<h3>CHAPTER XIV.</h3><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>Crusoe's return, and his private adventures among the Indians--Dick<br/>
at a very low ebb--Crusoe saves him</i>.<br/>
<br/>
The means by which Crusoe managed to escape<br/>
from his two-legged captors, and rejoin his master,<br/>
require separate and special notice.<br/>
<br/>
In the struggle with the fallen horse and Indian,<br/>
which Dick had seen begun but not concluded, he was<br/>
almost crushed to death; and the instant the Indian<br/>
gained his feet, he sent an arrow at his head with<br/>
savage violence. Crusoe, however, had been so well<br/>
used to dodging the blunt-headed arrows that were<br/>
wont to be shot at him by the boys of the Mustang<br/>
Valley, that he was quite prepared, and eluded the<br/>
shaft by an active bound. Moreover, he uttered one of<br/>
his own peculiar roars, flew at the Indian's throat, and<br/>
dragged him down. At the same moment the other<br/>
Indians came up, and one of them turned aside to the<br/>
rescue. This man happened to have an old gun, of<br/>
the cheap sort at that time exchanged for peltries by<br/>
the fur-traders. With the butt of this he struck<br/>
Crusoe a blow on the head that sent him sprawling on<br/>
the grass.<br/>
<br/>
The rest of the savages, as we have seen, continued<br/>
in pursuit of Dick until he leaped into the river; then<br/>
they returned, took the saddle and bridle off his dead<br/>
horse, and rejoined their comrades. Here they held a<br/>
court-martial on Crusoe, who was now bound foot and<br/>
muzzle with cords. Some were for killing him; others,<br/>
who admired his noble appearance, immense size, and<br/>
courage, thought it would be well to carry him to their<br/>
village and keep him. There was a pretty violent dispute<br/>
on the subject, but at length it was agreed that<br/>
they should spare his life in the meantime, and perhaps<br/>
have a dog-dance round him when they got to their<br/>
wigwams.<br/>
<br/>
This dance, of which Crusoe was to be the chief<br/>
though passive performer, is peculiar to some of the<br/>
tribes east of the Rocky Mountains, and consists in<br/>
killing a dog and cutting out its liver, which is afterwards<br/>
sliced into shreds or strings and hung on a pole<br/>
about the height of a man's head. A band of warriors<br/>
then come and dance wildly round this pole, and each<br/>
one in succession goes up to the raw liver and bites a<br/>
piece off it, without, however, putting his hands near<br/>
it. Such is the dog-dance, and to such was poor Crusoe<br/>
destined by his fierce captors, especially by the one<br/>
whose throat still bore very evident marks of his teeth.<br/>
<br/>
But Crusoe was much too clever a dog to be disposed<br/>
of in so disgusting a manner. He had privately resolved<br/>
in his own mind that he would escape; but the<br/>
hopelessness of his ever carrying that resolution into<br/>
effect would have been apparent to any one who could<br/>
have seen the way in which his muzzle was secured,<br/>
and his four paws were tied together in a bunch, as<br/>
he hung suspended across the saddle of one of the<br/>
savages!<br/>
<br/>
This particular party of Indians who had followed<br/>
Dick Varley determined not to wait for the return of<br/>
their comrades who were in pursuit of the other two<br/>
hunters, but to go straight home, so for several days<br/>
they galloped away over the prairie. At nights, when<br/>
they encamped, Crusoe was thrown on the ground like<br/>
a piece of old lumber, and left to lie there with a mere<br/>
scrap of food till morning, when he was again thrown<br/>
across the horse of his captor and carried on. When<br/>
the village was reached, he was thrown again on the<br/>
ground, and would certainly have been torn to pieces in<br/>
five minutes by the Indian curs which came howling<br/>
round him, had not an old woman come to the rescue<br/>
and driven them away. With the help of her grand-son--a<br/>
little naked creature, just able to walk, or rather<br/>
to stagger--she dragged him to her tent, and, undoing<br/>
the line that fastened his mouth, offered him a bone.<br/>
<br/>
Although lying in a position that was unfavourable<br/>
for eating purposes, Crusoe opened his jaws and took it.<br/>
An awful crash was followed by two crunches--and it<br/>
was gone! and Crusoe looked up in the old squaw's<br/>
face with a look that said plainly, "Another of the same,<br/>
please, and as quick as possible." The old woman gave<br/>
him another, and then a lump of meat, which latter<br/>
went down with a gulp; but he coughed after it! and<br/>
it was well he didn't choke. After this the squaw left<br/>
him, and Crusoe spent the remainder of that night<br/>
gnawing the cords that bound him. So diligent was<br/>
he that he was free before morning and walked deliberately<br/>
out of the tent. Then he shook himself, and<br/>
with a yell that one might have fancied was intended<br/>
for defiance he bounded joyfully away, and was soon<br/>
out of sight.<br/>
<br/>
To a dog with a good appetite which had been on short<br/>
allowance for several days, the mouthful given to him by<br/>
the old squaw was a mere nothing. All that day he<br/>
kept bounding over the plain from bluff to bluff in<br/>
search of something to eat, but found nothing until<br/>
dusk, when he pounced suddenly and most unexpectedly<br/>
on a prairie-hen fast asleep. In one moment its life<br/>
was gone. In less than a minute its body was gone<br/>
too--feathers and bones and all--down Crusoe's ravenous<br/>
throat.<br/>
<br/>
On the identical spot Crusoe lay down and slept like<br/>
a top for four hours. At the end of that time he<br/>
jumped up, bolted a scrap of skin that somehow had<br/>
been overlooked at supper, and flew straight over the<br/>
prairie to the spot where he had had the scuffle with<br/>
the Indian. He came to the edge of the river, took<br/>
precisely the same leap that his master had done before<br/>
him, and came out on the other side a good deal higher<br/>
up than Dick had done, for the dog had no savages to<br/>
dodge, and was, as we have said before, a powerful<br/>
swimmer.<br/>
<br/>
It cost him a good deal of running about to find the<br/>
trail, and it was nearly dark before he resumed his<br/>
journey; then, putting his keen nose to the ground, he<br/>
ran step by step over Dick's track, and at last found<br/>
him, as we have shown, on the banks of the salt creek.<br/>
<br/>
It is quite impossible to describe the intense joy<br/>
which filled Dick's heart on again beholding his favourite.<br/>
Only those who have lost and found such an one<br/>
can know it. Dick seized him round the neck and<br/>
hugged him as well as he could, poor fellow! in his<br/>
feeble arms; then he wept, then he laughed, and then<br/>
he fainted.<br/>
<br/>
This was a consummation that took Crusoe quite<br/>
aback. Never having seen his master in such a state<br/>
before he seemed to think at first that he was playing<br/>
some trick, for he bounded round him, and barked, and<br/>
wagged his tail. But as Dick lay quite still and<br/>
motionless, he went forward with a look of alarm;<br/>
snuffed him once or twice, and whined piteously; then<br/>
he raised his nose in the air and uttered a long melancholy<br/>
wail.<br/>
<br/>
The cry seemed to revive Dick, for he moved, and<br/>
with some difficulty sat up, to the dog's evident relief.<br/>
There is no doubt whatever that Crusoe learned an<br/>
erroneous lesson that day, and was firmly convinced<br/>
thenceforth that the best cure for a fainting fit is a<br/>
melancholy yell. So easy is it for the wisest of dogs<br/>
as well as men to fall into gross error!<br/>
<br/>
"Crusoe," said Dick, in a feeble voice, "dear good<br/>
pup, come here." He crawled, as he spoke, down to<br/>
the water's edge, where there was a level patch of dry<br/>
sand.<br/>
<br/>
"Dig," said Dick, pointing to the sand.<br/>
<br/>
Crusoe looked at him in surprise, as well he might,<br/>
for he had never heard the word "dig" in all his life<br/>
before.<br/>
<br/>
Dick pondered a minute then a thought struck him.<br/>
<br/>
He turned up a little of the sand with his fingers, and,<br/>
pointing to the hole, cried, "<i>Seek him out, pup</i>!"<br/>
<br/>
Ha! Crusoe understood <i>that</i>. Many and many a<br/>
time had he unhoused rabbits, and squirrels, and other<br/>
creatures at that word of command; so, without a moment's<br/>
delay, he commenced to dig down into the sand,<br/>
every now and then stopping for a moment and shoving<br/>
in his nose, and snuffing interrogatively, as if he fully<br/>
expected to find a buffalo at the bottom of it. Then he<br/>
would resume again, one paw after another so fast that<br/>
you could scarce see them going--"hand over hand," as<br/>
sailors would have called it--while the sand flew out<br/>
between his hind legs in a continuous shower. When<br/>
the sand accumulated so much behind him as to impede<br/>
his motions he scraped it out of his way, and set to<br/>
work again with tenfold earnestness. After a good<br/>
while he paused and looked up at Dick with an<br/>
"it-won't-do,-I-fear,-there's-nothing-here" expression on his<br/>
face.<br/>
<br/>
"Seek him out, pup!" repeated Dick.<br/>
<br/>
"Oh! very good," mutely answered the dog, and went<br/>
at it again, tooth and nail, harder than ever.<br/>
<br/>
In the course of a quarter of an hour there was a<br/>
deep yawning hole in the sand, into which Dick peered<br/>
with intense anxiety. The bottom appeared slightly<br/>
<i>damp</i>. Hope now reanimated Dick Varley, and by<br/>
various devices he succeeded in getting the dog to scrape<br/>
away a sort of tunnel from the hole, into which he<br/>
might roll himself and put down his lips to drink when<br/>
the water should rise high enough. Impatiently and<br/>
anxiously he lay watching the moisture slowly accumulate<br/>
in the bottom of the hole, drop by drop, and while<br/>
he gazed he fell into a troubled, restless slumber, and<br/>
dreamed that Crusoe's return was a dream, and that he<br/>
was alone again, perishing for want of water.<br/>
<br/>
When he awakened the hole was half full of clear<br/>
water, and Crusoe was lapping it greedily.<br/>
<br/>
"Back, pup!" he shouted, as he crept down to the<br/>
hole and put his trembling lips to the water. It was<br/>
brackish, but drinkable, and as Dick drank deeply of<br/>
it he esteemed it at that moment better than nectar.<br/>
Here he lay for half-an-hour, alternately drinking and<br/>
gazing in surprise at his own emaciated visage as reflected<br/>
in the pool.<br/>
<br/>
The same afternoon Crusoe, in a private hunting excursion<br/>
of his own, discovered and caught a prairie-hen,<br/>
which he quietly proceeded to devour on the spot, when<br/>
Dick, who saw what had occurred, whistled to him.<br/>
<br/>
Obedience was engrained in every fibre of Crusoe's<br/>
mental and corporeal being. He did not merely answer<br/>
at once to the call--he <i>sprang</i> to it, leaving the prairie-hen<br/>
untasted.<br/>
<br/>
"Fetch it, pup," cried Dick eagerly as the dog came<br/>
up.<br/>
<br/>
In a few moments the hen was at his feet. Dick's<br/>
circumstances could not brook the delay of cookery; he<br/>
gashed the bird with his knife and drank the blood, and<br/>
then gave the flesh to the dog, while he crept to the<br/>
pool again for another draught. Ah! think not, reader,<br/>
that although we have treated this subject in a slight<br/>
vein of pleasantry, because it ended well, that therefore<br/>
our tale is pure fiction. Not only are Indians glad to<br/>
satisfy the urgent cravings of hunger with raw flesh,<br/>
but many civilized men and delicately nurtured have<br/>
done the same--ay, and doubtless will do the same<br/>
again, as long as enterprising and fearless men shall go<br/>
forth to dare the dangers of flood and field in the wild<br/>
places of our wonderful world!<br/>
<br/>
Crusoe had finished his share of the feast before Dick<br/>
returned from the pool. Then master and dog lay down<br/>
together side by side and fell into a long, deep, peaceful<br/>
slumber.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
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