Part 27 (2/2)
brandis.h.i.+ng their various weapons, and making their s.h.i.+elds of _parfleche_ rattle by repeated strokes against their clubs and spears-- on comes the angry avalanche!
They are within a hundred yards of the b.u.t.te. For a moment we are in doubt. If they charge up the declivity, we are lost men. We may shoot down the foremost; but they are twenty to one. In a hand-to-hand struggle, we shall be overwhelmed--killed or captured--in less than sixty seconds of time!
”Hold your fire!” I cried, seeing my comrades lie with their cheeks against their guns; ”not yet! only two at a time--but not yet! Ha! as I expected.”
And just as I had expected, the wild ruck came to a halt--those in the lead drawing up their horses, as suddenly as if they had arrived upon the edge of a precipice! They had come to a stand just in the nick of time. Had they advanced but five paces further, at least two of their number would have tumbled out of their saddles. Sure-shot and I had each selected our man, and agreed upon the signal to fire. The others were ready to follow. All four barrels resting over the rampart had caught the eyes of the Indians. A glance at the glistening tubes was sufficient. True to their old tactics, it was the sight of these that had halted them!
CHAPTER FIFTY FOUR.
THE RED-HAND.
The whooping and screaming are for a while suspended. Those in the rear have ridden up; and the straggling cavalcade becomes ma.s.sed upon the plain, at less than two hundred yards' distance from the b.u.t.te. Shouts are still heard, and talking in an unknown tongue; but not the dread war-cry. That has failed of its effect, and is heard no longer. Now and then, young warriors gallop toward the b.u.t.te, vaunt their valour, brandish their weapons, shoot off their arrows, and threaten us by word and gesture. All, however, keep well outside the perilous circ.u.mference covered by our guns.
We perceive that they, too, have guns, both muskets and rifles--in all, a dozen or more! We can tell that they are empty. Those who carry them are dismounting to load. We may expect soon to receive their fire; but, from the clumsy manner in which they handle their pieces, that need not terrify us--any more than their arrows, already sent, and falling far short.
Half-a-dozen hors.e.m.e.n are conspicuous. They are chiefs, as can be told by the eagle plumes sticking in their hair, with other insignia on their b.r.e.a.s.t.s and bodies. These have ridden to the front, and are grouped together--their horses standing head to head. Their speeches and gesticulations declare that they are holding council. The movements of menace are no longer made. We have time to examine our enemies. They are so near that I need scarcely level the gla.s.s upon them; though through it, I can note every feature with minute distinctness.
They are not Comanches. Their bodies are too big, and their limbs too long, for these Ishmaelites of the southern plains. Neither are they of the Jicarilla-Apache: they are too n.o.ble-looking to resemble these skulking jackals. More like are they to the Cayguas? But no--they are not Cayguas. I have met these Indians, and should know them. The war-cry did not resemble theirs. Theirs is the war-cry of the Comanche.
I should have known it at once. Cheyennes they may be--since it is their especial ground? Or might it be that tribe of still darker, deadlier fame--the hostile Arapaho? If they be Arapahoes, we need look for no mercy.
I sweep the gla.s.s over them, seeking for signs by which I may identify our enemy. I perceive one that is significant. The leggings of the chiefs and princ.i.p.al warriors are fringed with scalps; their s.h.i.+elds are encircled by similar ornaments. Most of these appendages are of dark hue--the locks long and black. But not all are of this kind or colour.
One s.h.i.+eld is conspicuously different from the rest. A red-hand is painted upon its black disc. It is the _totem_ of him who carries it.
A thick fringe of hair is set around its rim. The tufts are of different lengths and colours. There are tresses of brown, blonde, and even red; hair curled and wavy; coa.r.s.e hair; and some soft and silky.
Through the gla.s.s I see all this, with a clearness that leaves no doubt as to the character of these varied _chevelures_. They are the scalps of whites--both of men and women! And the red-hand upon the s.h.i.+eld? A red-hand? Ah! I remember. There is a noted chief of the name, famed for his hostility to the trappers--famed for a ferocity unequalled among his race--a savage, who is said to delight in torturing his captives-- especially if it be a pale-face who has had the misfortune to fall into his hands. Can it be that fiend--the Red-Hand of the Arapahoes?
The appearance of the man confirms my suspicion. A body, tall, angular, and ill-shaped, scarred with cicatrised wounds, and bent with age; a face seamed with the traces of evil pa.s.sion; eyes deep sunken in their sockets, and sparkling like coals of fire--an aspect more fiend-like than human! All this agrees with the descriptions I have had of the Red-Hand chief. a.s.suredly it is he. Our enemies, then, are the Arapahoes--their leader the dreaded _Red-Hand_.
”Heaven have mercy upon us! These men will have none!” Such was the e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.i.o.n that escaped my lips, on recognising, or believing that I recognised, the foe that was before us.
The Red-Hand is seen to direct. He is evidently leader of the band.
All seem obedient to his orders; all move with military promptness at his word or nod. Beyond doubt, it is the Red-Hand and his followers, who for crimes and cold-blooded atrocities are noted as he. A dreaded band, long known to the traders of Santa Fe--to the _ciboleros_ from the Taos Valley--to the trappers of the Arkansas and Platte. We are not the first party of white men besieged by these barbarous robbers; and if it be our fate to fall, we shall not be their first victims. Many a brave ”mountain-man” has already fallen a victim to their fiendish grasp.
Scarcely a trapper who cannot tell of some comrade, who has been ”rubbed” out by Red-Hand and his ”Rapahoes.”
The council of the chiefs continues for some time. Some _ruse_ is being devised and debated among them. With palpitating hearts we await the issue. I have made known my suspicions as to who is our enemy, and cautioned my comrade's to be on their guard. I have told them that, if my conjecture prove true, we need look for no mercy. The talk is at an end. Red-Hand is about to address us. Riding two lengths in front of his followers, the savage chief makes halt. His s.h.i.+eld is held conspicuously upward--its convexity towards us--not for any purpose of security; but evidently that we may see its device, and know the bearer.
Red-Hand is conscious of the terror inspired by his name. In his other hand, he carries an object better calculated than the s.h.i.+eld to beget fearful emotions. Poised on the point of his long spear, and held high aloft, are the scalps recently taken. There are six of them in the bunch--easily told by the different hues of the hair; and all easily identified as those of white men. They are the scalps of the slain teamsters, and others who had vainly attempted to defend the captured waggon. They are all fresh and gory--hang limber along the shaft. The blood is not yet dry upon them--the wet surface glitters in the sun! We view them with singular emotions--mine perhaps more singular than any.
I endeavour to identify some of those ghastly trophies. I am but too satisfied at failing.
CHAPTER FIFTY FIVE.
AN ILL-TIMED SHOT.
”_Hablo Castellano_?” cries the savage chieftain in broken Spanish.
I am not surprised at being addressed in this language by a prairie Indian. Many of them speak Spanish, or its North Mexican _patois_.
They have opportunities of learning it from the New Mexican traders, but better--_from their captives_.
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