The Buffalo Runners: A Tale of the Red River Plains by R. M. Ballantyne (e reading malayalam books .TXT) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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âDid they ever want to help it?â asked Morel quietly.
âO yesâas you shall hear. Well, one day my mother was living with all our tribeâI say our tribe because my mother was an Indianâwith all our tribe, in a great dark gorge of the Rocky Mountains. The braves had gone out to hunt that day, but my mother stayed behind with the women and children. I was a little foolish child at that timeâtoo young to hunt or fight. My fatherâa French Canadianâhe was dead.
âWe knewâmy mother and Iâthat the braves would be home soon. We expected them every minute. While we were waiting for them, my mother went into the bush to pick berries. There she discovered a war-party of our enemies. They were preparing to attack our village, for they knew the men were away, and they wanted the scalps of the women and children. But they did not know the exact spot where our wigwams were pitched, and were just going, after a feed, to look for it.
âMy mother ran home with the news, and immediately roused the camp, and made them get ready to fly to meet the returning men.
ââBut, my daughter,â said an old chief, who had stayed in camp, âour enemies are young and active; they will quickly overtake us before we meet our men.â
ââNo,â said my mother, âI will stop them. Get ready, and set off quickly.â
âShe then ran back on her trailâmy mother was a tremendous runnerâsuperb! She came to a narrow place where our enemies would have to pass. A very thick tree grew there. She climbed it, and hid among the branches. It projected beyond a precipice and overhung a stream. Soon after that she saw the enemy advancing, step by step, slowly, cautiously, like men who dread an ambush, and with glances quick and solemn from side to side, like men who see a foe in every stump and stone.â
La Certe paused at this point. He was an adept at story-telling. His voice had slowed by degrees and become increasingly deep and solemn as he proceeded.
âNow,â continued he, in a higher tone, âmy mother did not fear that they would see her if they looked up when they passed the tree. She was too well hidden for that; but she was not sure what the effect of her voice would be, for she had never tried it in that way before. However, she was full of courage. She resembled me in thatâbold as a lion! She began to sing. Low and soft at the beginning, like a dream of song.
âAt the first note the Indians haltedâevery man; each in the position in which he was fixed. If a foot was up he kept it up. If both feet were down he left them down. The feet that were up came slowly to the ground when the Indians got tired, but no one took another step. My motherâs voice was a weird voice. It sounded as if the place from which it came was nowhereâor anywhereâor everywhere! Slowly the painted heads turned from side to side as far as they could go, and the glaring eyes turned a little further. A creeping fear came over them. They trembled. They turned pale. That could be easily seen through the paint. My mother saw it! She became more courageous and sang out in her most pathetic strain. The Indians wept. That was quite visible. My mother saw it. Her great object was to delay the attack until our men had time to arrive. She tried a war-song, but that was not so successful. It was too commonplace. Besides, in her energy she shook the branches, and that drew attention to the tree. My mother thought that she was in danger then; but fortune favoured her. It always favours the brave. I know this from experience.
âShe had just come to a terrific whoop in the war-song when she slipped off her branch and the whoop increased to a death-yell as she went crashing headlong through the branches and down into the stream at the foot of the precipice.
âWater! water!â exclaimed La Certe at this point, holding out both hands. âI can never pass this part of my story without burning thirst!â
A mug of water was handed him.
âPoor fellowâhave some brandy in it,â said a sympathetic hearer, hastily getting out his bottle.
La Certe held out his mug impatiently for the brandy, drained the mug, and cleared his voice.
âWasâwas your mother killed?â asked the sympathiser, earnestly.
âKilled? No. Impossible! My mother could not be killed because her destiny was not yet fulfilled. No: there was a deep pool right under the tree. She fell into that with a plunge that echoed from cliff to cliff. The Indians were profoundly superstitious. All Indians are not so, but these Indians were. They waited not for more. They turned and fled as if all the evil spirits in the Rocky Mountains were chasing them. They reached their wigwams breathless, and told their squaws that one of the spirits of a mountain stream had sat among the branches of a tree and sung to them. It had told them that the right time for attacking their foes had not yet come. Then it sang them a war-song descriptive of their final victory, and, just after uttering a tremendous war-whoop, it had dived back into its native stream.â
âWell done!â exclaimed an enthusiastic Canadian.
âBut what became of your mother?â asked Morel.
âOh! she swam ashore. My mother was a splendid swimmer. I know it, for she taught me.â
âWas it a long swim?â asked a sceptical sailor, who was one of the emigrants.
âHow?âwhat mean you?â demanded La Certe, sternly.
âI only want to know if she took long to swim ashore out oâ that pool,â said the sceptic, simply.
La Certe cast on him a glance of suspicion, and replied that his mother had found no difficulty in getting out of the pool.
âIs the old lady alive yet?â asked the pertinacious sceptic.
âOf course not. She died long long agoâthirty years ago.â
âWhat! before you was born? Thatâs strange, isnât it?â
âNo, but you not understand. I suppose my speech is not plain to you. I said three years ago.â
âAh! thatâs more like it. I only missed what you said,â returned the sceptic, whose name was Fred Jenkins, âfor Iâve lived a while in France, and understand your lingo pretty well. Pass that goose, Morel, if you have left anything on it. This air oâ the wilderness beats the air oâ the sea itself for givinâ a fellow a twist.â
The remarks of Jenkins, while they did not absolutely destroy the confidence of the Swiss party, shook it enough to show the wily half-breed that he must do something if possible to re-establish his credit. He therefore volunteered another song, which was gladly accepted and highly appreciated; for, as we have said, La Certe possessed a really good and tuneful voice, and these immigrants were a musical people.
While this was going on at the Swiss camp-fires an incident occurred at the fire round which the McKay-Davidson party was assembled, which deserves particular notice.
Old McKay was giving some directions to Fergus; Duncan junior was seated opposite Dan Davidson, smoking his pipe, and Elspie had gone into her tent, when Slowfoot, the spouse of La Certe, drew near.
âCome along, old girl,â exclaimed McKay senior. âIt iss some baccy you will be wantinâ, Iâll wager.â
Slowfoot did not reply in words, but the smile upon her face was eloquent.
âCome away, then,â continued the hospitable Highlander. âYou shall hev a pipe of it, whatever.â
He handed her a large plug of tobacco, and the woman, sitting down close to young Duncan, produced her pipe, and drew out a knife for the purpose of cutting up the tobacco.
âHallo!â exclaimed Duncan, âwhere did you get hold oâ my knife?â
He stopped abruptlyâa little confused in spite of himself. For the moment he had quite forgotten that the knife had been left in the camp where he had slain Perrin, and the sudden sight of it had thrown him off his guard. It was now too late to unsay the words, but not too late to mislead his hearers.
âI got it from Marie Blanc,â said Slowfoot with a look of surprise. âDoes the knife belong to Cloudbrow?â
âI think it does. Iâm almost sure it iss mine. Let me see it,â returned Duncan, taking the knife from the womanâs hand, and examining it with cool and critical deliberation.
âNo,â continued he, âit iss not mine, but very like one that I lostâso like that I felt sure at first it wass mine.â
Men who lie, usually overact their part. Duncan glanced suspiciously at Dan to see how he took the explanation as he returned the knife to Slowfoot, and Dan observed the glance, as being uncalled forâunnaturalâin the circumstances.
Dan was by no means of a suspicious nature, nevertheless the glance haunted him for many a day after that. Suspicion once aroused is a ghost which is not easily laid. He tried to shake it off, and he carefully, loyally, kept it confined in his own breast; but, do what he would, he could not banish entirely from his mind that Duncan McKayâthe brother of his Elspieâhad some sort of guilty knowledge of the murder of poor Henri Perrin.
When the bright warm days and cool starry nights of the Indian summer gave place to the sharp days and frosty nights of early winterâwhen young ice formed on the lakes and rendered canoeing impossible, and the ducks and geese had fled to warmer climes, and the Frost King had sent his first messengers of snow to cover the wilderness with a winding-sheet and herald his return to the Winter Palaceâthen it was that the banished Red River settlers began to feel the pinch of poverty and to understand the full extent of the calamity that had befallen them.
We have not space to follow them through all the details of that winter at Jack River. Some died, all suffered more or less; but they had to endure it, for escape from the country to the civilised world was even more difficult and hopeless than escape from the dreaded wilds of Siberia. The men hunted, fished under the ice, trapped, and sustained themselves and their families in life during the long, dreary winter; the only gain being that they became more or less expert at the Red-manâs work and ways of life.
Only two of the Indians remained with them to help them over their difficultiesânamely, OkĂ©matan and Kateegoose, with their respective squaws. These last were invaluable as the makers of moccasins and duffle socks and leathern coats, without which existence in such a climate would have been impossible. They also imparted their knowledge in such matters to the squaws of the white men.
There was one friend, however, who did not remain with the settlers when things began to look dismal around them. This was the amiable, musical, story-telling La Certe. That tender-hearted man could not endure the sight of human distress. If he could not relieve it, he felt constrained to shut his eyes to it and to flee from it. At the first indication of the approach of winter he had come to old McKay with that peculiarly mild, humble, deprecatory expression of countenance with which he was wont to preface an appeal for assistance of some sort.
âWhat iss it you will be wantinâ now?â demanded the old man, rather testily, for he had an aversion to the half-breedâs sneaking ways. âSurely you will not be wantinâ more powder anâ shot efter the supply I gave you last week?â
O no! nothing could be further from the mind of La Certe. He had plenty of ammunition and provisions. He had only come to say that he was going back toâtoâRed River.
âWeel, weel,â
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