Tales of Trail and Town by Bret Harte (ebook offline reader TXT) đ
- Author: Bret Harte
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âYour sister is exciting quite a sensation here,â he said. âDo you know that some of these idiotic braves and the Medicine Man insist upon it that sheâs A SQUAW, and that youâre keeping her in captivity against your plighted faith to them! Youâll excuse me,â he went on with an attempt to recover his gravity, âtroubling you with their dâd fool talk, and you wonât say anything to HER about it, but I thought you ought to know it on account of your position among âem. You donât want to lose their confidence, and you know how easily their skeery faculties are stampeded with an idea!â
âWhere is she now?â demanded Peter, with a darkening face.
âSomewhere with the squaws, I reckon. I thought she might be a little skeered of the braves, and Iâve kept them away. SHEâS all right, you know; only if you intend to stay here long Iâdââ
But Peter was already striding away in the direction of a thicket of cottonwood where he heard the ripple of womenâs and childrenâs voices. When he had penetrated it, he found his sister sitting on a stump, surrounded by a laughing, gesticulating crowd of young girls and old women, with a tightly swaddled papoose in her lap. Some of them had already half mischievously, half curiously possessed themselves of her dust cloak, hat, parasol, and gloves, and were parading before her in their grotesque finery, apparently as much to her childish excited amusement as their own. She was even answering their gesticulations with equivalent gestures in her attempt to understand them, and trying amidst shouts of laughter to respond to the monotonous chant of the old women who were zigzagging a dance before her. With the gayly striped blankets lying on the ground, the strings of beads, wampum, and highly colored feathers hanging from the trees, and the flickering lights and shadows, it was an innocent and even idyllic picture, but the more experienced Peter saw in the performances only the uncertain temper and want of consecutive idea of playing animals, and the stolid unwinking papoose in his sisterâs lap gave his sentiment a momentary shock.
Seeing him approach she ran to meet him, the squaws and children slinking away from his grave face. âI have had such a funny time, Peter! Only to think of it, I believe theyâve never seen men or women with decent clothes before,âof course the settlersâ wives donât dress much,âand I believe theyâd have had everything I possess if you hadnât come. But theyâre TOO funny for anything. It was killing to see them put on my hat wrong side before, and try to make one out of my parasol. But I like them a great deal better than those gloomy chiefs, and I think I understand them almost. And do you know, Peter, somehow I seem to have known them all before. And those dear little papooses, arenât they ridiculously lovely. I only wishââshe stopped, for Peter had somewhat hurriedly taken the Indian boy from her arms and restored it to the frightened mother. A singular change came over her face, and she glanced at him quickly. But she resumed, with a heightened color, âI like it ever so much better here than down at the fort. And ever so much better than New York. I donât wonder that you like them so much, Peter, and are so devoted to them. Donât be angry, dear, because I let them have my things; Iâm sure I never cared particularly for them, and I think it would be such fun to dress as they do.â Peter remembered keenly his sudden shock at her precipitate change to bright colors after leaving her novitiate at the Sacred Heart. âI do hope,â she went on eagerly, âthat we are going to stay a long time here.â
âWe are leaving tomorrow,â he said curtly. âI find I have urgent business at the fort.â
And they did leave. None too soon, thought Peter and the Indian agent, as they glanced at the faces of the dusky chiefs who had gathered around the cabin. Luckily the presence of their cavalry escort rendered any outbreak impossible, and the stoical taciturnity of the race kept Peter from any verbal insult. But Mrs. Lascelles noticed their lowering dissatisfaction, and her eyes flashed. âI wonder you donât punish them,â she said simply.
For a few days after their return she did not allude to her visit, and Peter was beginning to think that her late impressions were as volatile as they were childlike. He devoted himself to his government report, and while he kept up his communications with the reservation and the agent, for the present domiciled himself at the fort.
Colonel Bryce, the commandant though doubtful of civilians, was not slow to appreciate the difference of playing host to a man of Atherlyâs wealth and position and even found in Peterâs reserve and melancholy an agreeable relief to the somewhat boisterous and material recreations of garrison life, and a gentle check upon the younger officers. For, while Peter did not gamble or drink, there was yet an unobtrusive and gentle dignity in his abstention that relieved him from the attitude of a prig or an âexample.â Mrs. Lascelles was popular with the officers, and accepted more tolerantly by the wives, since they recognized her harmlessness. Once or twice she was found apparently interested in the gesticulations of a few âfriendliesâ who had penetrated the parade ground of the fort to barter beads and wampum. The colonel was obliged at last to caution her against this, as it was found that in her inexperience she had given them certain articles that were contraband of the rules, and finally to stop them from an intrusion which was becoming more frequent and annoying. Left thus to herself, she relieved her isolation by walks beyond the precincts of the garrison, where she frequently met those âfriendlyâ wanderers, chiefly squaws and children. Here she was again cautioned by the commander,â
âDonât put too much faith in those creatures, Mrs. Lascelles.â
Jenny elevated her black brows and threw up her arched nose like a charger. âIâm not afraid of old women and children,â she said loftily.
âBut I am,â said the colonel gravely. âItâs a horrible thing to think of, but these feeble old women and innocent children are always selected to torture the prisoners taken by the braves, and, by Jove, they seem to like it.â
Thus restricted, Mrs. Lascelles fell back upon the attentions of Lieutenant Forsyth, whose gallantry was always as fresh as his smart cadet-like tunics, and they took some rides together. Whether it was military caution or the feminine discretion of the colonelâs wife,âto the quiet amusement of the other officers,âa trooper was added to the riding party by the order of the colonel, and thereafter it consisted of three. One night, however, the riders did not appear at dinner, and there was considerable uneasiness mingled with some gossip throughout the garrison. It was already midnight before they arrived, and then with horses blown and trembling with exhaustion, and the whole party bearing every sign of fatigue and disturbance. The colonel said a few sharp, decisive words to the subaltern, who, pale and reticent, plucked at his little moustache, but took the whole blame upon himself. HE and Mrs. Lascelles had, he said, outridden the trooper and got lost; it was late when Cassidy (the trooper) found them, but it was no fault of HIS, and they had to ride at the top of their speed to cover the ground between them and the fort. It was noticed that Mrs. Lascelles scarcely spoke to Forsyth, and turned abruptly away from the colonelâs interrogations and went to her room.
Peter, absorbed in his report, scarcely noticed the incident, nor the singular restraint that seemed to fall upon the little military household for a day or two afterwards. He had accepted the lieutenantâs story without comment or question; he knew his own sister too well to believe that she had lent herself to a flirtation with Forsyth; indeed, he had rather pitied the young officer when he remembered Lascellesâ experience in his early courtship. But he was somewhat astonished one afternoon to find the trooper Cassidy alone in his office.
âOi thought Oiâd make bould to have a word wid ye, sorr,â he said, recovering from a stiff salute with his fingers nipping the cord of his trousers. âItâs not for meeself, sorr, although the ould man was harrd on me, nor for the leddy, your sister, but for the sake of the leftenant, sorr, who the ould man was harrdest on of all. Oi was of the parrty that rode with your sister.â
âYes, yes, I remember, I heard the story,â said Peter. âShe and Mr. Forsyth got lost.â
âAxinâ your pardin, sorr, she didnât. Mr. Forsyth loid. Loid like an officer and a jintlemanâas he is, God bless himâto save a leddy, more betoken your sister, sorr. They never got lost, sorr. We was all three together from the toime we shtarted till we got back, and itâs the love av God that we ever got back at all. And itâs breaking me hearrt, sorr, to see HIM goinâ round with the black looks of everybody upon him, and he a-twirlinâ his moustache and purtending not to mind.â
âWhat do you mean?â said Peter, uneasily.
âOi mane to be tellinâ you what happened, sorr,â said Cassidy stoutly. âWhen we shtarted out Oi fell three files to the rear, as became me, so as not to be in the way oâ their colloguing, but sorra a bit oâ stragglinâ was there, and Oi kept them afore me all the toime. When we got to Post Oak Bottom the leddy pâints her whip off to the roight, and sez she: âItâs a fine bit of turf there, Misther Forsyth,â invitinâ like, and with that she gallops away to the right. The leftenant follys her, and Oi closed up the rear. So we rides away innoshent like amongst the trees, me thinkinâ only it wor a mighty queer place for manoovrinâ, until we seed, just beyond us in the hollow, the smoke of an Injin camp and a lot of women and childer. And Mrs. Lascelles gets off and goes to discoursinâ and blarneying wid âem: and Oi sees Mr. Forsyth glancinâ round and lookinâ oneasy. Then he goes up and sez something to your sister, and she wonât give him a hearinâ. And then he tells her she must mount and be off. And she turns upon him, bedad, like a tayger, and bids him be off himself. Then he comes to me and sez he, âOi donât like the look oâ this, Cassidy,â sez he; âthe woods behind is full of braves,â sez he. âThrue for you, leftenant,â sez Oi, âitâs into a trap that the leddy hez led us, God save her!â âWhisht,â he sez, âtake my horse, itâs the strongest. Go beside her, and when Oi say
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