Part 12 (1/2)
And later when Leloo, safely seated beside the big driver, related how he had tricked the scoundrels, Big Bill was as proud as if he had been the boy's father. ”The whole Cariboo trail from end to end shall know of this,” he declared, ”know just how you saved me and the miners' gold.”
”Me no save,” said Leloo, shaking his head with denial. ”Not me save, just save by big wolf-brother. He teach me to make his cry, he answer me when I talk his talk to him.”
And it must have been this speech that the big driver told far and wide, for at the next great ”potlatch” (feast) given by the Lillooets, the entire tribe conferred the great honor of a new name upon Leloo, the name he had won for himself--”Wolf-Brother.”
We-hro's Sacrifice
A Story of a Boy and a Dog
We-hro was a small Onondaga Indian boy, a good-looking, black-eyed little chap with as pagan a heart as ever beat under a copper-colored skin. His father and grandfathers were pagans. His ancestors for a thousand years back, and yet a thousand years back of that, had been pagans, and We-hro, with the pride of his religion and his race, would not have turned from the faith of his fathers for all the world. But the world, as he knew it, consisted entirely of the Great Indian Reserve, that lay on the banks of the beautiful Grand River, sixty miles west of he great Canadian city of Toronto.
Now, the boys that read this tale must not confuse a pagan with a heathen. The heathen nations that wors.h.i.+p idols are terribly pitied and despised by the pagan Indians, who are wors.h.i.+ppers of ”The Great Spirit,” a kind and loving G.o.d, who, they say, will reward them by giving them happy hunting grounds to live in after they die; that is, if they live good, honest, upright lives in this world.
We-hro would have scowled blackly if anyone had dared to name him a heathen. He thoroughly ignored the little Delaware boys, whose fathers wors.h.i.+pped idols fifty years ago, and on all the feast days and dance days he would accompany his parents to the ”Longhouse” (which was their church), and take his little part in the religious festivities. He could remember well as a tiny child being carried in his mother's blanket ”pick-a-back,” while she dropped into the soft swinging movement of the dance, for We-hro's people did not wors.h.i.+p their ”Great Spirit”
with hymns of praise and lowly prayers, the way the Christian Indians did. We-hro's people wors.h.i.+pped their G.o.d by dancing beautiful, soft, dignified steps, with no noisy clicking heels to annoy one, but only the velvety shuffle of the moccasined feet, the weird beat of the Indian drums, the mournful chanting of the old chiefs, keeping time with the throb of their devoted hearts.
Then, when he grew too big to be carried, he was allowed to clasp his mother's hand, and himself learn the pretty steps, following his father, who danced ahead, dressed in full costume of scarlet cloth and buckskin, with gay beads and bear claws about his neck, and wonderful carven silver ornaments, ma.s.sive and sold, decorating his s.h.i.+rt and leggings.
We-hro loved the tawny fringes and the hammered silver quite as much as a white lady loves diamonds and pearls; he loved to see his father's face painted in fierce reds, yellows and blacks, but most of all he loved the unvarying chuck-a, chuck-a, chuck-a of the great mud-turtle rattles that the ”musicians” skilfully beat upon the benches before them. Oh, he was a thorough little pagan, was We-hro! His loves and his hates were as decided as his comical but stately step in the dance of his ancestors' religion. Those were great days for the small Onondaga boy. His father taught him to shape axe-handles, to curve lacrosse sticks, to weave their deer-sinew netting, to tan skins, to plant corn, to model arrows and--most difficult of all--to ”feather” them, to ”season” bows, to chop trees, to burn, hollow, fas.h.i.+on and ”man” a dugout canoe, to use the paddle, to gauge the wind and current of that treacherous Grand River, to learn wild cries to decoy bird and beast for food. Oh, little pagan We-hro had his life filled to overflowing with much that the civilized white boy would gave all his dimes and dollars to know.
And it was then that the great day came, the marvellous day when We-hro discovered his second self, his playmate, his loyal, unselfish, loving friend--his underbred, unwashed, hungry, vagabond dog, born white and spotless, but begrimed by contact with the world, the mud, and the white man's hovel.
It happened this way:
We-hro was cleaning his father's dugout canoe, after a night of fish spearing. The soot, the scales, the fire ashes, the mud--all had to be ”swabbed” out at the river's brink by means of much water and an Indian ”slat” broom. We-hro was up to his little ears in work, when suddenly, above him, on the river road, he heard the coa.r.s.e voice and thundering whipfalls of a man urging and beating his horse--a white man, for no Indian used such language, no Indian beat an animal that served him.
We-hro looked up. Stuck in the mud of the river road was a huge wagon, grain-filled. The driver, purple of face, was whaling the poor team, and shouting to a cringing little drab-white dog, of fox-terrier lineage, to ”Get out of there or I'll--!”
The horses were dragging and tugging. The little dog, terrified, was sneaking off with tail between its hind legs. Then the brutal driver's whip came down, curling its lash about the dog's thin body, forcing from the little speechless brute a howl of agony. Then We-hro spoke--spoke in all the English he knew.
”Bad! bad! You die some day--you! You hurt that dog. White man's G.o.d, he no like you. Indian's Great Spirit, he not let you shoot in happy hunting grounds. You die some day--you _bad_!”
”Well, if I _am_ bad I'm no pagan Indian Hottentot like you!” yelled the angry driver. ”Take the dog, and begone!”
”Me no Hottentot,” said We-hro, slowly. ”Me Onondaga, all right. Me take dog;” and from that hour the poor little white cur and the copper-colored little boy were friends for all time.
The Superintendent of Indian Affairs was taking his periodical drive about the Reserve when he chanced to meet old ”Ten-Canoes,” We-hro's father.
The superintendent was a very important person. He was a great white gentleman, who lived in the city of Brantford, fifteen miles away. He was a kindly, handsome man, who loved and honored every Indian on the Grand River Reserve. He had a genial smile, a warm hand-shake, so when he stopped his horse and greeted the old pagan, Ten-Canoes smiled too.
”Ah, Ten-Canoes!” cried the superintendent, ”a great man told me he was coming to see your people--a big man, none less than Great Black-Coat, the bishop of the Anglican Church. He thinks you are a bad lot, because you are pagans; he wonders why it is that you have never turned Christian. Some of the missionaries have told him you pagans are no good, so the great man wants to come and see for himself. He wants to see some of your religious dances--the 'Dance of the White Dog,' if you will have him; he wants to see if it is really _bad_.”
Ten-Canoes laughed. ”I welcome him,” he said, earnestly, ”Welcome the 'Great Black-Coat.' I honor him, though I do not think as he does. He is a good man, a just man; I welcome him, bid him come.”
Thus was his lords.h.i.+p, the Bishop, invited to see the great pagan Onondaga ”Festival of the White Dog.”
But what was _this_ that happened?