<h3>CHAPTER XXV.</h3><br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<i>Dangers of the prairie</i>--<i>Our travellers attacked by Indians,<br/>
and delivered in a remarkable manner</i>.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
There are periods in the life of almost all men<br/>
A when misfortunes seem to crowd upon them in<br/>
rapid succession, when they escape from one danger<br/>
only to encounter another, and when, to use a well-known<br/>
expression, they succeed in leaping out of the<br/>
frying-pan at the expense of plunging into the fire.<br/>
<br/>
So was it with our three friends upon this occasion.<br/>
They were scarcely rid of the Blackfeet, who found them<br/>
too watchful to be caught napping, when, about daybreak<br/>
one morning, they encountered a roving band of<br/>
Camanchee Indians, who wore such a warlike aspect<br/>
that Joe deemed it prudent to avoid them if possible.<br/>
<br/>
"They don't see us yit, I guess," said Joe, as he and<br/>
his companions drove the horses into a hollow between<br/>
the grassy waves of the prairie, "an' if we only can escape their<br/>
sharp<br/>
eyes till we're in yonder clump o' willows, we're safe enough."<br/>
<br/>
"But why don't you ride up to them, Joe," inquired<br/>
Dick, "and make peace between them and the Pale-faces,<br/>
as you ha' done with other bands?"<br/>
<br/>
"Because it's o' no use to risk our scalps for the<br/>
chance o' makin' peace wi' a rovin' war party. Keep<br/>
yer head down, Henri! If they git only a sight o' the<br/>
top o' yer cap, they'll be down on us like a breeze o'<br/>
wind."<br/>
<br/>
"Ha! let dem come!" said Henri.<br/>
<br/>
"They'll come without askin' yer leave," remarked<br/>
Joe, dryly.<br/>
<br/>
Notwithstanding his defiant expression, Henri had<br/>
sufficient prudence to induce him to bend his head and<br/>
shoulders, and in a few minutes they reached the<br/>
shelter of the willows unseen by the savages. At least<br/>
so thought Henri, Joe was not quite sure about it, and<br/>
Dick hoped for the best.<br/>
<br/>
In the course of half-an-hour the last of the Camanchees<br/>
was seen to hover for a second on the horizon,<br/>
like a speck of black against the sky, and then to disappear.<br/>
<br/>
Immediately the three hunters vaulted on their steeds<br/>
and resumed their journey; but before that evening<br/>
closed they had sad evidence of the savage nature of<br/>
the band from which they had escaped. On passing<br/>
the brow of a slight eminence, Dick, who rode first,<br/>
observed that Crusoe stopped and snuffed the breeze in<br/>
an anxious, inquiring manner.<br/>
<br/>
"What is't, pup?" said Dick, drawing up, for he<br/>
knew that his faithful dog never gave a false alarm.<br/>
<br/>
Crusoe replied by a short, uncertain bark, and then<br/>
bounding forward, disappeared behind a little wooded<br/>
knoll. In another moment a long, dismal howl floated<br/>
over the plains. There was a mystery about the dog's<br/>
conduct which, coupled with his melancholy cry, struck<br/>
the travellers with a superstitious feeling of dread, as<br/>
they sat looking at each other in surprise.<br/>
<br/>
"Come, let's clear it up," cried Joe Blunt, shaking<br/>
the reins of his steed, and galloping forward. A few<br/>
strides brought them to the other side of the knoll,<br/>
where, scattered upon the torn and bloody turf, they<br/>
discovered the scalped and mangled remains of about<br/>
twenty or thirty human beings. Their skulls had been<br/>
cleft by the tomahawk and their breasts pierced by the<br/>
scalping-knife, and from the position in which many of<br/>
them lay it was evident that they had been slain while<br/>
asleep.<br/>
<br/>
Joe's brow flushed and his lips became tightly compressed<br/>
as he muttered between his set teeth, "Their<br/>
skins are white."<br/>
<br/>
A short examination sufficed to show that the men<br/>
who had thus been barbarously murdered while they<br/>
slept had been a band of trappers or hunters, but what<br/>
their errand had been, or whence they came, they could<br/>
not discover.<br/>
<br/>
Everything of value had been carried off, and all the<br/>
scalps had been taken. Most of the bodies, although<br/>
much mutilated, lay in a posture that led our hunters<br/>
to believe they had been killed while asleep; but one or<br/>
two were cut almost to pieces, and from the blood-bespattered<br/>
and trampled sward around, it seemed as if<br/>
they had struggled long and fiercely for life. Whether<br/>
or not any of the savages had been slain, it was impossible<br/>
to tell, for if such had been the case, their<br/>
comrades, doubtless, had carried away their bodies.<br/>
<br/>
That they had been slaughtered by the party of Camanchees<br/>
who had been seen at daybreak was quite clear to<br/>
Joe; but his burning desire to revenge the death of the<br/>
white men had to be stifled, as his party was so small.<br/>
<br/>
Long afterwards it was discovered that this was a<br/>
band of trappers who, like those mentioned at the beginning<br/>
of this volume, had set out to avenge the death<br/>
of a comrade; but God, who has retained the right of<br/>
vengeance in his own hand, saw fit to frustrate their<br/>
purpose, by giving them into the hands of the savages<br/>
whom they had set forth to slay.<br/>
<br/>
As it was impossible to bury so many bodies, the<br/>
travellers resumed their journey, and left them to bleach<br/>
there in the wilderness; but they rode the whole of<br/>
that day almost without uttering a word.<br/>
<br/>
Meanwhile the Camanchees, who had observed the<br/>
trio, and had ridden away at first for the purpose of<br/>
deceiving them into the belief that they had passed<br/>
unobserved, doubled on their track, and took a long<br/>
sweep in order to keep out of sight until they could<br/>
approach under the shelter of a belt of woodland<br/>
towards which the travellers now approached.<br/>
<br/>
The Indians adopted this course instead of the easier<br/>
method of simply pursuing so weak a party, because<br/>
the plains at this part were bordered by a long stretch<br/>
of forest into which the hunters could have plunged,<br/>
and rendered pursuit more difficult, if not almost useless.<br/>
The detour thus taken was so extensive that the shades<br/>
of evening were beginning to descend before they could<br/>
put their plan into execution. The forest lay about a<br/>
mile to the right of our hunters, like some dark mainland, of which<br/>
the<br/>
prairie was the sea and the scattered<br/>
clumps of wood the islands.<br/>
<br/>
"There's no lack o' game here," said Dick Varley,<br/>
pointing to a herd of buffaloes which rose at their<br/>
approach and fled away towards the wood.<br/>
<br/>
"I think we'll ha' thunder soon," remarked Joe. "I<br/>
never feel it onnatteral hot like this without lookin' out<br/>
for a plump."<br/>
<br/>
"Ha! den ve better look hout for one goot tree to<br/>
get b'low," suggested Henri. "Voilà!" he added, pointing<br/>
with his finger towards the plain; "dere am a lot<br/>
of wild hosses."<br/>
<br/>
A troop of about thirty wild horses appeared, as he<br/>
spoke, on the brow of a ridge, and advanced slowly<br/>
towards them.<br/>
<br/>
"Hist!" exclaimed Joe, reining up; "hold on, lads.<br/>
Wild horses! my rifle to a pop-gun there's wilder men<br/>
on t'other side o' them."<br/>
<br/>
"What mean you, Joe?" inquired Dick, riding close<br/>
up.<br/>
<br/>
"D'ye see the little lumps on the shoulder o' each<br/>
horse?" said Joe. "Them's Injun's <i>feet</i>; an' if we don't<br/>
want to lose our scalps we'd better make for the forest."<br/>
<br/>
Joe proved himself to be in earnest by wheeling<br/>
round and making straight for the thick wood as fast as<br/>
his horse could run. The others followed, driving the<br/>
pack-horses before them.<br/>
<br/>
The effect of this sudden movement on the so-called<br/>
"wild horses" was very remarkable, and to one unacquainted<br/>
with the habits of the Camanchee Indians<br/>
must have appeared almost supernatural. In the twinkling<br/>
of an eye every steed had a rider on its back, and<br/>
before the hunters had taken five strides in the direction<br/>
of the forest, the whole band were in hot pursuit,<br/>
yelling like furies.<br/>
<br/>
The manner in which these Indians accomplish this<br/>
feat is very singular, and implies great activity and<br/>
strength of muscle on the part of the savages.<br/>
<br/>
The Camanchees are low in stature, and usually are<br/>
rather corpulent. In their movements on foot they are<br/>
heavy and ungraceful, and they are, on the whole, a<br/>
slovenly and unattractive race of men. But the instant<br/>
they mount their horses they seem to be entirely<br/>
changed, and surprise the spectator with the ease and<br/>
elegance of their movements. Their great and distinctive<br/>
peculiarity as horsemen is the power they have<br/>
acquired of throwing themselves suddenly on either side<br/>
of their horse's body, and clinging on in such a way<br/>
that no part of them is visible from the other side<br/>
save the foot by which they cling. In this manner<br/>
they approach their enemies at full gallop, and, without<br/>
rising again to the saddle, discharge their arrows at<br/>
them over the horses' backs, or even under their<br/>
necks.<br/>
<br/>
This apparently magical feat is accomplished by<br/>
means of a halter of horse-hair, which is passed round<br/>
under the neck of the horse and both ends braided into<br/>
the mane, on the withers, thus forming a loop which<br/>
hangs under the neck and against the breast. This<br/>
being caught by the hand, makes a sling, into which the<br/>
elbow falls, taking the weight of the body on the middle<br/>
of the upper arm. Into this loop the rider drops suddenly<br/>
and fearlessly, leaving his heel to hang over the<br/>
horse's back to steady him, and also to restore him to his<br/>
seat when desired.<br/>
<br/>
By this stratagem the Indians had approached on the<br/>
present occasion almost within rifle range before they<br/>
were discovered, and it required the utmost speed of the<br/>
hunters' horses to enable them to avoid being overtaken.<br/>
One of the Indians, who was better mounted<br/>
than his fellows, gained on the fugitives so much that<br/>
he came within arrow range, but reserved his shaft until<br/>
they were close on the margin of the wood, when, being<br/>
almost alongside of Henri, he fitted an arrow to his<br/>
bow. Henri's eye was upon him, however. Letting go<br/>
the line of the pack-horse which he was leading, he<br/>
threw forward his rifle; but at the same moment the<br/>
savage disappeared behind his horse, and an arrow<br/>
whizzed past the hunter's ear.<br/>
<br/>
Henri fired at the horse, which dropped instantly,<br/>
hurling the astonished Camanchee upon the ground, where<br/>
he lay for some time insensible. In a few seconds<br/>
pursued and pursuers entered the wood, where both had<br/>
to advance with caution, in order to avoid being swept<br/>
off by the overhanging branches of the trees.<br/>
<br/>
Meanwhile the sultry heat of which Joe had formerly<br/>
spoken increased considerably, and a rumbling noise,<br/>
as if of distant thunder, was heard; but the flying<br/>
hunters paid no attention to it, for the led horses gave<br/>
them so much trouble, and retarded their flight so much,<br/>
that the Indians were gradually and visibly gaining on<br/>
them.<br/>
<br/>
"We'll ha' to let the packs go," said Joe, somewhat<br/>
bitterly, as he looked over his shoulder. "Our scalps'll<br/>
pay for't, if we don't."<br/>
<br/>
Henri uttered a peculiar and significant <i>hiss</i> between<br/>
his teeth, as he said, "P'r'aps ve better stop<br/>
and fight!"<br/>
<br/>
Dick said nothing, being resolved to do exactly what<br/>
Joe Blunt bid him; and Crusoe, for reasons best known<br/>
to himself, also said nothing, but bounded along beside<br/>
his master's horse, casting an occasional glance upwards<br/>
to catch any signal that might be given.<br/>
<br/>
They had passed over a considerable space of ground,<br/>
and were forcing their way at the imminent hazard of<br/>
their necks through a densely-clothed part of the wood,<br/>
when the sound above referred to increased, attracting<br/>
the attention of both parties. In a few seconds the<br/>
air was filled with a steady and continuous rumbling<br/>
sound, like the noise of a distant cataract. Pursuers<br/>
and fugitives drew rein instinctively, and came to a<br/>
dead stand; while the rumbling increased to a roar, and<br/>
evidently approached them rapidly, though as yet nothing<br/>
to cause it could be seen, except that there was a dense,<br/>
dark cloud overspreading the sky to the southward.<br/>
The air was oppressively still and hot.<br/>
<br/>
"What can it be?" inquired Dick, looking at Joe, who<br/>
was gazing with an expression of wonder, not unmixed<br/>
with concern, at the southern sky.<br/>
<br/>
"Dun'no', boy. I've bin more in the woods than in<br/>
the clearin' in my day, but I niver heerd the likes o'<br/>
that."<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
"It am like t'ondre," said Henri; "mais it nevair do<br/>
stop."<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
This was true. The sound was similar to continuous,<br/>
uninterrupted thunder. On it came with a magnificent<br/>
roar that shook the very earth, and revealed<br/>
itself at last in the shape of a mighty whirlwind. In<br/>
a moment the distant woods bent before it, and fell like<br/>
grass before the scythe. It was a whirling hurricane,<br/>
accompanied by a deluge of rain such as none of the<br/>
party had ever before witnessed. Steadily, fiercely,<br/>
irresistibly it bore down upon them, while the crash of<br/>
falling, snapping, and uprooting trees mingled with the<br/>
dire artillery of that sweeping storm like the musketry<br/>
on a battle-field.<br/>
<br/>
"Follow me, lads!" shouted Joe, turning his horse<br/>
and dashing at full speed towards a rocky eminence<br/>
that offered shelter. But shelter was not needed. The<br/>
storm was clearly defined. Its limits were as distinctly<br/>
marked by its Creator as if it had been a living intelligence<br/>
sent forth to put a belt of desolation round<br/>
the world; and, although the edge of devastation was<br/>
not five hundred yards from the rock behind which the<br/>
hunters were stationed, only a few drops of ice-cold<br/>
rain fell upon them.<br/>
<br/>
It passed directly between the Camanchee Indians<br/>
and their intended victims, placing between them a<br/>
barrier which it would have taken days to cut through.<br/>
The storm blew for an hour, then it travelled onward in<br/>
its might, and was lost in the distance. Whence it<br/>
came and whither it went none could tell, but far as<br/>
the eye could see on either hand an avenue a quarter<br/>
of a mile wide was cut through the forest. It had<br/>
levelled everything with the dust; the very grass was<br/>
beaten flat; the trees were torn, shivered, snapped<br/>
across, and crushed; and the earth itself in many<br/>
places was ploughed up and furrowed with deep scars.<br/>
The chaos was indescribable, and it is probable that<br/>
centuries will not quite obliterate the work of that<br/>
single hour.<br/>
<br/>
While it lasted, Joe and his comrades remained<br/>
speechless and awe-stricken. When it passed, no Indians<br/>
were to be seen. So our hunters remounted their<br/>
steeds, and, with feelings of gratitude to God for having<br/>
delivered them alike from savage foes and from the destructive<br/>
power of the whirlwind, resumed their journey<br/>
towards the Mustang Valley.<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
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