for
these scoundrels understand every word you speak.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_50">50</div>
<p>At this moment the chief approached and caught Mr.
Wescott by his wounded arm, causing him to utter a low cry
of pain, while the blood gushed from under his hand.</p>
<p>“No whispering,” he hissed, dropping all at once his assumed
Indian habits. “I’m no baby, Sam Wescott, but a bird
of the woods, a Mississippi roarer, and I can lick the universal
earth a-flying.”</p>
<p>“Dick Garrett!” cried Wescott, in a tone of surprise. “I
thought so.”</p>
<p>“You know me, do ye?” said Dick, with an air of bravado.
“All right, ’square, it’s all the wuss for you, for Dick
Garrett don’t let no man live that knows he wears an Injin
rig. Git ropes hyar and take a couple of hitches on this
chap, some of you fellers.”</p>
<p>“What do you intend to do?” cried Wescott, struggling.
“Hands off, you scoundrels!”</p>
<p>“Tie him tight, boys,” replied Dick Garrett, in fiendish
glee. “Teach the cuss to be so sharp, I will, before I git
done with him. Now, then, Sam Wescott, if you’ve got any
prayers to say, say ’em quick, for overboard you go when we
get to that snag in the river.”</p>
<p>“You cannot mean it,” said Wescott. “Such a cold blooded
and unprovoked murder—”</p>
<p>“Oh, give us a rest or I’ll gag you,” replied Dick Garrett.
“The matter of a man more or less in the world ain’t going
to shake it to its center, you bet, and when I say you’ve got
to go under, then you go.”</p>
<p>“Have your way, then, murderous wretch,” cried the brave
man, drawing himself up proudly. “I will not beg for my
life from such as you, and am ready to die, if my time has
come, as bravely as another. Do your worst.”</p>
<p>Sadie by this time began to comprehend the danger in
which her father stood, and would have come to him, but
she was forced back by one of the rough men who wore the
Indian garb, but who could not conceal a certain flat-boat
swagger which betrayed him.</p>
<p>“He crows loud, boys, don’t he?” said Garrett; “mighty
loud for a bird of his feather that’s only got three minnits
to live. Keep the gal away; she ain’t got leave to
die yet.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_51">51</div>
<p>“Let me go to my father,” pleaded Sadie. “Oh, sir, you
will not kill him for a single hasty word?”</p>
<p>“I rather think I shall,” replied Garrett, as cool and composed
as if talking of any ordinary event. “The man’s got
to go. I don’t advertise to be a saint, and when a man runs
ag’inst me and calls me a murderer, I reckon it’s about time
for him to pass in his chips. I’m a peaceable man—I will
<i>have</i> peace, or a fight.”</p>
<p>This strange man was dreadfully in earnest. Human life
was to him a thing of no price—we might lose it to-day or
to-morrow, of we might live a hundred years—a small matter,
not to be taken into account. He had no objections to
killing a man, and if he had stood in his way, in any manner,
it became a <i>duty</i> to put him aside.</p>
<p>They were approaching the snag, and the desperado was
about to order the prisoner to be thrown into the water,
when the boatmen were suddenly thrust aside, and Minneoba,
holding her bow in her hand, darted forward and leveled an
arrow at his breast.</p>
<p>“Look, white man,” she cried, “Minneoba is the daughter
of Black-Hawk, and she can not lie; if you do harm to the
good white man, I will send an arrow through your heart.”</p>
<p>“Why, you cat!” hissed Dick Garrett, turning upon her
with a devilish look. “Stand out of the way.”</p>
<p>But Minneoba would not obey him. It was the second
time she had found her arrow effective, and it had some influence
upon the man who “would have peace or a fight.”
Although full of mad hate, he knew that she could aim an
arrow well, for he had seen her skill tested in the Indian
towns.</p>
<p>“What in the devil’s name made me bring this cat on
board?” he uttered. “Better far have left her behind to find
her way to the village as best she could. Look you, Minneoba,”
he added aloud. “You know that I would not willingly
do you a wrong, but you must get out of the way.”</p>
<p>“No,” replied Minneoba, stamping her foot. “Minneoba
will not move, and if Garrett does wrong to the good white
man, he shall die.”</p>
<p>“Now, my girl, be careful, please; I’ll have to take measures
you won’t like if you don’t get out of the way.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_52">52</div>
<p>“Minneoba will shoot,” replied the girl, with flashing eyes,
still pointing the arrow at his breast. Garrett nodded to
one of his men, and while the leader expostulated with her
he stole behind and suddenly caught her by the arm in a
firm clasp. With a cry of anger the girl caught the arrow
in her disengaged hand and drove it through the arm of her
captor, who released her with an oath, but before she could
strike again, Garrett had her in his arms.</p>
<p>“Now then, lads!” he cried. “I’ll hold this beauty fast,
and if she struggles I’ll take toll from her lips.”</p>
<p>“Cease to struggle, Minneoba,” said Mr. Wescott. “You
only expose yourself to new indignity without the chance of
aiding me. I am ready to meet my fate, although it is a
hard one, but it grieves me to think that I die by the hands
of white men. Sadie, farewell—farewell, my dear child.
All that I have is yours and your dear mother’s. Thank
God that she at least was absent when this blow fell.”</p>
<p>“I can not see you die,” she sobbed. “Oh, Richard Garrett,
will nothing move you to do right?”</p>
<p>“That depends on what you call <i>right</i>. Now you don’t
think it right to beat a man at the picturs or billiards or to
pick his pocket, or crack a bank. Now I do, so we won’t
seem to agree, no matter how you fix it, so I guess we may as
well end this now. Toss him over, boys.”</p>
<p>“It don’t seem scarcely right,” said the rough young fellow
who was helping Sadie back. “Why not duck him, and
then let him out, boss?”</p>
<p>“Because he knows I wear an Injin disguise. It’s all
very well for you that he don’t know, but I ain’t so easy
suited. Toss him over, I say, and make no words.”</p>
<p>They lifted the bound man and flung him over the rail,
while with a thrilling shriek Sadie fell senseless into the
arms of the man who held her. He laid her gently down,
and made a spring at the taffrail, and his body struck the
water almost as soon as that of Mr. Wescott, who was unable
to help himself.</p>
<p>“Come back here, you born fool,” screamed Dick Garrett.
“What do you think the Cap will say when he hears how
you act?”</p>
<p>“You go to ——,” said the rough but good-hearted
fellow,
<span class="pb" id="Page_53">53</span>
naming a locality not sought after by humanity generally.
“I’m going to save this man.”</p>
<p>“Then by ——” hissed Dick Garrett, “you stay with him;
set in your poles, boys. Tom don’t want to come on
board.”</p>
<p>By this time the man had seized the helpless form of
Wescott, and with his clasp-knife managed to cut the bonds
upon his hands and feet, and Wescott at once began to swim,
but feebly at first, and the fiendish order of the desperate
leader rung in his ears, and they saw the boat moving slowly
away, leaving them alone on the wide river.</p>
<p>“We’re done, stranger,” said the man called Tom. “I
done my best, but he’s run from us.”</p>
<p>“You can swim to the bank,” said Mr. Wescott, noting
with what ease the man sustained himself.</p>
<p>“I reckon.”</p>
<p>“Then do so and leave me to my fate,” replied Wescott.
“You have already risked too much for me.”</p>
<p>“When I quit a man in that way I reckon you’d better
call round with a rope and string me up. It’ll suit me fust
rate. Let the current take ye square; we’ll fetch up somewhere
I reckon, and when we do, and I onc’t git on the trail
of that Dick Garrett, won’t I make him howl!”</p>
<p>Even as he spoke the two men were moving on a course
diagonal with the current, the stronger man giving all the
support he could to his wounded companion. But the shore
seemed far away and Wescott felt that he could not go much
further.</p>
<p>“Save yourself,” he gasped. “My wound has opened
again and I am losing strength.”</p>
<p>“I won’t do it,” replied Tom, through his set teeth.
“Hold up a little; I’ll save you yet.”</p>
<p>“There is no hope,” replied Wescott. “Avenge me if
you can and save my daughter from that villain. You can
do me better service in that way than by staying with me
now.”</p>
<p>At this moment the surge came down heavily and buried
the speaker beneath the water. Tom paddled to and fro,
looking for him in vain, for the water had claimed its prey,
and nerving himself to the task the young man struck out
<span class="pb" id="Page_54">54</span>
resolutely for the shore, which he reached nearly exhausted.
Then he ran along the bank and looked for some sign of
Wescott, but he looked in vain. The surface of the river
was blank.</p>
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