<h2><SPAN name="chap05"></SPAN>CHAPTER V</h2>
<p class="poem">
Why, worthy father, what have we to lose?<br/>
—The law<br/>
Protects us not. Then why should we be tender<br/>
To let an arrogant piece of flesh threat us!<br/>
Play judge and executioner.<br/>
—Cymbeline.</p>
<p>While the Teton thus enacted his subtle and characteristic part, not a sound
broke the stillness of the surrounding prairie. The whole band lay at their
several posts, waiting, with the well-known patience of the natives, for the
signal which was to summon them to action. To the eyes of the anxious
spectators who occupied the little eminence, already described as the position
of the captives, the scene presented the broad, solemn view of a waste, dimly
lighted by the glimmering rays of a clouded moon. The place of the encampment
was marked by a gloom deeper than that which faintly shadowed out the courses
of the bottoms, and here and there a brighter streak tinged the rolling summits
of the ridges. As for the rest, it was the deep, imposing quiet of a desert.</p>
<p>But to those who so well knew how much was brooding beneath this mantle of
stillness and night, it was a scene of high and wild excitement. Their anxiety
gradually increased, as minute after minute passed away, and not the smallest
sound of life arose out of the calm and darkness which enveloped the brake. The
breathing of Paul grew louder and deeper, and more than once Ellen trembled at
she knew not what, as she felt the quivering of his active frame, while she
leaned dependently on his arm for support.</p>
<p>The shallow honesty, as well as the besetting infirmity of Weucha, have already
been exhibited. The reader, therefore, will not be surprised to learn that he
was the first to forget the regulations he had himself imposed. It was at the
precise moment when we left Mahtoree yielding to his nearly ungovernable
delight, as he surveyed the number and quality of Ishmael’s beasts of
burden, that the man he had selected to watch his captives chose to indulge in
the malignant pleasure of tormenting those it was his duty to protect. Bending
his head nigh the ear of the trapper, the savage rather muttered than
whispered—</p>
<p>“If the Tetons lose their great chief by the hands of the Long-knives<SPAN href="#linknote-9" name="linknoteref-9" id="linknoteref-9"><sup>[9]</sup></SPAN>,
old shall die as well as young!”</p>
<p>“Life is the gift of the Wahcondah,” was the unmoved reply.
“The burnt-wood warrior must submit to his laws, as well as his other
children. Men only die when he chooses; and no Dahcotah can change the
hour.”</p>
<p>“Look!” returned the savage, thrusting the blade of his knife
before the face of his captive. “Weucha is the Wahcondah of a dog.”</p>
<p>The old man raised his eyes to the fierce visage of his keeper, and, for a
moment, a gleam of honest and powerful disgust shot from their deep cells; but
it instantly passed away, leaving in its place an expression of commiseration,
if not of sorrow.</p>
<p>“Why should one made in the real image of God suffer his natur’ to
be provoked by a mere effigy of reason?” he said in English, and in tones
much louder than those in which Weucha had chosen to pitch the conversation.
The latter profited by the unintentional offence of his captive, and, seizing
him by the thin, grey locks, that fell from beneath his cap, was on the point
of passing the blade of his knife in malignant triumph around their roots, when
a long, shrill yell rent the air, and was instantly echoed from the surrounding
waste, as if a thousand demons opened their throats in common at the summons.
Weucha relinquished his grasp, and uttered a cry of exultation.</p>
<p>“Now!” shouted Paul, unable to control his impatience any longer,
“now, old Ishmael, is the time to show the native blood of Kentucky! Fire
low, boys—level into the swales, for the red skins are settling to the
very earth!”</p>
<p>His voice was, however, lost, or rather unheeded, in the midst of the shrieks,
shouts, and yells that were, by this time, bursting from fifty mouths on every
side of him. The guards still maintained their posts at the side of the
captives, but it was with that sort of difficulty with which steeds are
restrained at the starting-post, when expecting the signal to commence the
trial of speed. They tossed their arms wildly in the air, leaping up and down
more like exulting children than sober men, and continued to utter the most
frantic cries.</p>
<p>In the midst of this tumultuous disorder a rushing sound was heard, similar to
that which might be expected to precede the passage of a flight of buffaloes,
and then came the flocks and cattle of Ishmael in one confused and frightened
drove.</p>
<p>“They have robbed the squatter of his beasts!” said the attentive
trapper. “The reptiles have left him as hoofless as a beaver!” He
was yet speaking, when the whole body of the terrified animals rose the little
acclivity, and swept by the place where he stood, followed by a band of dusky
and demon-like looking figures, who pressed madly on their rear.</p>
<p>The impulse was communicated to the Teton horses, long accustomed to sympathise
in the untutored passions of their owners, and it was with difficulty that the
keepers were enabled to restrain their impatience. At this moment, when all
eyes were directed to the passing whirlwind of men and beasts, the trapper
caught the knife from the hands of his inattentive keeper, with a power that
his age would have seemed to contradict, and, at a single blow, severed the
thong of hide which connected the whole of the drove. The wild animals snorted
with joy and terror, and tearing the earth with their heels, they dashed away
into the broad prairies, in a dozen different directions.</p>
<p>Weucha turned upon his assailant with the ferocity and agility of a tiger. He
felt for the weapon of which he had been so suddenly deprived, fumbled with
impotent haste for the handle of his tomahawk, and at the same moment glanced
his eyes after the flying cattle, with the longings of a Western Indian. The
struggle between thirst for vengeance and cupidity was severe but short. The
latter quickly predominated in the bosom of one whose passions were
proverbially grovelling; and scarcely a moment intervened between the flight of
the animals and the swift pursuit of the guards. The trapper had continued
calmly facing his foe, during the instant of suspense that succeeded his hardy
act; and now that Weucha was seen following his companions, he pointed after
the dark train, saying, with his deep and nearly inaudible laugh—</p>
<p>“Red-natur’ is red-natur’, let it show itself on a prairie,
or in a forest! A knock on the head would be the smallest reward to him who
should take such a liberty with a Christian sentinel; but there goes the Teton
after his horses as if he thought two legs as good as four in such a race! And
yet the imps will have every hoof of them afore the day sets in, because
it’s reason ag’in instinct. Poor reason, I allow; but still there
is a great deal of the man in an Indian. Ah’s me! your Delawares were the
redskins of which America might boast; but few and scattered is that mighty
people, now! Well! the traveller may just make his pitch where he is; he has
plenty of water, though natur’ has cheated him of the pleasure of
stripping the ’arth of its lawful trees. He has seen the last of his
four-footed creatures, or I am but little skilled in Sioux cunning.”</p>
<p>“Had we not better join the party of Ishmael?” said the bee-hunter.
“There will be a regular fight about this matter, or the old fellow has
suddenly grown chicken-hearted.”</p>
<p>“No—no—no,” hastily exclaimed Ellen.</p>
<p>She was stopped by the trapper, who laid his hand gently on her mouth, as he
answered—</p>
<p>“Hist—hist!—the sound of voices might bring us into danger.
Is your friend,” he added, turning to Paul, “a man of spirit
enough?”</p>
<p>“Don’t call the squatter a friend of mine!” interrupted the
youth. “I never yet harboured with one who could not show hand and zeal
for the land which fed him.”</p>
<p>“Well—well. Let it then be acquaintance. Is he a man to maintain
his own, stoutly by dint of powder and lead?”</p>
<p>“His own! ay, and that which is not his own, too! Can you tell me, old
trapper, who held the rifle that did the deed for the sheriff’s deputy,
that thought to rout the unlawful settlers who had gathered nigh the Buffaloe
lick in old Kentucky? I had lined a beautiful swarm that very day into the
hollow of a dead beech, and there lay the people’s officer at its roots,
with a hole directly through the ‘grace of God;’ which he carried
in his jacket pocket covering his heart, as if he thought a bit of sheepskin
was a breastplate against a squatter’s bullet! Now, Ellen, you
needn’t be troubled for it never strictly was brought home to him; and
there were fifty others who had pitched in that neighbourhood with just the
same authority from the law.”</p>
<p>The poor girl shuddered, struggling powerfully to suppress the sigh which arose
in spite of her efforts, as if from the very bottom of her heart.</p>
<p>Thoroughly satisfied that he understood the character of the emigrants, by the
short but comprehensive description conveyed in Paul’s reply, the old man
raised no further question concerning the readiness of Ishmael to revenge his
wrongs, but rather followed the train of thought which was suggested to his
experience, by the occasion.</p>
<p>“Each one knows the ties which bind him to his fellow-creatures
best,” he answered. “Though it is greatly to be mourned that
colour, and property, and tongue, and l’arning should make so wide a
difference in those who, after all, are but the children of one father!
Howsomever,” he continued, by a transition not a little characteristic of
the pursuits and feelings of the man, “as this is a business in which
there is much more likelihood of a fight than need for a sermon, it is best to
be prepared for what may follow.—Hush! there is a movement below; it is
an equal chance that we are seen.”</p>
<p>“The family is stirring,” cried Ellen, with a tremor that announced
nearly as much terror at the approach of her friends, as she had before
manifested at the presence of her enemies. “Go, Paul, leave me. You, at
least, must not be seen!”</p>
<p>“If I leave you, Ellen, in this desert before I see you safe in the care
of old Ishmael, at least, may I never hear the hum of another bee, or, what is
worse, fail in sight to line him to his hive!”</p>
<p>“You forget this good old man. He will not leave me. Though I am sure,
Paul, we have parted before, where there has been more of a desert than
this.”</p>
<p>“Never! These Indians may come whooping back, and then where are you!
Half way to the Rocky Mountains before a man can fairly strike the line of your
flight. What think you, old trapper? How long may it be before these Tetons, as
you call them, will be coming for the rest of old Ishmael’s goods and
chattels?”</p>
<p>“No fear of them,” returned the old man, laughing in his own
peculiar and silent manner; “I warrant me the devils will be scampering
after their beasts these six hours yet! Listen! you may hear them in the willow
bottoms at this very moment; ay, your real Sioux cattle will run like so many
long-legged elks. Hist! crouch again into the grass, down with ye both; as
I’m a miserable piece of clay, I heard the ticking of a gunlock!”</p>
<p>The trapper did not allow his companions time to hesitate, but dragging them
both after him, he nearly buried his own person in the fog of the prairie,
while he was speaking. It was fortunate that the senses of the aged hunter
remained so acute, and that he had lost none of his readiness of action. The
three were scarcely bowed to the ground, when their ears were saluted with the
well-known, sharp, short, reports of the western rifle, and instantly, the
whizzing of the ragged lead was heard, buzzing within dangerous proximity of
their heads.</p>
<p>“Well done, young chips! well done, old block!” whispered Paul,
whose spirits no danger nor situation could entirely depress. “As pretty
a volley, as one would wish to bear on the wrong end of a rifle! What
d’ye say, trapper! here is likely to be a three-cornered war. Shall I
give ’em as good as they send?”</p>
<p>“Give them nothing but fair words,” returned the other, hastily,
“or you are both lost.”</p>
<p>“I’m not certain it would much mend the matter, if I were to speak
with my tongue instead of the piece,” said Paul, in a tone half jocular
half bitter.</p>
<p>“For the sake of heaven, do not let them hear you!” cried Ellen.
“Go, Paul, go; you can easily quit us now!”</p>
<p>Several shots in quick succession, each sending its dangerous messenger, still
nearer than the preceding discharge, cut short her speech, no less in prudence
than in terror.</p>
<p>“This must end,” said the trapper, rising with the dignity of one
bent only on the importance of his object. “I know not what need ye may
have, children, to fear those you should both love and honour, but something
must be done to save your lives. A few hours more or less can never be missed
from the time of one who has already numbered so many days; therefore I will
advance. Here is a clear space around you. Profit by it as you need, and may
God bless and prosper each of you, as ye deserve!”</p>
<p>Without waiting for any reply, the trapper walked boldly down the declivity in
his front, taking the direction of the encampment, neither quickening his pace
in trepidation, nor suffering it to be retarded by fear. The light of the moon
fell brighter for a moment on his tall, gaunt, form, and served to warn the
emigrants of his approach. Indifferent, however to this unfavourable
circumstance, he held his way, silently and steadily towards the copse, until a
threatening voice met him with a challenge of—</p>
<p>“Who comes; friend or foe?”</p>
<p>“Friend,” was the reply; “one who has lived too long to
disturb the close of life with quarrels.”</p>
<p>“But not so long as to forget the tricks of his youth,” said
Ishmael, rearing his huge frame from beneath the slight covering of a low bush,
and meeting the trapper, face to face; “old man, you have brought this
tribe of red devils upon us, and to-morrow you will be sharing the
booty.”</p>
<p>“What have you lost?” calmly demanded the trapper.</p>
<p>“Eight as good mares as ever travelled in gears, besides a foal that is
worth thirty of the brightest Mexicans that bear the face of the King of Spain.
Then the woman has not a cloven hoof for her dairy, or her loom, and I believe
even the grunters, foot sore as they be, are ploughing the prairie. And now,
stranger,” he added, dropping the butt of his rifle on the hard earth,
with a violence and clatter that would have intimidated one less firm than the
man he addressed, “how many of these creatures may fall to your
lot?”</p>
<p>“Horses have I never craved, nor even used; though few have journeyed
over more of the wide lands of America than myself, old and feeble as I seem.
But little use is there for a horse among the hills and woods of
York—that is, as York was, but as I greatly fear York is no
longer—as for woollen covering and cow’s milk, I covet no such
womanly fashions! The beasts of the field give me food and raiment. No, I crave
no cloth better than the skin of a deer, nor any meat richer than his
flesh.”</p>
<p>The sincere manner of the trapper, as he uttered this simple vindication, was
not entirely thrown away on the emigrant, whose dull nature was gradually
quickening into a flame, that might speedily have burst forth with dangerous
violence. He listened like one who doubted, not entirely convinced: and he
muttered between his teeth the denunciation, with which a moment before he
intended to precede the summary vengeance he had certainly meditated.</p>
<p>“This is brave talking,” he at length grumbled; “but to my
judgment, too lawyer-like, for a straight forward, fair-weather, and
foul-weather hunter.”</p>
<p>“I claim to be no better than a trapper,” the other meekly
answered.</p>
<p>“Hunter or trapper—there is little difference. I have come, old
man, into these districts because I found the law sitting too tight upon me,
and am not over fond of neighbours who can’t settle a dispute without
troubling a justice and twelve men; but I didn’t come to be robb’d
of my plunder, and then to say thank’ee to the man who did it!”</p>
<p>“He, who ventures far into the prairies, must abide by the ways of its
owners.”</p>
<p>“Owners!” echoed the squatter, “I am as rightful an owner of
the land I stand on, as any governor in the States! Can you tell me, stranger,
where the law or the reason, is to be found, which says that one man shall have
a section, or a town, or perhaps a county to his use, and another have to beg
for earth to make his grave in? This is not nature, and I deny that it is law.
That is, your legal law.”</p>
<p>“I cannot say that you are wrong,” returned the trapper, whose
opinions on this important topic, though drawn from very different premises,
were in singular accordance with those of his companion, “and I have
often thought and said as much, when and where I have believed my voice could
be heard. But your beasts are stolen by them who claim to be masters of all
they find in the deserts.”</p>
<p>“They had better not dispute that matter with a man who knows
better,” said the other in a portentous voice, though it seemed deep and
sluggish as he who spoke.</p>
<p>“I call myself a fair trader, and one who gives to his chaps as good as
he receives. You saw the Indians?”</p>
<p>“I did—they held me a prisoner, while they stole into your
camp.”</p>
<p>“It would have been more like a white man and a Christian, to have let me
known as much in better season,” retorted Ishmael, casting another
ominous sidelong glance at the trapper, as if still meditating evil. “I
am not much given to call every man, I fall in with, cousin, but colour should
be something, when Christians meet in such a place as this. But what is done,
is done, and cannot be mended, by words. Come out of your ambush, boys; here is
no one but the old man: he has eaten of my bread, and should be our friend;
though there is such good reason to suspect him of harbouring with our
enemies.”</p>
<p>The trapper made no reply to the harsh suspicion which the other did not
scruple to utter without the smallest delicacy, notwithstanding the
explanations and denials to which he had just listened. The summons of the
unnurtured squatter brought an immediate accession to their party. Four or five
of his sons made their appearance from beneath as many covers, where they had
been posted under the impression that the figures they had seen, on the swell
of the prairie, were a part of the Sioux band. As each man approached, and
dropped his rifle into the hollow of his arm, he cast an indolent but enquiring
glance at the stranger, though neither of them expressed the least curiosity to
know whence he had come or why he was there. This forbearance, however,
proceeded only in part, from the sluggishness of their common temper; for long
and frequent experience in scenes of a similar character, had taught them the
virtue of discretion. The trapper endured their sullen scrutiny with the
steadiness of one as practised as themselves, and with the entire composure of
innocence. Content with the momentary examination he had made, the eldest of
the group, who was in truth the delinquent sentinel by whose remissness the
wily Mahtoree had so well profited, turned towards his father and said
bluntly—</p>
<p>“If this man is all that is left of the party I saw on the upland,
yonder, we haven’t altogether thrown away our ammunition.”</p>
<p>“Asa, you are right,” said the father, turning suddenly on the
trapper, a lost idea being recalled by the hint of his son. “How is it,
stranger; there were three of you, just now, or there is no virtue in
moonlight?”</p>
<p>“If you had seen the Tetons racing across the prairies, like so many
black-looking evil ones, on the heels of your cattle, my friend, it would have
been an easy matter to have fancied them a thousand.”</p>
<p>“Ay, for a town bred boy, or a skeary woman; though for that matter,
there is old Esther; she has no more fear of a red-skin than of a suckling cub,
or of a wolf pup. I’ll warrant ye, had your thievish devils made their
push by the light of the sun, the good woman would have been smartly at work
among them, and the Siouxes would have found she was not given to part with her
cheese and her butter without a price. But there’ll come a time,
stranger, right soon, when justice will have its dues, and that too, without
the help of what is called the law. We ar’ of a slow breed, it may be
said, and it is often said, of us; but slow is sure; and there ar’ few
men living, who can say they ever struck a blow, that they did not get one as
hard in return, from Ishmael Bush.”</p>
<p>“Then has Ishmael Bush followed the instinct of the beasts rather than
the principle which ought to belong to his kind,” returned the stubborn
trapper. “I have struck many a blow myself, but never have I felt the
same ease of mind that of right belongs to a man who follows his reason, after
slaying even a fawn when there was no call for his meat or hide, as I have felt
at leaving a Mingo unburied in the woods, when following the trade of open and
honest warfare.”</p>
<p>“What, you have been a soldier, have you, trapper! I made a forage or two
among the Cherokees, when I was a lad myself; and I followed Mad Anthony,<SPAN href="#linknote-10" name="linknoteref-10" id="linknoteref-10"><sup>[10]</sup></SPAN> one season, through the beeches; but
there was altogether too much tatooing and regulating among his troops for me;
so I left him without calling on the paymaster to settle my arrearages. Though,
as Esther afterwards boasted, she had made such use of the pay-ticket, that the
States gained no great sum, by the oversight. You have heard of such a man as
mad Anthony, if you tarried long among the soldiers.”</p>
<p>“I fou’t my last battle, as I hope, under his orders,”
returned the trapper, a gleam of sunshine shooting from his dim eyes, as if the
event was recollected with pleasure, and then a sudden shade of sorrow
succeeding, as though he felt a secret admonition against dwelling on the
violent scenes in which he had so often been an actor. “I was passing
from the States on the sea-shore into these far regions, when I cross’d
the trail of his army, and I fell in, on his rear, just as a looker-on; but
when they got to blows, the crack of my rifle was heard among the rest, though
to my shame it may be said, I never knew the right of the quarrel as well as a
man of threescore and ten should know the reason of his acts afore he takes
mortal life, which is a gift he never can return!”</p>
<p>“Come, stranger,” said the emigrant, his rugged nature a good deal
softened when he found that they had fought on the same side in the wild
warfare of the west, “it is of small account, what may be the ground-work
of the disturbance, when it’s a Christian ag’in a savage. We shall
hear more of this horse-stealing to-morrow; to-night we can do no wiser or
safer thing than to sleep.”</p>
<p>So saying, Ishmael deliberately led the way back towards his rifled encampment,
and ushered the man, whose life a few minutes before had been in real jeopardy
from his resentment, into the presence of his family. Here, with a very few
words of explanation, mingled with scarce but ominous denunciations against the
plunderers, he made his wife acquainted with the state of things on the
prairie, and announced his own determination to compensate himself for his
broken rest, by devoting the remainder of the night to sleep.</p>
<p>The trapper gave his ready assent to the measure, and adjusted his gaunt form
on the pile of brush that was offered him, with as much composure as a
sovereign could resign himself to sleep, in the security of his capital and
surrounded by his armed protectors. The old man did not close his eyes,
however, until he had assured himself that Ellen Wade was among the females of
the family, and that her relation, or lover, whichever he might be, had
observed the caution of keeping himself out of view: after which he slept,
though with the peculiar watchfulness of one long accustomed to vigilance, even
in the hours of deepest night.</p>
<p class="footnote">
<SPAN name="linknote-9" id="linknote-9"></SPAN> <SPAN href="#linknoteref-9">[9]</SPAN>
The whites are so called by the Indians, from their swords.</p>
<p class="footnote">
<SPAN name="linknote-10" id="linknote-10"></SPAN> <SPAN href="#linknoteref-10">[10]</SPAN>
Anthony Wayne, a Pennsylvanian distinguished in the war of the revolution, and
subsequently against the Indians of the west, for his daring as a general, by
which he gained from his followers the title of Mad Anthony. General Wayne was
the son of the person mentioned in the life of West as commanding the regiment
which excited his military ardour.</p>
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