Twice Bought by R. M. Ballantyne (fun books to read for adults .txt) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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âI expected to meet you here, Betty, because I have perceived that you are fond of the place, and, believe me, I would not have presumed to intrude, were it not that I wish to ask one or two questions, the answers to which may affect my future movements.â
He paused, and Bettyâs heart fluttered, for she could not help remembering former meetings when Tom had tried to win her affections, and when she had felt it her duty to discourage him. She made no reply to this rather serious beginning to the interview, but dropped her eyes on the turf, for she saw that the youth was gazing at her with a very mingled and peculiar expression.
âTell me,â he resumed, after a few momentsâ thought, âdo you feel quite safe with these Indians?â
âQuite,â replied the girl with a slight elevation of the eyebrows; âthey are unusually gentle and good-natured people. Besides, their chief would lay down his life for my fatherâhe is so grateful. Oh yes, I feel perfectly safe here.â
âBut what does your father think. He is always so fearlessâI might say recklessâthat I donât feel certain as to his real opinion. Have you heard him speaking about the chance of that rascal Stalker following him up?â
âYes; he has spoken freely about that. He fully expects that Stalker will search for us, but considers that he will not dare to attack us while we live with so strong a band of Indians, and, as Stalkerâs followers wonât hang about here very long for the mere purpose of pleasing their chief, especially when nothing is to be gained by it, father thinks that his enemy will be forced to go away. Besides, he has made up his mind to remain here for a long timeâmany months, it may be.â
âThat will do,â returned Tom, with a sigh of relief; âthen there will be no need for me toââ
âTo what?â asked Betty, seeing that the youth paused.
âForgive me if I do not say what I meant to. I have reasons forââ (he paused again)ââThen you are pleased with the way the people treat you?â
âOf course I am. They could not be kinder if I were one of themselves. And some of the women are so intelligent, too! You know I have picked up a good deal of the Indian language, and understand them pretty well, though I canât speak much, and youâve no idea what deep thinkers some of them are! There is Unacoâs mother, who looks so old and dried up and stupidâshe is one of the dearest old things I ever knew. Why,â continued the girl, with increasing animation, as she warmed with her subject, âthat old creature led me, the other night, into quite an earnest conversation about religion, and asked me ever so many questions about the ways of God with manâspeculative, difficult questions too, that almost puzzled me to answer. You may be sure I took the opportunity to explain to her Godâs great love to man in and through Jesus, andââ
She stopped abruptly, for Tom Brixton was at that moment regarding her with a steady and earnest gaze.
âYes,â he said, slowly, almost dreamily, âI can well believe you took your opportunity to commend Jesus to her. You did so once to me, andââ
Tom checked himself, as if with a great effort. The girl longed to hear more, but he did not finish the sentence. âWell,â he said, with a forced air of gaiety, âI have sought you here to tell you that I am going off onâonâa long hunting expedition. Going at onceâbut I would not leave without bidding you good-bye.â
âGoing away, Mr Brixton!â exclaimed Betty, in genuine surprise.
âYes. As you see, I am ready for the field, with rifle and wallet, firebag and blanket.â
âBut you are not yet strong enough,â said Betty.
âOh! yes, I amâstronger than I look. Besides, that will mend every day. I donât intend to say goodbye to Westly or any one, because I hate to have people try to dissuade me from a thing when my mind is made up. I only came to say good-bye to you, because I wish you to tell Fred and your father that I am grateful for all their kindness to me, and that it will be useless to follow me. Perhaps we may meet again, Betty,â he added, still in the forced tone of lightness, while he gently took the girlâs hand in his and shook it; âbut the dangers of the wilderness are numerous, and, as you have once or twice told me, we âknow not what a day or an hour may bring forth.ââ (His tone had deepened suddenly to that of intense earnestness)ââGod bless you, Betty; farewell.â
He dropped her hand, turned sharply on his heel, and walked swiftly away, never once casting a look behind.
Poor Tom! It was a severe wrench, but he had fought the battle manfully and gained the victory. In his new-born sense of personal unworthiness and strict Justice, he had come to the conclusion that he had forfeited the right to offer heart or hand to the Rose of Oregon. Whether he was right or wrong in his opinion we do not pretend to judge, but this does not alter the fact that a hard battle with self had been fought by him, and a great victory won.
But Tom neither felt nor looked very much like a conqueror. His heart seemed to be made of lead, and the strength of which he had so recently boasted seemed to have deserted him altogether after he had walked a few miles, insomuch that he was obliged to sit down on a bank to rest. Fear lest Fred or Paul should follow up his trail, however, infused new strength into his limbs, and he rose and pushed steadily on, for he was deeply impressed with the duty that lay upon himânamely, to get quickly, and as far as possible, away from the girl whom he could no longer hope to wed.
Thus, advancing at times with great animation, sitting down occasionally for short rests, and then resuming the march with renewed vigour, he travelled over the mountains without any definite end in view, beyond that to which we have already referred.
For some time after he was gone Betty stood gazing at the place in the thicket where he had disappeared, as if she half expected to see him return; then, heaving a deep sigh, and with a mingled expression of surprise, disappointment, and anxiety on her fair face, she hurried away to search for her father.
She found him returning to their tent with a load of firewood, and at once told him what had occurred.
âHeâll soon come back, Betty,â said Paul, with a significant smile. âWhen a young feller is fond of a lass, heâs as sure to return to her as water is sure to find its way as fast as it can to the bottom of a hill.â
Fred Westly thought the same, when Paul afterwards told him about the meeting, though he did not feel quite so sure about the return being immediate; but Mahoghany Drake differed from them entirely.
âDepend onât,â he said to his friend Paul, when, in the privacy of a retired spot on the mountain-side, they discussed the matterââdepend onât, that young feller ainât made oâ butter. What he says he will do heâll stick to, if Iâm any judge oâ human natur. Of course it ainât for me to guess why he should fling off in this fashion. Are ye sure heâs fond oâ your lass?â
âSure? Ay, as sure as I am that yon is the sun anâ not the moon a-shininâ in the sky.â
âHâm! thatâs strange. Anâ theyâve had no quarrel?â
âNone that I knows on. Moreover, they ainât bin used to quarrel. Bettyâs not one oâ that sortâdear lass. Sheâs always fair anâ above board; honest anâ straight forâard. Says âzactly what she means, anâ means what she says. Mister Tom ainât given to shilly-shallyinâ, neither. No, Iâm sure theyâve had no quarrel.â
âWell, itâs the old story,â said Drake, while a puzzled look flitted across his weather-beaten countenance, and the smoke issued more slowly from his unflagging pipe, âthe conduct oâ lovers is not to be accounted for. Howsever, thereâs one thing Iâm quite sure ofâthat he must be looked after.â
âDâye think so?â said Paul. âIâd have thought he was quite able to look arter himself.â
âNot just now,â returned the trapper; âheâs not yet got the better of his touch oâ starvation, anâ thereâs a chance oâ your friend Stalker, or Buxley, which dâye call him?â
âWhichever you like; he answers to either, or neither, as the case may be. Heâs best known as Stalker in these parts, though Buxley is his real name.â
âWell, then,â resumed Drake, âthereâs strong likelihood oâ him prowlinâ about here, and cominâ across the tracks oâ young Brixton; so, as I said before, he must be looked after, and Iâll take upon myself to do it.â
âWell, Iâll jine ye,â said Paul, âfor of course yeâll have to make up a party.â
âNot at all,â returned the trapper, with decision. âIâll do it best alone; leastwise Iâll take only little Tolly Trevor anâ Leapinâ Buck with me, for theyâre both smart anâ safe lads, and are burninâ keen to learn somethinâ oâ woodcraft.â
In accordance with this determination, Mahoghany Drake, Leaping Buck, and little Trevor set off next day and followed Tom Brixtonâs trail into the mountains. It was a broad trail and very perceptible, at least to an Indian or a trapper, for Tom had a natural swagger, which he could not shake off, even in the hour of his humiliation, and, besides, he had never been an adept at treading the western wilderness with the care which the red man finds needful in order to escape from, or baffle, his foes.
ââTis as well marked, aâmostâ said Drake, pausing to survey the trail, âas if heâd bin dragginâ a toboggan behind him.â
âYet a settlement man wouldnât see much of it,â remarked little Trevor; âeh! Buckie?â
The Indian boy nodded gravely. He emulated his father in this respect, and would have been ashamed to have given way to childish levity on what he was pleased to consider the war-path, but he had enough of the humorous in his nature to render the struggle to keep grave in Tollyâs presence a pretty severe one. Not that Tolly aimed at being either witty or funny, but he had a peculiarly droll expression of face, which added much point to whatever he said.
âHo!â exclaimed the trapper, after they had gone a little farther; âhereâs a trail that even a settlement man could hardly fail to see. Thereâs bin fifty men or more. Dâye see it Tolly?â
âSee it? I should think so. Dâyou suppose I carry my eyes in my pocket?â
âCome now, lad,â said Drake, turning to Leaping Buck, âyou want to walk in your fatherâs tracks, no doubt. Read me this trail if ye can.â
The boy stepped forward with an air of dignity that Drake regarded as sublime and Tolly thought ludicrous, but the latter was too fond of his red friend to allow his feelings to betray themselves.
âAs the white trapper has truly said,â he began, âfifty men or more have passed this way. They are most of them white men, but three or four are Indians.â
âGood!â said Drake, with an approving nod; âI thought yeâd notice that. Well, go on.â
âThey were making straight for my fatherâs camp,â continued the lad, bending a stern look on the trail, âbut they turned sharp round, like the swallow, on coming to the trail of the white man Brixton, and followed it.â
âHow dâye know that, lad?â asked the trapper.
âBecause I see itâ returned the boy, promptly, pointing at the same time to a spot on the hill-side considerably above them, where the conformation of the land at a certain spot revealed enough of the trail of
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