Part 7 (1/2)

”Very good,” Fray Ambrosio went on; ”but where are they to be found?”

”I know where to find them. You are here in an excellent position, where you can hold your own for a long time, without any fear of it being carried. This is what I have resolved on.”

”Come, gossip, explain yourself; I am anxious to know your plans,” said the monk.

”You shall be satisfied: I am going to start at once in search of my friends, whom I am certain of finding within a few hours: you will not stir from here till my return.”

”Hum! And will you be long absent?”

”Two days, then, at the most.”

”That is a long time,” Garote remarked.

”During that period you will conceal your presence as far as possible.

Let no one suspect you are encamped here. I will bring you the ten best rifles in the Far West, and with their protection, and that of Stanapat, the great Apache Chief of the Buffalo tribe, whom I expect to see also, we can traverse the desert in perfect safety.”

”But who will command the band in your absence?” Fray Ambrosio asked.

”You, and these caballeros. But remember this: you will under no pretext leave the island.”

”'Tis enough, Red Cedar, you can start; we shall not stir till you return.”

After a few more words of slight importance, Red Cedar left the clearing, swam his horse over the river, and on reaching firm ground, buried himself in the tall gra.s.s, where he soon disappeared.

It was about six in the evening, when the squatter left his comrades, to go in search of the men whom he hoped to make his allies. The gambusinos had paid but slight attention to the departure of their chief, the cause of which they were ignorant of, and which they supposed would not last long. The night had completely fallen. The gambusinos, wearied by a long journey, were sleeping, wrapped in their zarapes, round the fire, while two sentries alone watched over the common safety. They were d.i.c.k and Harry, the two Canadian hunters, whom chance had so untowardly brought among these bandits.

Three men leaning against the trunk of an enormous ungquito were conversing in a low voice. They were Andres Garote, Fray Ambrosio, and Eagle-wing. A few paces from them was the leafy cabin, beneath whose precarious shelter reposed the squatter's wife, her daughter Ellen, and Dona Clara.

The three men, absorbed in the conversation, did not notice a white shadow emerge from the cabin, glide silently along, and lean against the very tree, at the foot of which they were.

Eagle-wing, with that penetration which distinguishes the Indians, had read the hatred which existed between Fray Ambrosio and Red Cedar; but the Coras had kept this discovery in his heart, intending to take advantage of it when the opportunity presented itself.

”Chief,” the monk said, ”do you suspect who the allies are Red Cedar has gone to seek?”

”No,” the other replied, ”how should I know?”

”Still it must interest you, for you are not so great a friend of the Gringo as you would like to appear.”

”The Indians have a very dense mind; let my father explain himself so that I may understand him, and be able to answer him.”

”Listen,” the monk continued, in a dry voice and with a sharp accent, ”I know who you are: your disguise, clever and exact though it be, was not sufficient to deceive me: at the first glance I recognised you. Do you believe that if I had said to Red Cedar, this man is a spy or a traitor; he has crept among us to make us tall into a trap prepared long beforehand: in a word, this man is no other than Moukapec, the princ.i.p.al Cacique of the Coras? Do you believe, I say, that Red Cedar would have hesitated to blow out your brains, eh, chief? Answer.”

During these words whose significance was terrible to him, the Coras had remained unmoved; not a muscle of his face had quivered. When the monk ceased speaking, he smiled disdainfully, and contented himself with replying in a haughty voice, while looking at him fixedly:

”Why did not my father tell this to the scalp hunter? He was wrong.”

The monk was discountenanced by this reply, which he was far from expecting; he understood that he had before him one of those energetic natures over which threats have no power. Still he had advanced too far to draw back: he resolved to go on to the end, whatever might happen.