<h3><SPAN name="Ch_23" name="Ch_23">Chapter XXIII.</SPAN></h3>
<h2>Border Chivalry.</h2>
<p>As the scout uttered these words, the Apache whirled like
lightning and drew his knife. His swarthy, painted face glowed with
passion, and his black eyes twinkled with a deadly light. Seeing
that he had no weapon but the knife, Sut Simpson, with a certain
rude chivalry that did him credit, left his rifle leaning against
the tree, while he advanced with a weapon corresponding to that of
his enemy, so that both stood upon the same footing.</p>
<p>“Lone Wolf is glad to meet the white dog that he has
hunted so long,” said the chieftain, speaking English like a
native.</p>
<p>With a sardonic grin Sut replied:</p>
<p>“That’s played out, old
Pockared”—alluding to the chieftain’s pitted
face. “I’m just as mad at yer as I kin be, without yer
getting up any fancy didoes to upset my nerves. I’ve come for
yer this time, and the best thing yer kin do is to proceed to
business.”</p>
<p>They were facing each other with drawn knives—almost toe
to toe, and each waiting for the other to lead off. It would have
been hard to tell which stood the best chance of winning.</p>
<p>Lone Wolf suddenly sprang forward like a panther, and made a
vicious lunge with his knife, Sut easily avoiding it by leaping
back, when, in turn, he made a similar attempt upon his adversary,
who escaped in precisely the same manner. But the scout noticed an
unaccountable thing. Lone Wolf had dropped his knife!</p>
<p>True, he picked it up like a flash, and put himself on guard,
but how it was that a veteran like him could have made such a slip
was totally inexplainable to his foe. But the explanation came the
next moment, when the chief, without removing his eyes from those
of the white man, cautiously changed the knife to his left hand.
His right arm was injured in some way, so that it was unreliable.
He had shown this, first by dropping the weapon while attempting to
use it, and he showed it again by shifting it to his left hand,
thus placing himself at a frightful disadvantage.</p>
<p>Sut saw no wound, yet there could be no doubt of the truth, and
his feelings changed on the instant. He felt himself the meanest of
men to attempt to overcome an almost helpless foe.</p>
<p>“Lone Wolf,” said he, still looking him straight in
the eyes, “why don’t yer hold yer knife in the hand
that yer generally do?”</p>
<p>“Lone Wolf can slay the dog of a white man with which hand
he may choose.”</p>
<p>“Yer haven’t been able to do it with both hands
during all these years that you’ve been tryin’, when
yer’ve had yer whole tribe to help yer; but don’t make
a fool of yerself, Lone Wolf. Are your right arm hurt?”</p>
<p>“Lone Wolf will fight the white dog with his strong
arm.”</p>
<p>“No, yer don’t—that’s played out,”
growled the scout, shoving his knife back in his girdle. “I
don’t love yer ’any more than I love the devil, and I
felt happy to think that I had got a chance at last to git square
with yer; but when I lift the top-knot of Lone Wolf and slide him
under, he’s got to have the same chance that I have. I
don’t believe you’d act that way toward me; but, then,
you’re a redskin, and that makes the difference. Lone Wolf,
we’ll adjourn the fight till you’re yerself
agin.”</p>
<p>And, deliberately turning away, the scout vaulted upon the back
of the mustang, cutting the lariat that held him by a sweep of the
knife.</p>
<p>“I s’pose you’ll own I’ve got some claim
on this beast; so good-by.”</p>
<div class="figure"><SPAN href="images/236_full.png" title=
"“I s’pose you’ll own I’ve got some claim on this beast.”"
target="_blank"><ANTIMG src="images/236_small.png" alt="A man on a horse with a gun talks to an Indian standing with a knife." id="img236" name="img236" width-obs="360" height-obs="583" /></SPAN>
<p>“I S’POSE YOU’LL OWN I’VE GOT SOME CLAIM
ON THIS BEAST.”</p>
</div>
<p>And, without turning to look at him again, he rode deliberately
away.</p>
<p>The Apache stood like a statute staring at him until he was
hidden from view by the intervening trees. Then he turned and
walked slowly in the opposite direction, no doubt with strange
thoughts in his brain.</p>
<p>“I don’t know how that scamp will take it,”
muttered Sut, as he rode along. “He’s one of the
ugliest dogs that ever wore a painted face; and if he could catch
me with a broken arm or head, he wouldn’t want anything
better than to chop me up into mincemeat; but, as I told the old
varmint himself, he’s an Injin and I ain’t, and
that’s what’s the matter.”</p>
<p>The wood was too dense and the ground too uneven to permit him
to ride at a faster gait than a walk, but long before the appointed
hour was up, he rejoined his friends, who were as surprised as
pleased at his prompt reappearance.</p>
<p>“But where are the bastes that ye promised to furnish
us?” inquired Mickey, who had very little relish for the
prospect of walking any portion of the distance homeward.</p>
<p>“That’s what I’ll have for yer before the sun
goes down,” was the confident reply. “I’ll get
you one hoss, anyway, which, maybe, is just as good as two, for the
weight of the younker don’t make no difference, and we kin
git along with one beast better than two.”</p>
<p>“I submit to your suparior judgment,” said the
Irishman, deferentially, “and would suggist that the sooner
the same quadruped is procured the better all round. I hope the
thing won’t be delayed, as me aunt obsarved when the joodge
sintenced her husband to be hung.”</p>
<p>Sut explained that his plan was to ride some distance further,
to a spot which he had in mind, where they would be safer against
being trailed. There, consequently, they could wait with more
security while he went for the much-needed horse. Time was
precious, and no one realized it more than Sut Simpson. He turned
the head of his mustang toward the left, and, after he had started,
leaped to the ground and walked ahead, acting the part of a guide
for the horse as well as for his friends.</p>
<p>The surface over which they journeyed was of the roughest
nature. The fact of it was, the scout was working the party out
toward the open prairie, without availing himself of the
pass—an undertaking which would have been almost impossible
to any one else. At the same time, by picking his way over the
rocky surface, and using all means possible to conceal their trail,
he hoped to baffle any pursuit that might be attempted.</p>
<p>Lone Wolf was not the redskin to allow such a formidable enemy
as Sut Simpson to walk away unmolested, even though he had received
an unexpected piece of magnanimity at his hands. He had learned
that it was he who had played such havoc among his warriors the day
before, who had deceived them by cunningly uttered signals, and had
drawn away the redskins sufficiently to permit his two intended
victims to walk out of his clutches. It had been a series of
unparalleled exploits, the results of which would have exasperated
the mildest tempered Indian ever known.</p>
<p>These thoughts were constantly in the mind of the scout as he
picked out the path for his equine and human companions. He took
unusual pains, for a great deal depended upon his success in hiding
the trail as much as possible. Perhaps it is not correct to say
that the Apaches could be thrown entirely off the scent, if they
should set themselves to work to run the fugitives under cover.
None knew this better than Sut himself, but he knew also that the
thing could be partially done, and a partial success could be made
a perfect one. That is, by adopting all the artifices at his
command, the work of trailing could be rendered so difficult that
it would be greatly delayed—so that it would require hours
for the Apaches to unearth the hiding-place. And Sut meant to
accomplish his self-imposed task during those few hours, so as to
rejoin his friends, and resume their flight before the sharp-witted
pursuers could overhaul them.</p>
<p>The journey, therefore, was made one of the most difficult
imaginable. The mustang was unshod, and yet he clambered up steep
places, and over rocks, and through gravelly gullies, where the
ordinary horse would have been powerless. The animal seemed to
enter into the spirit of the occasion and his performances again
and again excited the wonder and admiration of Mickey and Fred. The
creature had undergone the severest kind of training at the hands
of an unsurpassed veteran of the frontier.</p>
<p>This laborious journeying continued for a couple of hours,
during which it seemed to the man and lad that they passed over
several miles of the roughest traveling they had ever witnessed.
The mustang had fallen several times, but he sprang up again like a
dog and showed no signs of injury or fatigue. Finally Sut made a
halt, just as Mickey was on the point of protesting, and, turning
about, so as to face his companions, he smiled in his peculiar way
as he spoke.</p>
<p>“You’ve stood it pretty well for greenhorns, and now
I’m going to give yer a good rest.”</p>
<p>“Do you maan to go into camp for a week or a month, or
until the warm season is over?”</p>
<p>“I’m going to leave yer here, while I go for some
hoss flesh, and it’ll take longer time than
before.”</p>
<p>But the Irishman insisted that he should be allowed to accompany
the scout upon this dangerous expedition.</p>
<p>“For the raison that ye are going to pick out this animal
for <em>me</em>,” he added, “how do I know but what
ye’ll pick out some ring-boned, spavined critter that trots
sideways, and is blind in both eyes?”</p>
<p>Fred, who dreaded the long spell of dreary waiting which seemed
before him, asked that he might make one of the company; but Sut
would not consent, and he objected to both. He finally compromised
by agreeing to take the Irishman, but insisted that the lad should
stay behind with his mustang.</p>
<p>“A younker like you couldn’t do us a bit of
good,” added Sut, by way of explanation, “and like as
not yer’d get us into the worst kind of difficulty. Better
stay whar you be, rest and be ready to mount your new animal as
soon as we’re back, and scoot away for New Boston.”</p>
<p>“How soon will you be back?” he asked, feeling that
he ought to make no objection to the decision.</p>
<p>The forenoon was about half gone, and the scout looked up at the
sky, removed his coon-skin cap, and thoughtfully wrinkled his
brows, as though he were solving some important mental problem.</p>
<p>“Yer may skulp me, younker, but it’s a mighty hard
thing to tell. Now I got back with my own animile a good deal
sooner than I expected, but that same thing ain’t likely to
happen agin. More likely it’ll be t’other way, and we
may be gone all day, and p’raps all night.”</p>
<p>“And what am I to do all that time?”</p>
<p>“Wait; that’ll be easy enough, arter such a rough
tramp as I’ve given yer.”</p>
<p>“But suppose some of the Indians come here; I
haven’t got any gun or pistol, so what shall I do?”</p>
<p>“The hoss thar will let you know when any of the varmints
come sneaking round, and he’ll do it, too, afore they know
whar yer be, so you’ll have time to dig out. I ain’t
much in the way of using a knife,” added the scout. “I
depends on me gun for a long range, and when I gets into close
quarters, I throw this yer (tapping the handle of his knife), round
careless like; but I’ve got a little plaything yer that has
stood me well, once or twice, and if it’s any help to yer,
why, yer are welcome to it. It was give to me by an officer down at
Fort Massachusetts.”</p>
<p>As he spoke, the scout drew a small revolver, beautifully
mounted and ornamented with silver, which he handed to the lad,
who, as may be supposed, was delighted with the weapon.</p>
<p>“Just the thing, exactly,” he said, as he turned it
over in his hand. “There are five barrels.”</p>
<p>“And every one is loaded,” added the scout.
“The pill which it gives a redskin ain’t very big, but
it’s sure, and it’ll hunt for him a good ways off; so
the dog is apt to bite better than you expect.”</p>
<p>Sut told him that he expected to return by nightfall, and
possible before, but they might be kept away until morning. Under
any circumstances, whether successful or not, they would be back
within twenty-four hours, for they could better afford to wait and
repeat the attempt than to stay away longer than that. The reason
for this decision was that if any of the Apaches should attempt to
trail them, and there was every reason to believe that they would,
they would not need more than twenty-four hours to track them to
this hiding place. It was especially necessary that a collision
with them should be avoided as long as possible, for the whites had
everything to gain by such a course. As time was valuable, Sut did
not delay the departure, and, as he and Mickey gave the lad a
cheery good-by, they turned off to the right, and a minute later
disappeared from view.</p>
<p>“Here I am alone again,” he said to himself,
“excepting the horse, and I’ve got a loaded revolver.
Sut don’t think those Apaches can get here before to-morrow
morning, and he knows more than I do about it, so I hope he’s
right. We’ve got thus far on our way home, and it would be a
pity if we should fail.”</p>
<p>As he looked around, he saw nothing in the place or surroundings
which would have commended it to him. There was water in the shape
of a trickling stream, and that was plenty everywhere, but there
was scarcely a spear of grass visible. The vegetation was stunted
and unthrifty in appearance. There were stones and rocks
everywhere, with nothing that could serve as a shelter in case of
storm. He searched for a considerable distance around, but was
unable to find even a shelving rock, beneath which he might creep
and gather himself up if one of those terrific tempests peculiar to
this region should happen to strike him. Nor did there seem to be
any suitable refuge if the Apaches should attack him before he
could retreat.</p>
<p>He might crouch down behind some of the boulders and rocks, but
the make-up of the surface around him was so similar that three red
skins could surround him with perfect ease and without any danger
to themselves. Fred therefore made up his mind that he was in about
as uncomfortable a situation as a fugitive could well be.</p>
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