<h3>CHAPTER XXIV.</h3><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>Plans and prospects--Dick becomes home-sick, and Henri<br/>
metaphysical--Indians attack the camp--A blow-up.</i><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
On the following day the Indians gave themselves<br/>
up to unlimited feasting, in consequence of the<br/>
arrival of a large body of hunters with an immense<br/>
supply of buffalo meat. It was a regular day of rejoicing.<br/>
Upwards of six hundred buffaloes had been killed<br/>
and as the supply of meat before their arrival had been<br/>
ample, the camp was now overflowing with plenty.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
Feasts were given by the chiefs, and the medicine men<br/>
went about the camp uttering loud cries, which were<br/>
meant to express gratitude to the Great Spirit for the<br/>
bountiful supply of food. They also carried a portion<br/>
of meat to the aged and infirm who were unable to hunt<br/>
for themselves, and had no young men in their family<br/>
circle to hunt for them.<br/>
<br/>
This arrival of the hunters was a fortunate circumstance,<br/>
as it put the Indians in great good-humour, and<br/>
inclined them to hold friendly intercourse with the<br/>
trappers, who for some time continued to drive a brisk<br/>
trade in furs. Having no market for the disposal of<br/>
their furs, the Indians of course had more than they<br/>
knew what to do with, and were therefore glad to exchange<br/>
those of the most beautiful and valuable kind<br/>
for a mere trifle, so that the trappers laid aside their<br/>
traps for a time and devoted themselves to traffic.<br/>
<br/>
Meanwhile Joe Blunt and his friends made preparations<br/>
for their return journey.<br/>
<br/>
"Ye see," remarked Joe to Henri and Dick, as they<br/>
sat beside the fire in Pee-eye-em's lodge, and feasted on<br/>
a potful of grasshopper soup, which the great chief's<br/>
squaw had just placed before them--"ye see, my calc'lations<br/>
is as follows. Wot with trappin' beavers and<br/>
huntin', we three ha' made enough to set us up, an it<br/>
likes us, in the Mustang Valley--"<br/>
<br/>
"Ha!" interrupted Dick, remitting for a few seconds<br/>
the use of his teeth in order to exercise his<br/>
tongue--ha! Joe, but it don't like <i>me</i>! What, give up a<br/>
hunter's life and become a farmer? I should think not!"<br/>
<br/>
"Bon!" ejaculated Henri, but whether the remark<br/>
had reference to the grasshopper soup or the sentiment<br/>
we cannot tell.<br/>
<br/>
"Well," continued Joe, commencing to devour a large<br/>
buffalo steak with a hunter's appetite, "ye'll please yourselves,<br/>
lads, as to that; but as I wos sayin', we've got a<br/>
powerful lot o' furs, an' a big pack o' odds and ends for<br/>
the Injuns we chance to meet with by the way, an'<br/>
powder and lead to last us a twelvemonth, besides five<br/>
good horses to carry us an' our packs over the plains;<br/>
so if it's agreeable to you, I mean to make a bee-line for<br/>
the Mustang Valley. We're pretty sure to meet with<br/>
Blackfeet on the way, and if we do we'll try to make<br/>
peace between them an' the Snakes. I 'xpect it'll be<br/>
pretty well on for six weeks afore we git to home, so<br/>
we'll start to-morrow."<br/>
<br/>
"Dat is fat vill do ver' vell," said Henri; "vill you<br/>
please donnez me one petit morsel of steak."<br/>
<br/>
"I'm ready for anything, Joe," cried Dick; "you are<br/>
leader. Just point the way, and I'll answer for two o'<br/>
us followin' ye--eh! won't we, Crusoe?"<br/>
<br/>
"We will," remarked the dog quietly.<br/>
<br/>
"How comes it," inquired Dick, "that these Indians<br/>
don't care for our tobacco?"<br/>
<br/>
"They like their own better, I s'pose," answered Joe;<br/>
"most all the western Injuns do. They make it o' the<br/>
dried leaves o' the shumack and the inner bark o' the<br/>
red-willow, chopped very small an' mixed together.<br/>
They call this stuff <i>kinnekinnik</i>; but they like to mix<br/>
about a fourth o' our tobacco with it, so Pee-eye-em tells<br/>
me, an' he's a good judge. The amount that red-skinned<br/>
mortal smokes <i>is</i> oncommon."<br/>
<br/>
"What are they doin' yonder?" inquired Dick, pointing<br/>
to a group of men who had been feasting for some<br/>
time past in front of a tent within sight of our trio.<br/>
<br/>
"Goin' to sing, I think," replied Joe.<br/>
<br/>
As he spoke six young warriors were seen to work<br/>
their bodies about in a very remarkable way, and give<br/>
utterance to still more remarkable sounds, which gradually<br/>
increased until the singers burst out into that<br/>
terrific yell, or war-whoop, for which American savages<br/>
have long been famous. Its effect would have been appalling<br/>
to unaccustomed ears. Then they allowed their<br/>
voices to die away in soft, plaintive tones, while their<br/>
action corresponded thereto. Suddenly the furious style<br/>
was revived, and the men wrought themselves into a<br/>
condition little short of madness, while their yells rang<br/>
wildly through the camp. This was too much for ordinary<br/>
canine nature to withstand, so all the dogs in the<br/>
neighbourhood joined in the horrible chorus.<br/>
<br/>
Crusoe had long since learned to treat the eccentricities<br/>
of Indians and their curs with dignified contempt.<br/>
He paid no attention to this serenade, but lay sleeping<br/>
by the fire until Dick and his companions rose to take<br/>
leave of their host and return to the camp of the fur-traders.<br/>
The remainder of that night was spent in<br/>
making preparations for setting forth on the morrow;<br/>
and when, at gray dawn, Dick and Crusoe lay down<br/>
to snatch a few hours' repose, the yells and howling<br/>
in the Snake camp were going on as vigorously as<br/>
ever.<br/>
<br/>
The sun had arisen, and his beams were just tipping<br/>
the summits of the Rocky Mountains, causing the snowy<br/>
peaks to glitter like flame, and the deep ravines and<br/>
gorges to look sombre and mysterious by contrast, when<br/>
Dick and Joe and Henri mounted their gallant steeds,<br/>
and, with Crusoe gambolling before, and the two pack-horses<br/>
trotting by their side, turned their faces eastward,<br/>
and bade adieu to the Indian camp.<br/>
<br/>
Crusoe was in great spirits. He was perfectly well<br/>
aware that he and his companions were on their way<br/>
home, and testified his satisfaction by bursts of scampering<br/>
over the hills and valleys. Doubtless he thought of<br/>
Dick Varley's cottage, and of Dick's mild, kind-hearted<br/>
mother. Undoubtedly, too, he thought of his own<br/>
mother, Fan, and felt a glow of filial affection as he did<br/>
so. Of this we feel quite certain. He would have been<br/>
unworthy the title of hero if he hadn't. Perchance he<br/>
thought of Grumps, but of this we are not quite so sure.<br/>
We rather think, upon the whole, that he did.<br/>
<br/>
Dick, too, let his thoughts run away in the direction<br/>
of <i>home</i>. Sweet word! Those who have never left it<br/>
cannot, by any effort of imagination, realize the full import<br/>
of the word "home." Dick was a bold hunter; but<br/>
he was young, and this was his first long expedition.<br/>
Oftentimes, when sleeping under the trees and gazing<br/>
dreamily up through the branches at the stars, had he<br/>
thought of home, until his longing heart began to yearn<br/>
to return. He repelled such tender feelings, however,<br/>
when they became too strong, deeming them unmanly,<br/>
and sought to turn his mind to the excitements of the<br/>
chase; but latterly his efforts were in vain. He became<br/>
thoroughly home-sick, and while admitting the fact to<br/>
himself, he endeavoured to conceal it from his comrades.<br/>
He thought that he was successful in this attempt. Poor<br/>
Dick Varley! as yet he was sadly ignorant of human<br/>
nature. Henri knew it, and Joe Blunt knew it. Even<br/>
Crusoe knew that something was wrong with his master,<br/>
although he could not exactly make out what it was.<br/>
But Crusoe made memoranda in the note-book of his<br/>
memory. He jotted down the peculiar phases of his<br/>
master's new disease with the care and minute exactness<br/>
of a physician, and, we doubt not, ultimately added the<br/>
knowledge of the symptoms of home-sickness to his<br/>
already well-filled stores of erudition.<br/>
<br/>
It was not till they had set out on their homeward<br/>
journey that Dick Varley's spirits revived, and it was<br/>
not till they reached the beautiful prairies on the eastern<br/>
slopes of the Rocky Mountains, and galloped over the<br/>
greensward towards the Mustang Valley, that Dick<br/>
ventured to tell Joe Blunt what his feelings had been.<br/>
<br/>
"D'ye know, Joe," he said confidentially, reining up<br/>
his gallant steed after a sharp gallop--"d'ye know I've<br/>
bin feelin' awful low for some time past."<br/>
<br/>
"I know it, lad," answered Joe, with a quiet smile, in<br/>
which there was a dash of something that implied he<br/>
knew more than he chose to express.<br/>
<br/>
Dick felt surprised, but he continued, "I wonder what<br/>
it could have bin. I never felt so before."<br/>
<br/>
"'Twas home-sickness, boy," returned Joe.<br/>
<br/>
"How d'ye know that?"<br/>
<br/>
"The same way as how I know most things--by<br/>
experience an' obsarvation. I've bin home-sick myself<br/>
once, but it was long, long agone."<br/>
<br/>
Dick felt much relieved at this candid confession by<br/>
such a bronzed veteran, and, the chords of sympathy<br/>
having been struck, he opened up his heart at once, to<br/>
the evident delight of Henri, who, among other curious<br/>
partialities, was extremely fond of listening to and taking<br/>
part in conversations that bordered on the metaphysical,<br/>
and were hard to be understood. Most conversations<br/>
that were not connected with eating and hunting were<br/>
of this nature to Henri.<br/>
<br/>
"Hom'-sik," he cried, "veech mean bein' sik of hom'!<br/>
Hah! dat is fat I am always be, ven I goes hout on de<br/>
expedition. Oui, vraiment."<br/>
<br/>
"I always packs up," continued Joe, paying no attention<br/>
to Henri's remark--"I always packs up an' sets<br/>
off for home when I gits home-sick. It's the best cure;<br/>
an' when hunters are young like you, Dick, it's the only cure. I've<br/>
knowed<br/>
fellers a'most die o' home-sickness,<br/>
an' I'm told they <i>do</i> go under altogether<br/>
sometimes."<br/>
<br/>
"Go onder!" exclaimed Henri; "oui, I vas all but<br/>
die myself ven I fust try to git away from hom'. If I<br/>
have not git away, I not be here to-day."<br/>
<br/>
Henri's idea of home-sickness was so totally opposed<br/>
to theirs that his comrades only laughed, and refrained<br/>
from attempting to set him right.<br/>
<br/>
"The fust time I wos took bad with it wos in a<br/>
country somethin' like that," said Joe, pointing to the<br/>
wide stretch of undulating prairie, dotted with clusters<br/>
of trees and meandering streamlets, that lay before them.<br/>
"I had bin out about two months, an' was makin' a<br/>
good thing of it, for game wos plenty, when I began to<br/>
think somehow more than usual o' home. My mother<br/>
wos alive then."<br/>
<br/>
Joe's voice sank to a deep, solemn tone as he said<br/>
this, and for a few minutes he rode on in silence.<br/>
<br/>
"Well, it grew worse and worse. I dreamed o' home<br/>
all night an' thought of it all day, till I began to shoot<br/>
bad, an' my comrades wos gittin' tired o' me; so says I<br/>
to them one night, says I, 'I give out, lads; I'll make<br/>
tracks for the settlement to-morrow.' They tried to<br/>
laugh me out of it at first, but it was no go, so I packed<br/>
up, bid them good-day, an' sot off alone on a trip o' five<br/>
hundred miles. The very first mile o' the way back I<br/>
began to mend, and before two days I wos all right<br/>
again."<br/>
<br/>
Joe was interrupted at this point by the sudden<br/>
appearance of a solitary horseman on the brow of an<br/>
eminence not half-a-mile distant. The three friends<br/>
instantly drove their pack-horses behind a clump of<br/>
trees; but not in time to escape the vigilant eye of the<br/>
Red-man, who uttered a loud shout, which brought up<br/>
a band of his comrades at full gallop.<br/>
<br/>
"Remember, Henri," cried Joe Blunt, "our errand is<br/>
one of <i>peace</i>."<br/>
<br/>
The caution was needed, for in the confusion of the<br/>
moment Henri was making preparation to sell his life<br/>
as dearly as possible. Before another word could be<br/>
uttered, they were surrounded by a troop of about<br/>
twenty yelling Blackfeet Indians. They were, fortunately,<br/>
not a war party, and, still more fortunately, they<br/>
were peaceably disposed, and listened to the preliminary<br/>
address of Joe Blunt with exemplary patience; after<br/>
which the two parties encamped on the spot, the council fire was<br/>
lighted,<br/>
and every preparation made for a long palaver.<br/>
<br/>
We will not trouble the reader with the details of<br/>
what was said on this occasion. The party of Indians<br/>
was a small one, and no chief of any importance was<br/>
attached to it. Suffice it to say that the pacific overtures<br/>
made by Joe were well received, the trifling gifts<br/>
made thereafter were still better received, and they<br/>
separated with mutual expressions of good-will.<br/>
<br/>
Several other bands which were afterwards met with<br/>
were equally friendly, and only one war party was seen.<br/>
Joe's quick eye observed it in time to enable them to<br/>
retire unseen behind the shelter of some trees, where<br/>
they remained until the Indian warriors were out of<br/>
sight.<br/>
<br/>
The next party they met with, however, were more<br/>
difficult to manage, and, unfortunately, blood was shed<br/>
on both sides before our travellers escaped.<br/>
<br/>
It was at the close of a beautiful day that a war<br/>
party of Blackfeet were seen riding along a ridge on the<br/>
horizon. It chanced that the prairie at this place was<br/>
almost destitute of trees or shrubs large enough to conceal<br/>
the horses. By dashing down the grassy wave<br/>
into the hollow between the two undulations, and dismounting,<br/>
Joe hoped to elude the savages, so he gave<br/>
the word; but at the same moment a shout from the<br/>
Indians told that they were discovered.<br/>
<br/>
"Look sharp, lads! throw down the packs on the<br/>
highest point of the ridge," cried Joe, undoing the lashings,<br/>
seizing one of the bales of goods, and hurrying to<br/>
the top of the undulation with it; "we must keep them<br/>
at arm's-length, boys--be alive! War parties are not to<br/>
be trusted."<br/>
<br/>
Dick and Henri seconded Joe's efforts so ably that<br/>
in the course of two minutes the horses were unloaded,<br/>
the packs piled in the form of a wall in front of a<br/>
broken piece of ground, the horses picketed close beside<br/>
them, and our three travellers peeping over the<br/>
edge, with their rifles cocked, while the savages--about<br/>
thirty in number--came sweeping down towards them.<br/>
<br/>
"I'll try to git them to palaver," said Joe Blunt;<br/>
"but keep yer eye on 'em, Dick, an' if they behave ill,<br/>
shoot the <i>horse</i> o' the leadin' chief. I'll throw up my<br/>
left hand, as a signal. Mind, lad, don't hit human flesh<br/>
till my second signal is given, and see that Henri don't<br/>
draw till I git back to ye."<br/>
<br/>
So saying, Joe sprang lightly over the slight parapet<br/>
of their little fortress, and ran swiftly out, unarmed,<br/>
towards the Indians. In a few seconds he was close<br/>
up with them, and in another moment was surrounded.<br/>
At first the savages brandished their spears and rode<br/>
round the solitary man, yelling like fiends, as if they<br/>
wished to intimidate him; but as Joe stood like a<br/>
statue, with his arms crossed, and a grave expression of<br/>
contempt on his countenance, they quickly desisted, and,<br/>
drawing near, asked him where he came from, and what<br/>
he was doing there.<br/>
<br/>
Joe's story was soon told; but instead of replying,<br/>
they began to shout vociferously, and evidently meant<br/>
mischief.<br/>
<br/>
"If the Blackfeet are afraid to speak to the Pale-face,<br/>
he will go back to his braves," said Joe, passing suddenly<br/>
between two of the warriors and taking a few<br/>
steps towards the camp.<br/>
<br/>
Instantly every bow was bent, and it seemed as if<br/>
our bold hunter were about to be pierced by a score of<br/>
arrows, when he turned round and<br/>
cried,--"The Blackfeet must not advance a single step. The<br/>
first that moves his <i>horse</i> shall die. The second that<br/>
moves <i>himself</i> shall die."<br/>
<br/>
To this the Blackfeet chief replied scornfully, "The<br/>
Pale-face talks with a big mouth. We do not believe<br/>
his words. The Snakes are liars; we will make no<br/>
peace with them."<br/>
<br/>
While he was yet speaking, Joe threw up his hand;<br/>
there was a loud report, and the noble horse of the<br/>
savage chief lay struggling in death agony on the ground.<br/>
<br/>
The use of the rifle, as we have before hinted, was<br/>
little known at this period among the Indians of the<br/>
far west, and many had never heard the dreaded report<br/>
before, although all were aware, from hearsay, of its<br/>
fatal power. The fall of the chief's horse, therefore,<br/>
quite paralyzed them for a few moments, and they had<br/>
not recovered from their surprise when a second report<br/>
was heard, a bullet whistled past, and a second horse<br/>
fell. At the same moment there was a loud explosion<br/>
in the camp of the Pale-faces, a white cloud enveloped<br/>
it, and from the midst of this a loud shriek was heard,<br/>
as Dick, Henri, and Crusoe bounded over the packs<br/>
with frantic gestures.<br/>
<br/>
At this the gaping savages wheeled their steeds<br/>
round, the dismounted horsemen sprang on behind two<br/>
of their comrades, and the whole band dashed away<br/>
over the plains as if they were chased by evil spirits.<br/>
<br/>
Meanwhile Joe hastened towards his comrades in a<br/>
state of great anxiety, for he knew at once that one of<br/>
the powder-horns must have been accidentally blown up.<br/>
<br/>
"No damage done, boys, I hope?" he cried on coming<br/>
up.<br/>
<br/>
"Damage!" cried Henri, holding his hands tight<br/>
over his face. "Oh! oui, great damage--moche damage;<br/>
me two eyes be blowed out of dere holes."<br/>
<br/>
"Not quite so bad as that, I hope," said Dick, who<br/>
was very slightly singed, and forgot his own hurts in<br/>
anxiety about his comrade. "Let me see."<br/>
<br/>
"My eye!" exclaimed Joe Blunt, while a broad grin<br/>
overspread his countenance, "ye've not improved yer<br/>
looks, Henri."<br/>
<br/>
This was true. The worthy hunter's hair was singed<br/>
to such an extent that his entire countenance presented<br/>
the appearance of a universal frizzle. Fortunately the<br/>
skin, although much blackened, was quite uninjured--a<br/>
fact which, when he ascertained it beyond a doubt,<br/>
afforded so much satisfaction to Henri that he capered<br/>
about shouting with delight, as if some piece of good<br/>
fortune had befallen him.<br/>
<br/>
The accident had happened in consequence of Henri<br/>
having omitted to replace the stopper of his powder-horn,<br/>
and when, in his anxiety for Joe, he fired at random<br/>
amongst the Indians, despite Dick's entreaties to<br/>
wait, a spark communicated with the powder-horn and<br/>
blew him up. Dick and Crusoe were only a little<br/>
singed, but the former was not disposed to quarrel with<br/>
an accident which had sent their enemies so promptly<br/>
to the right-about.<br/>
<br/>
This band followed them for some nights, in the hope<br/>
of being able to steal their horses while they slept; but<br/>
they were not brave enough to venture a second time<br/>
within range of the death-dealing rifle.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
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