Part 20 (1/2)
Meanwhile the other savage busied himself in examining the saddle-bags of the obstinate horse. He did not appear to think it worth while to tie the hands of Betty! During the short scuffle between his comrade and the boy he had held her fast, because she manifested an intention to run to the rescue. When that was ended he relieved her of the weapons she carried and let her go, satisfied, no doubt that, if she attempted to run away, he could easily overtake her, and if she were to attempt anything else he could restrain her.
When, however, Betty saw that Tolly's antagonist meant no harm, she wisely attempted nothing, but sat down on a fallen tree to await the issue. The savages did not keep her long in suspense. Tolly's foe, having bound him, lifted him on the back of the pony, and then, taking the bridle, quietly led it away. At the same time the other savage a.s.sisted Betty to remount the horse, and, grasping the bridle of that obstinate creature, followed his comrade. The whole thing was so sudden, so violent, and the result so decisive, that the boy looked back at Betty and burst into a half-hysterical fit of laughter, but the girl did not respond.
”It's a serious business, Tolly!” she said.
”So it is, Betty,” he replied.
Then, pursing his little mouth, and gathering his eyebrows into a frown, he gave himself up to meditation, while the Indians conducted them into the dark recesses of the Long Gap.
CHAPTER TWELVE.
Now, the Indians, into whose hands the Rose of Oregon and our little hero had fallen, happened to be part of the tribe to which the three who had discovered Tom Brixton belonged, and although his friends little knew it, Tom himself was not more than a mile or so distant from them at the time, having been carried in the same direction, towards the main camp or headquarters of the tribe in the Sawback Hills.
They had not met on the journey, because the two bands of the tribe were acting independently of each other.
We will leave them at this point and ask the reader to return to another part of the plain over which Tolly and Betty had galloped so furiously.
It is a small hollow, at the bottom of which a piece of marshy ground has encouraged the growth of a few willows. Paul Bevan had selected it as a suitable camping-ground for the night, and while Paddy Flinders busied himself with the kettle and frying-pan, he and Fred Westly went among the bushes to procure firewood.
Fred soon returned with small twigs sufficient to kindle the fire; his companion went on further in search of larger boughs and logs.
While Fred was busily engaged on hands and knees, blowing the fire into a flame, a sharp ”hallo!” from his companion caused him to look up.
”What is it?” he asked.
”Goliath of Gath--or his brother!” said Paddy, pointing to a little eminence behind which the sun had but recently set.
The horseman, who had come to a halt on the eminence and was quietly regarding them, did indeed look as if he might have claimed kins.h.i.+p with the giant of the Philistines, for he and his steed looked stupendous.
No doubt the peculiarity of their position, with the bright sky as a glowing background, had something to do with the gigantic appearance of horse and man, for, as they slowly descended the slope towards the fire, both of them a.s.sumed a more natural size.
The rider was a strange-looking as well as a large man, for he wore a loose shooting-coat, a tall wideawake with a broad brim, blue spectacles with side-pieces to them, and a pair of trousers which appeared to have been made for a smaller man, as, besides being too tight, they were much too short. Over his shoulder was slung a green tin botanical box. He carried no visible weapons save a small hatchet and a bowie-knife, though his capacious pockets might easily have concealed half a dozen revolvers.
”Goot night, my frunds,” said the stranger, in broken English, as he approached.
”The same to yersilf, sor,” returned Flinders.
Anyone who had been closely watching the countenance of the stranger might have observed a sudden gleam of surprise on it when the Irishman spoke, but it pa.s.sed instantly, and was replaced by a pleasant air of good fellows.h.i.+p as he dismounted and led his horse nearer the fire.
”Good night, and welcome to our camp. You are a foreigner, I perceive,”
said Fred Westly in French, but the stranger shook his head.
”I not un'erstan'.”
”Ah! a German, probably,” returned Fred, trying him with the language of the Fatherland; but again the stranger shook his head.
”You mus' spok English. I is a Swedish man; knows noting but a leetil English.”
”I'm sorry that I cannot speak Swedish,” replied Fred, in English; ”so we must converse in my native tongue. You are welcome to share our camp. Have you travelled far?”
Fred cast a keen glance of suspicion at the stranger as he spoke, and, in spite of himself, there was a decided diminution in the heartiness of his tones, but the stranger did not appear to observe either the change of tone or the glance, for he replied, with increased urbanity and openness of manner, ”Yis; I has roden far--very far--an' moche wants meat an' sleep.”