THE ISLAND TRAPPER;

                                 OR,

                  THE YOUNG WHITE-BUFFALO HUNTERS.

                       BY CAPT. CHAS. HOWARD,

              _Author of the following Pocket Novels_:

           5. THE ELK KING.           50. THE WOLF QUEEN.
                         52. THE MAD CHIEF.

                              NEW YORK:
                    BEADLE AND ADAMS, PUBLISHERS,
                         98 WILLIAM STREET.




     Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1873, by
                         FRANK STARR & CO.,
      In the office of the Librarian of Congress, at Washington




                              CONTENTS

                                                                   PAGE
     I.  THE YOUNG ADVENTURERS.                                      9
    II.  THE GOLD GIRL.                                             17
   III.  THE VENGEANCE-HUNTER.                                      23
    IV.  CHARLEY SHAFER’S RIDE.                                     31
     V.  RIFLE, FIRE AND LASSO.                                     37
    VI.  WHITE LASSO’S CAPTURE.                                     45
   VII.  TREASON.                                                   51
  VIII.  AN UNEXPECTED ACCUSATION.                                  58
    IX.  “YOU’VE GOT MY HORSE.”.                                    65
     X.  SHOT BY HIS OWN RIFLE.                                     72
    XI.  A VOICE IN THE NIGHT.                                      79
   XII.  THE BLOW FOR FREEDOM.                                      85
  XIII.  THE SWOOP OF THE AVENGER.                                  89
   XIV.  TECUMSEH’S VICTORY.                                        93




                           FRONTIER SHACK,

                         THE ISLAND TRAPPER.




                             CHAPTER I.

                       THE YOUNG ADVENTURERS.


“Whoa!”

The Command was spoken in a low tone to a majestic iron-gray horse.

Instantly the fore-feet were plunged into the loose earth, and the
animal became as stationary as a bronze statue.

“Dash me! if I didn’t hear music. Tecumseh, ye heard it, too, for I
saw ye prick yer ears before I told ye to stop. Where is the white
man who has the audacity to be musical in the Pawnee country? Dash
me! I’d like to see him; I’d like to take ’im back to the States
and present ’im to Mr. Barnum. Listen! there it goes again. Music,
certain, no mistake, and it sounds like that which I’ve heard on
Broadway, comin’ from the dirty hand-organs.”

With a smile on his broad, handsome countenance, the speaker leaned
forward in the wooden stirrups, with a half-doubled band behind his
left ear.

“He’s struck up a new tune, and dash me if it isn’t ‘Hail Columbia.’
I’m gettin’ uncommon curious, settin’ here on Tecumseh, and list’nin’
to the first genuine music I’ve heard for five years, and dash me
if--Injun yells, by Joshua!”

The iron-gray heard the new sounds, which seemed to emanate from the
same spot as the mysterious music, and turned his head to his master,
as if to ask what they meant. A furious light flashed from his dark
eyes, and a low neigh told how eager he was to court excitement.

“Steady, Tecumseh, steady!” whispered the frontiersman “The Injun
yells come from the same spot as the music; but still, ‘Hail
Columbia’ remains unbroken. I can’t stand it any longer. Dash me if I
ain’t goin’ to inquire into that music. The old song goes all over me
like an electric arrow, and I b’lieve it affects my old horse. Now,
Tecumseh, for’ard!”

With the last word the horseman settled back into the saddle, and the
steed bounded off like a frightened stag.

Down the right bank of the Pawnee Loup the twain flew, through the
soft gloaming of that delightful May day, 1815.

The horse and his rider were well mated. Both possessed courage,
strength and true nobleness of character, the brute none less than
his master.

The occupant of the blanketed saddle was a medium-sized man,
about forty years of age. His hair, and he had an ocean of it,
was an iron-gray, and shone like silver. The face was smooth,
somewhat cadaverous, but healthy; and the brownish eyes, nestling
between long, dark lashes, were indicative alike of gentleness and
determination. He wore the often-described habiliments of the Western
hunter, and in addition to the long-barreled rifle that lay across
the pommel of his saddle, supported in its position by a great hand,
the only ill-proportioned member of the body, a brace of Colt’s large
revolvers protruded from his buck-skin belt.

“Tecumseh, if ye see danger afore Shack does, stop,” he said, as they
neared the mouth of the Nebraska’s tributary. “We’re gettin’ close to
the place now. I hevn’t heard the red devils for some time; but the
music keeps up mighty well. He’s got out a new tune now--a tune which
the lame old Italian used to grind out before the ‘Arcade’--a tune
which nobody in creation could tell the name of. Wonder if that old
chap hesn’t come out here to amuse the Pawnee Loups? If he hes--”

The sentence was broken by Tecumseh’s abrupt halt, and the
frontiersman spoke a few words which effectually quieted the steed’s
nervousness.

“It’s jest over the rise, thar, on the Oregon trail,” muttered
Frontier Shack, glancing at his revolvers and lifting the deadly
rifle from the saddle. “The Injuns hev played smash with another lot
of poor emigrants. ’Twas but yesterday that they butchered everybody
in Davidson’s train, and now they’ve made new rivers of blood! Dash
me if these things don’t rile me; they run through my marrow like
fiery arrows, and if the Gov’ment would appoint Ote Shackelford
Injun agent, the Oregon trail would soon be as safe as Broadway. But
for’ard, Tecumseh, slowly, slowly, horse.”

The faithful steed now walked cautiously toward a knoll well defined
against the darkening horizon, and when the summit had almost been
gained, a word from his master caused him to pause.

“I’ll be back presently, horse,” he said, in low tones, as he
dismounted and crept forward.

His ears were saluted by coarse but not unpleasant music, as he
executed the movement, and he knew that it emanated from a hand-organ
not far from the opposite foot of the knoll, and between him and the
Nebraska or Platte. The night was still, and the stars were beginning
to appear in the boundless firmament above the treeless river. A
light breeze blew from the water, and wafted the strains toward the
northern lodges of the Pawnees, between which and the river they had
encountered the frontiersman.

Frontier Shack reached the summit of the hillock, and peered over
toward the stream.

“Well, this beats any thing _I’ve_ seen since I’ve been in the West!”
he ejaculated, a moment later. “That’s what I call pursuin’ music
under difficulties. That young chap handles the crank well, but he’s
almost played out, and his friend can’t dance much longer. Dash me if
I didn’t get here in the nick of time; there’s goin’ to be some new
tunes played now--new tunes, by Joshua!”

A moment later the scout rose and walked back to his untethered
and impatient horse, and while he is examining the priming of his
weapons, let us introduce the reader to the scene near the base of
the hillock.

Seated about a fire lately kindled, more for light than heat, for
the air was not uncomfortable, though sharp, were perhaps fifteen
Indians--Pawnee Loups. Their arms lay at their sides, and proclaimed
that they were not dreaming of the presence of an enemy. Fresh scalps
dangled from the belts of the younger warriors, and a close observer
would have detected blood on their hatchets and bows.

The scalps, the blood and their prisoners told, in silent but
unmistakable language, the fate of an emigrant train.

The marauders’ captives were two youths, neither beyond seventeen,
fair-skinned and handsome, and bore a striking resemblance to one
another.

Their garments were of the latest cut in the States, but quite
serviceable for the wilds of the West. They also proclaimed that
they were not the sons of ordinary emigrants, who, unable to thrive
among the populous lands of the East, were seeking homes, Boone-like,
beyond the verge of civilization. Their faces betokened intelligence,
and a bravery suited to the land and times they were in.

One stood near the fire, turning, with a strange desperation, the
crank of a new hand-organ, such as the beggarly sons of Italy grind
on the streets of our metropolis to-day. Long playing had almost
exhausted him, his cheeks were flushed with fever, his breathing
came by gasps, and great blue veins stood forth on his hands and
forehead like whip-cords. He partially leaned against the organ for
support, and his eyes were upturned to a great red star that seemed
to pity him from the heavens. His companion was dancing for dear life
near by, ready to sink to the ground, and die beneath the reeking
tomahawks of the savages, who grinned and congratulated each other on
the tortures they were inflicting on the American boys.

The youths were playing and dancing for dear life. Whenever one
relinquished the accursed crank for a moment, to catch his breath,
the leader of the band, a gaunt savage, would start forward with
drawn tomahawk, and eyes glaring with the most brutal of murders. The
other was not allowed to pause in his forced dance, and more than
once the Indian above-mentioned had thrown new but transitory life
into his tired limbs.

“They will have to tomahawk me ere long,” at last groaned the youth
at the organ. “Nature is almost exhausted; my arm feels like a bar
of lead, and my blood is on fire. Oh! heaven, why did I allow my
adventurous spirit to lead me into the jaws of death? The sweetest
of all homes had I, the best of fathers, sisters--and a mother--in
heaven! Yes, mother! mother! I have journeyed here to meet thee. I
can hold out no longer--there! God help me now!”

With the last words he pushed the instrument from him, and staggered
back with a groan of despair.

The Indians leaped to their feet, and, with a wild yell, the gaunt
taskmaster bounded forward with upraised tomahawk.

The youth could not resist; he sunk to the ground and looked calmly
at his would-be slayer. But a form threw itself between him and the
Indian. It was the form of his young companion.

“Charley, we’ll die together,” said the youngest boy, through
compressed lips. “They shan’t kill you, and leave me. I persuaded you
to undertake this death-journey--”

“No, no, George. The blame is mine! Heaven! the fiend is upon us.”

The boys saw the fiendish face and gory tomahawk of the Pawnee above
them, and George threw himself upon the prostrate body of his friend.

The savage shot an expressive “ugh” from his lips, and stooped to
tear the twain apart, for it was evident that one was to be spared,
when the sharp crack of a rifle rung out on the cool night air, and
the Pawnee staggered from his victims with a death-cry.

The shot started the Indians into fiery life, and, quickly following
the report, a wild yell saluted their ears.

“Scatter ’em, Tecumseh!” cried the hoarse voice of a man. “We’ll give
the Pawnee dogs thunder to-night. Cl’ar the way, ye red devils! I’m
right among ye--Frontier Shack!--and ye’ve see’d me afore.”

Down the hill, like a dusky thunderbolt, came the speaker. He stood
erect in the stirrups, a revolver in either hand, the reins lying
across Tecumseh’s neck. He looked like a demon of destruction in the
light of the fire, and he added new and terrible life to the scene on
the banks of the Platte.

“Trample the dogs down, horse!” he yelled, and as he reached the
foot of the hill, bang, bang, bang, went the chambers of his deadly
weapons.

Not a bullet was thrown away; with each report an Indian fell
backward, and before the white, death-dealing whirlwind they
scattered and fled, every man for himself, toward the river.

The horse was in his glory; he overtook several of the red fugitives,
and knocked two beneath his iron-shod feet, never to rise again.

Bang! bang! and two more dropped dead at the water’s edge; another
shot, the last, and the Nebraska was crimsoned with the blood of a
third.

“We’ve roasted ’em, Tecumseh,” said the hunter, as the steed paused
in the water to slake his burning thirst. “They can’t stand afore ye,
horse, they can’t do it, by Joshua! Now we’ll go back and look for
the boys.”

A moment later Frontier Shack was galloping back to the fire.

He found Charley Shafer on his knees, supported by his stronger
friend, George Long.

Frontier Shack dismounted and knelt before the twain.

“As weak as kittens, almost,” he said, in a kindly tone; “and dash
me, if I didn’t reach these diggin’s in the nick o’ time. Them devils
might hev’ known that ye couldn’t play and dance forever; but ye’ll
live to pay ’em back!”

“I hope so, sir,” said George, his eyes lighting up with vengeance.
“Don’t you want to pay the dogs back, Charley?”

“Yes,” was the feeble answer. “Every dog has his day, George.”

“How came ye hare?” suddenly broke in the frontiersman. “Ye came out
with a train, I suppose.”

“Yes; we were attacked this day about noon. It was a terrible
massacre.”

“Who led the Pawnees?--for Pawnees, of course, the red dogs were.”

“A white man--the ‘Dandy Demon of the Plains,’ I should call him.”

Frontier Shack gritted his teeth.

“We’ll talk about that scoundrel--Tom Kyle--some other time,” he
said. “How many escaped the butchery?”

“Three persons, besides ourselves. They were Mr. Denison, Government
agent, his daughter Mabel, and his niece, Miss Aiken. After the
massacre the band divided; the larger portion went northward with
the three; we fell to the lot of the minority.”

“Where did that organ come from?”

“An Italian was crossing the plains with the emigrants, to try his
fortune in the land of gold.”

“And he’s found it afore he got there,” said the hunter, with a
strange smile. “He’d hev’ done better on Broadway, I think. But, my
boys, ye weren’t emigrants; yer clothes--”

He paused suddenly, ashamed to proceed.

“No, we were not emigrants,” answered George Long, glancing at his
companion with a smile, which was followed by a mortifying blush.

“We are runaways; our parents live in Cincinnati, Ohio, and are well
to do in the world.”

“Then, why did you leave home and seek this death-land?” asked
Shackelford, the stern part of his nature getting uppermost.

“I will tell you the truth,” said George, looking him squarely in the
eyes. “We came hither to shoot white buffaloes.”

For a moment the old hunter stared blankly into the youthful faces
before him, then he rose to his feet and gave a long whistle of
profound wonder and astonishment.

The boys watched him anxiously.

For several minutes he look vacantly toward the south, and then a
ludicrous smile overspread his countenance.

“Who told you about white buffaloes?” he asked, stooping again.

“No one, sir. We read about them in Gregg’s ‘_Commerce of the
Prairies_.’”

“And you believed it?”

“Why--yes!”

Another long whistle which ended in a laugh.

“I’ve heard of wild-goose chases afore,” said the hunter; “but this
beats all of ’em. White buffler! Thet Gregg’s ahead o’ me, and I’ve
seen the plains and prairies from the Platte to the Santa Fe. And
I’ve seen buffler, too, boys; but nary a white one. We’ve got white
horses, white foxes, and the like out here;” but, a short pause,
“Gregg _may_ be right. I don’t call any man a liar till he is proven
one.”

The young hunters took courage at this last remark.

“I wish you boys war at home in Ohio,” said the frontiersman; “but
ye’re here, and I’m goin’ to take care of ye. We’ll strike Fort
Laramie one o’ these days, and then home ye go! But, we’re in the
jaws of death yet, and mebbe two more Ohio scalps and one Maryland
one, may hang at the Loup’s belt afore the week’s out. We’ll go now;
Tecumseh can carry three, I reckon.”

“But hold,” cried Charley Shafer. “What will become of those
girls--they’re in a demon’s clutches.”

“Yer right, boy,” said the scout of the Platte; “but I guess we’ll
let ’em be.”

“No, no!” cried both boys in a single breath. “They shall not be his.”

Frontier Shack smiled:

“Boys, yer the true grit!” he cried, “jest the chaps to hunt white
bufflers. The girls shan’t be Tom Kyle’s long. He can muster three
thousand red wolves. We’ll face him--the terror of the Plains--and
we’ll free his prisoners, or--”

“Die in the attempt!”

The old hunter caught the spirit that animated the breasts of the
youths.

“Yes! yes! I’m growin’ tired of this life,” he said, “and I might as
well die fighting the White Pawnee as trappin’ beaver.”

The next moment he spoke to Tecumseh, and, despite the load he
carried, the noble horse dashed away like an antelope.

“I’ll crease two splendid horses for ye, boys,” he said, “and then,
for Tom Kyle’s pris’ners and--white bufflers!”

The last words were clothed in irony, and they set the two boys to
thinking anxiously.

They had chased an _ignis fatuus_ over twelve hundred miles of
territory--to die, perhaps, at the Pawnee stake.




                             CHAPTER II.

                           THE GOLD GIRL.


While the thrilling scenes recorded above were transpiring on the
banks of the Platte, the fate of two beautiful girls was being
decided not many miles away.

To this scene we turn, for it is time that one of the most prominent
actors in our wild western drama should appear in the mad, relentless
role he has to play.

The somber shades of evening were prevailing when two score and six
horsemen entered the great village of the Pawnee Loups, situated
on the head-waters of the Loup fork of Platte. The hardy mustangs
gave forth evidences of fatigue, their flanks reeked with sweat,
and several seemed on the eve of dropping to the earth from utter
exhaustion.

The mustangs’ riders, with four exceptions, were Indians, great
stalwart fellows, naked to the waist, and painted for the murderous
foray.

Their leader--let me describe their leader.

He was a white man, whose tanned countenance denoted a roving,
restless life. His face was faultless to the minutest particular;
his eyes were dark and piercing, like the eagle’s, and an ocean of
long raven locks fell ever his rich crimson serape. His head was
crowned by a black sombrero, whose snow-white plume swept his silken
hair, while his waist was encircled by a crimson scarf, worked with
mythological designs in gold thread. His fingers, as white and
delicately shaped as a woman’s, glittered with gems, set in hoops of
gold--jewels, which were, no doubt, the fruits of a raid upon some
rich New Mexican hacienda. The ornamented butts of two revolvers
showed themselves above the scarf, and at his side hung a short
Spanish sword, whose metallic scabbard, carved with quaint designs,
among them the Departure of Boabdil, proclaimed it a relic of early
Spanish days.

To complete the fantastic costume of the Pawnees’ king

                “Spanish spurs, with bells of steel,
                 Dashed and jingled at his heel!”

He possessed the air and bearing of one born to command; he could
have brought subordination from the most mutinous of Cossack bands,
with the flashings of his eyes; he was, to sum up all in a nutshell,
“half angel and half Lucifer.”

Such a man, reader, once held the mighty Pawnee nation under his
thumb; they could go and come but at his bidding, he could inaugurate
a massacre with a word, and save a captive with the same. He was
still young, and an American, bred and born.

He seemed proud of his authority as he galloped at the head of his
braves into the Indian village, and when he drew rein in the square,
if “square” the plot of ground that held the council-house can be
called, he raised his symmetrical body in the stirrups, and flashed
his eyes over the concourse of noisy people below.

“Conduct the pale-faces to Kenoagla’s lodge!” he cried, suddenly
turning to his followers who sat immobile on the backs of their
exhausted steeds. “The River Wolf and his braves will guard them till
I come.”

At these commands five Indians left their places, and three steeds
were led from the band.

To one of these horses a handsome middle-aged white man was bound,
while the other blankets, for the only saddle belonging to the
marauders crowned the Pale Pawnee’s “buck-skin,” were occupied by
two young girls, whose pale, tearful, fearful faces were exceedingly
beautiful, and whose garments indicated wealth, but now, how
strangely out of place!

“I demand, sir, our release for the last time,” said the gentleman,
looking into the dandy demon’s face, as he was led past by a Pawnee.
“The Government will not brook such an insult to one of her agents.”

A contemptuous smile curved the white king’s lips, and that
smile grew broader when he glanced at the girls, just before his
mustache-crowned lips parted in speech.

“_I_ am a _king_ sir!” he answered, proudly flashing the light of
his dark eyes upon the captive gentleman. “A free king, sir, at
that. I rule this country, as far as your eyes can reach, when the
sun has reached the meridian. You see my capital, my subjects, my
thunderbolts. Here, in my stronghold, or out on the plains, at the
head of my red-boys, I defy the Government that sent you hither. I am
an American! I am proud of the name; but I am a king, also. Lead on,
Wolf. I will talk to Uncle Sam’s agent at some future time.”

“As sure as my name’s Frank Denison, you shall rue this indignity,”
hissed the agent, through clenched teeth. “My Government will not
submit to the hellish deeds of an Apache, the brutality--”

“Father, do not imitate the fiend!” interrupted the silvery voice of
Mabel Denison. “Fiery words may send the bullet to your brain. We can
curse in secret, and it will avail as much as anathemas poured upon
his head in thunder tones.”

Frank Denison became silent; but he grated his teeth, and bit his
pale lips as he moved on from the renegade’s sight.

Kenoagla did not catch all the young girl’s words; but the
appellation bestowed upon him, in her first sentence, fell
indistinctly upon his ears, and he flashed a fearful scowl upon her.

“My young lady, you’ll rue that, some of these fine days,” he
murmured. “You are completely in _my_ power, and all the gold in
the United States Treasury could not ransom you therefrom. And your
father--if he gets an opportunity to tell the Government about Tom
Kyle, then I’ll give my clothes to Red Eagle, and transform myself
into a squaw!”

His white teeth met behind the last word, and the next moment he
turned to a young chief that sat near.

“Ready, Red Eagle?”

The Pawnee nodded.

Then the renegade faced his band, and the next moment every steed was
riderless.

He, however, retained his perch, and made up to Red Eagle, who was
standing on the ground beside his white mustang.

“Up.”

Red Eagle vaulted nimbly to his old perch.

“Follow!”

The renegade touched the flanks of his “buck-skin” with the heavy
silver spurs, and through the Pawnee village the twain galloped,
toward the river.

Not a word was spoken by either until they drew rein on the bank of
the western stream. Then the Pale Pawnee spoke a single word, and
they leaped to the ground.

The night had fairly thrown her vail about the face of nature now,
and the clear water glittered beautifully beneath the stars, as it
pushed its way, with more than one sweet murmur, to the broad bosom
of the Platte.

“Now we will settle about the captives,” said the renegade, as they
threw themselves upon the rich grass that thrived to the very edge of
the water. “I speak truly, chief, when I say that I don’t care which
falls to my lot. If you have a preference, speak it, and you shall
have my hand on my satisfaction.”

“The pale flowers are beautiful,” answered the Indian, quickly,
and with a dash of admiration. “The eyes of one are as blue as the
Manitou’s carpet, and her hair shines like the stones which the
pale-faces seek for toward the setting sun. Her sister’s eyes are
like the night; her hair as black as the crow’s wing. Red Eagle could
live with either; but he and the Pale Pawnee will play for them.”

“I am satisfied. Go, get your sticks, chief, and let me guess as soon
as possible.”

His tones proclaimed much impatience, and he watched the Indian move
up the stream in the demi-gloom.

“Playing guess for a wife!” he ejaculated with a smile, when Red
Eagle had passed beyond hearing distance. “I’ve got to humor that
accursed red-skin, too. He’s becoming uncommon popular--too popular
for me! I have more foes in this village than I ever had, and I
find it pretty difficult to rule them. If that chap was out of my
way! He’s doing all the mischief, and doing it so infernal slyly,
too. He’s the best dissimulator this side the Rockies, and I can’t
circumvent him. I know I stand over the crater of a volcano, and the
fire that burns under my feet is his heart--his accursed scheming
heart.”

“Who Pale Pawnee talking to?”

Tom Kyle started, and almost sprung to his feet.

The chief stood before him, his left hand gently clenched.

“Red Eagle could find no sticks,” he said, smiling at the renegade’s
surprise. “But he has found a black stone and a yellow one. The black
stone is the flower with midnight hair; the yellow stone is her
sister.”

Then Red Eagle suddenly whirled and dexterously changed the pebbles,
while his face was turned from his white companion.

“Now!” he cried, facing Kyle again. “Each of Eagle’s hands holds a
stone. Let the Pale Pawnee touch one. If he touches the hand that
holds the yellow stone, the fairest skinned is his, the black-haired
one Red Eagle’s.”

The great red hands were outstretched toward the renegade, side by
side, and the guesser stood before them, a statue of indecision.

He had a preference--his face told his red companion that--and he
did not want to guess the girl he desired into Red Eagle’s hands. He
inspected the fists a long time before he raised his hand, and then
he held his finger over the chief’s right member, unwilling to see it
descend.

All at once he threw a slight glance upward through his long black
lashes.

The Indian’s eyes were riveted upon his finger, and a strange smile,
which the renegade deemed one of triumph, toyed with his handsome
lips.

“I’ll catch him!” mentally ejaculated the renegade, dropping his eyes
to his hand again. “I’ll cheat him out of the blonde, yet.”

The next moment his finger took a great leap, and alighted on Red
Eagle’s _left_ hand.

The Indian laughed triumphantly, and opened his hand.

The black stone glittered in the red palm.

The Pale Pawnee could not repress a cry of rage and disappointment.

“Kenoagla wanted the Gold Girl,” said Red Eagle, calmly; “but she has
fallen to the lot of the Pawnee. She shall build his fires and warm
his couch when the snow comes.”

Tom Kyle bit his nether lip till the blood dyed his chin.

“Would not Red Eagle have been content with the dark flower?”

“Yes.”

“I will give him the dark flower, then, for the gold one.”

The Indian drew back.

“No, no!”

“I’ll throw this serape into the bargain. You have coveted it for
five years.”

“Red Eagle won’t sell the Gold Girl.”

“Not for the darker flower, my serape and sword?”

“_No!_”

“Then he shall keep her! The Pale Pawnee will love his captive, and
he hopes that the gold flower will thrive in Red Eagle’s lodge.”

With the last word, he put forth his hand, and in the soft starlight
the palms of red and white met.

It was the grip of a Cæsar and his Brutus--the silent pledge, beneath
friendship’s cloak, of hatred and treason bitter and intense.

“The fate of the pale flower is settled now--settled forever, chief.
One is mine, the other yours. _I’ll_ settle the insulting agent’s
doom hereafter.”

A few moments later the arbiters of others’ fates remounted their
steeds and rode toward the Pawnee lodges.

They did not cast their eyes behind as they galloped from the river,
therefore they did not see the figure which suddenly appeared on the
scene, and stood between them and the silver of the starlit waves.

“The Gold Girl is his,” said a woman’s voice, stern with terrible
sarcasm and determination. “Winnesaw thought she was his. But who is
this Gold Girl? Where did she come from, and where is her father’s
lodge? Ha! Kenoagla has returned from the war-path; his band has
struck the pale-faces who travel along the big river to the land of
yellow stones. He found two girls there--dark and gold. They played
for them here to-night. Kenoagla wanted the Gold Girl, but he got the
dark one. But he shall have the Gold Girl--at least Red Eagle shall
never see her asleep, like the fawn, on his couch. Winnesaw is Red
Eagle’s--the Gold Girl is not.”

The slender and beautiful Pawnee girl grew into a very Pythoness as,
with clenched hands and gritted teeth, she stood on the spot which
the secret enemies had just vacated.

Several moments of silence followed her last word, when she suddenly
tore herself from the river-bank, and darted toward the village,
hidden by the darkness.

“The Gold Girl--the Gold Girl!” she repeated, in an audible tone, as
she bounded over the ground. “Winnesaw is going to see the Gold Girl,
whom Red Eagle won to-night.”

Poor, unloved Winnesaw!

She never dreamed what would follow her meeting with Lina Aiken, the
“Gold Girl.”




                            CHAPTER III.

                        THE VENGEANCE-HUNTER.


The occupants of the Pale Pawnee’s lodge awaited, with fear, anxiety
and impatience, his return. They had witnessed his departure with Red
Eagle, and they felt that something terrible was about to transpire.

Mr. Denison now knew that the renegade defied the American
Government, and he believed that it was Kenoagla’s intention to make
short work of him. He had heard of the cruelties of the Pawnees;
their treatment of the emigrant trains had reached the ears of
the authorities at Washington, and measures were being adopted to
chastise the red marauders and protect the trains. But the Government
was snail-like in its operations; and while it hesitated, while other
measures not so important as the lives of our emigrants retarded the
humane step, the Pawnee tomahawk was reeking with blood on the banks
of the Platte.

The Indians would submit when the iron hand of the Great Father at
Washington closed on them; but they would massacre so long as the
blue-coats kept out of sight. Train after train was halted by the
savage whoop; and the poor emigrants were suddenly called upon to
sell their scalps at the price of blood. Seldom mercy was shown, but
now and then some lovely girl was spared and carried to a dreadful
captivity, in the lair of the Pawnee or the giant Sioux.

The train in which Mr. Denison and the dear ones under his charge
had taken passage, was attacked near the banks of the Platte, ten
miles below the mouth of the Loup Fork. The force that bore down upon
the caravan was overwhelming--it could not be resisted. The train
was feeble in point of numbers--too feeble, in fact, to cross the
plains; but the men fought bravely for themselves and families. But
their bravery availed them naught, for the Indians were armed with
Government rifles and revolvers, which they could handle with deadly
effect.

Finally the defenders surrendered. Kenoagla--Tom Kyle--had promised
quarter, but he broke his word. He did not attempt to restrain his
red fiends; but he saved the lives of the Government agent and his
charges, while an inferior chief belonging to a Pawnee village
situated many miles toward the head of the Platte, succeeded in
rescuing the brace of white buffalo-hunters from the vengeance of the
tomahawk.

After the massacre the bands separated.

“Father, some dark work is brewing. The white Ogre of these beautiful
plains and his red ally are plotting mischief somewhere beneath the
stars. I fear your words have irritated him to a fearful degree.
I heard him grit his teeth when I rode by. I do not fear for
myself--no, no; but for you, father, for you!”

It was Mabel Denison who spoke, and in the darkness that reigned
throughout Tom Kyle’s lodge, the fearful girl crept nearer her
parent, and threw her arms about his neck.

“I have not thought once of myself, Mabel,” he answered, searching
for the pale cheeks, which his lips found, as he spoke her name. “I
have been thinking about you and Lina, there. He has saved you for a
purpose--he and his red ally.”

“But he shall not carry out his purpose!” returned Mabel, fiercely.
“I am not to be this Ogre’s wife; sooner than bear such relation to
him I would fly, if I could, to the brazen doors of perdition and
knock for admission there!”

“My fair lady will need wings ere long, then.”

The trio turned at the sound of the voice, and saw a dark form
between them and the stars.

Though the face of their visitor could not be seen, the great feather
that fell gracefully over his head, and the glitter of silver
ornaments on the shoulders of his serape, told them who he was. He
had parted the skins without noise, and no doubt had listened to much
of the conversation which had lately passed between his prisoners.

Mabel Denison uttered a light cry as she beheld the renegade; but her
father gritted his teeth in silence.

“I say you’ll need wings ere long, Miss Denison, if you intend
carrying out your resolve,” continued Tom Kyle, and a light chuckle
followed his last word. “Your father spoke truly when he said that I
spared you girls for a purpose. And I will inform him just now that
he, too, has been spared for a purpose, differing widely from the one
for which his child has been spared.”

He paused as if expecting Mr. Denison to speak; but, as no word fell
from the agent’s lips, he continued:

“Ladies, I must separate you.”

“No! no!” and Mabel threw herself upon her golden-haired cousin. “If
we are to remain your captives, let us, at least, enjoy, if we can,
our captivity together. Do not tear us apart; if you still retain
a spark of respect for womanly affection, you will change your
resolution.”

“I am not the sole arbiter of your fates,” the renegade replied. “I
have been compelled to divide the spoils of our last excursion. Mabel
Denison, you are mine; your cousin belongs to Red Eagle.”

A trembling cry parted Lina Aiken’s lips, and she sunk senseless into
Mabel’s lap.

“Sir, you are blighting the purest, the sweetest of lives!” cried the
agent’s daughter, forgetting the passions of the man who confronted
her. “Sir renegade, let me tell you, now, that I am not yours. I
loathe you, as I loathe the scaly folds of the serpent, and--”

“Girl,” and the word sounded like ice-drops falling on red-hot iron,
“I beg of you to desist. I am passionate--a word makes me a devil!”

“No, no! you have ever been such.”

The Spanish sword leaped from the gilded scabbard, and Tom Kyle
sprung forward with an oath.

“Girl, curse you! I can find a wife in the next train, or the Gold
Girl--”

His vengeful sentence was broken by the entrance of an Indian, and
the renegade found himself hurled to the furthest part of the lodge.

“Kenoagla would kill Gold Girl!” cried the new-comer, snatching Lina
Aiken from Mabel’s embrace. “Gold Girl belong to Red Eagle. Kenoagla
die if he touches her!”

“Leave me Lina, Red Eagle,” cried Mabel, springing to her feet, to be
met by the broad palm of the Pawnee chief.

“No, no, Gold Girl Red Eagle’s; dark girl Kenoagla’s. The sisters
meet often in Pawnee lodges. Gold Girl must go to chief’s wigwam; she
still sleeps.”

With a painful groan Mabel Denison sunk back and dropped into her
father’s arms.

At this juncture the renegade regained his feet, and came forward,
gritting his teeth with rage.

“Who, in the name of the furies--”

He paused suddenly when he found himself face to face with Red Eagle.

“Kenoagla let the storm rise in his heart. He sought Gold Girl’s
blood; but Red Eagle came, and he pushed Kenoagla.”

“I didn’t seek the Gold Girl; the dark one made me mad.”

“Then Red Eagle did wrong!”

“No, no, chief. I am glad you pushed me. I wouldn’t kill that girl
for the world now. All the venom she can fling can irritate me no
more. But I’m going to show her, in more senses than one, that she is
mine! mine! mine!”

He bent forward as he hissed the last words, and Mabel Denison felt
his hot breath scorch her pale cheek.

“Red Eagle, and his Gold Girl go now,” said the Pawnee, breaking the
silence that followed.

“Yes, go.”

The next instant the Indian turned on his heel, and hurried away with
the unconscious Gold Girl in his arms.

“I’m not going to disturb you with my presence longer to-night,” said
Tom Kyle, addressing his captives. “But I would bid you, before I go,
to prepare for another separation. Mr. Denison, you leave the Pawnee
village to-morrow.”

The agent and his child were silent.

“Did you ever read the story of Mazeppa?” the renegade asked, after a
long silence.

A low “My God, Mabel,” told the villain that that famous ride was not
unknown to his captive.

“So you have heard of that ride,” chuckled Tom Kyle. “Well, Mr.
Denison, to be brief, we’re going to make a Mazeppa out of you
to-morrow. I’ll have some of my fellows to lasso or crease a wild
horse, and perhaps the beast may bear you to Washington, where you
can lay your wrongs before the Government. So prepare for the ordeal,
I say.”

He stood a moment longer in the doorway, then turned abruptly on his
heel, with a fiendish laugh, and walked away.

“I’m going to see what Red Eagle is doing with the Gold Girl,” he
murmured, walking toward the chief’s lodge. “By heavens! she shall
not belong to him. I had marked her for my own long before the train
surrendered, and Tom Kyle can’t be balked by a red-skin. Let me
get her in my clutches once, and a buck-skin shall bear me to the
Apaches. I’ve been among them; they are ready to follow my white
plume. What a beautiful white queen the Gold Girl would make! Red
Eagle, she shan’t be yours long. I mean it, I swear it!”

A certain light now attracted the renegade’s attention, and his voice
ceased altogether. He walked more cautiously than ever, and at last
knell behind a wigwam, the build and decorations of which proclaimed
it the habitation of a chief.

He lay like a corpse on the ground, and his eyes, flashing like fire,
almost touched a crack, through which he was drinking in the scenes
that were transpiring in the lodge.

Red Eagle bent over Lina Aiken, who lay upon a couch of skins, pale
and motionless.

The red-man was watching her intently.

“Gold Girl sleep long,” the Indian murmured, and a look of fear sat
enthroned upon his anxious face. “The Pale Pawnee’s words chased
her near the dark river. He wants Gold Girl; he tried to cheat Red
Eagle to-night, but she shall never warm his couch. The Indians hate
him; they would give Red Eagle his plume, his serape, his sword;
but Red Eagle say, ‘not yet.’ But,” and a dark scowl overrode the
fearful expression, “let the Pale Pawnee touch Gold Girl and he get
this--this.”

Significantly, as if addressing some one, the chief touched the hilt
of his knife, and the silvered butt of “Colt,” then clenched his
hands and gritted his teeth till they cracked.

The passions that bubbled and hissed in the spectator’s heart cannot
be described, and once he drew his revolver and cocked it, and put it
up again.

“Curse you, Indian!” he hissed. “It’s diamond cut diamond now; you
won’t live ten days, I swear it, by my hopes of eternal life! and the
Pawnees shall be kingless before the expiration of that time.”

For several moments longer Red Eagle watched over his beautiful
captive, whose insensibility had created some alarm in the breast of
his arch-enemy, lying at the base of the wigwam, watching and biding
his time for revenge and success.

“Red Eagle go bring Medicine,” suddenly cried the chief, starting
to his feet. “Gold Girl sleeps too long. Red Eagle can’t wake her;
Medicine can.”

Then the Indian, after casting a long look upon the marble form on
the couch, walked from the lodge, and Tom Kyle heard him bounding
away toward the Pawnee doctor’s wigwam with the fleetness of the deer.

“Now I could rob him of his Gold Girl, and rob him effectually,”
ejaculated the renegade. “One blow could constitute my revenge; but
I would have to fly for my life, and leave my captives here. No, I
won’t do it. I will bide another time; then, if I can’t wed her, I
can strike.”

Again he turned his eyes to the crack, but started from the wigwam
with a low ejaculation of surprise.

The figure of a girl stood over Lina Aiken. It was Winnesaw. The
renegade recognized her in a moment, and he almost cried aloud when
his gaze dropped from her flashing eyes to the slender-bladed knife
that glittered in her right hand.

He saw, too, that the girl had just entered the lodge, and that the
beauty of Lina had riveted her, as it were, to the ground.

He gazed upon her, too horror-stricken to dissipate the striking
tableau!

Suddenly the Indian girl stooped over her rival; the passionate fire
vanished from her dark eyes, like mists from a morning sun, and the
light of love and pity supplied its place.

Nearer and nearer the red face approached Lina Aiken, and at last the
lips of the strange twain met.

“Poor Gold Girl!” the renegade heard Winnesaw murmur, as she slowly
raised her head. “Winnesaw came here to kill; but the Gold Girl is
too pretty for her knife.”

For an instant she knelt over Lina, admiring her unconscious form;
then the knife suddenly flew aloft again.

Tom Kyle, the watcher, started, and held his breath.

He saw the firm set lips of the Pawnee girl, by the light of the fire
in the center of the lodge; and he saw the glittering blade descend
like a bolt of lightning!

It grazed the Gold Girl’s head and severed a shining tress, which
rolled from the fox-skin pillow.

Winnesaw’s hand darted upon the severed lock, and the next moment it
was hidden away in her bosom.

Then the Indian started to her feet, and Lina Aiken was alone again.

Slowly her eyes unclosed, and with a look of bewilderment she rose to
a sitting posture and gazed about the apartment.

The sleep of insensibility had been broken, as it were, by the rape
of a lock.

The watcher hailed her recovery with an exclamation of joy, and,
simultaneously with the return of Red Eagle, accompanied by the
Pawnee Medicine, he was brought to his feet by a yell.

“The Platte Pawnees have entered the village!” he exclaimed. “What
can it mean?”

He bounded to the council square, and found a crowd of red-skins
swarming about several wild-looking men seated on jaded steeds.

In an instant his voice quieted the Bedlamic uproar.

The new-comers sprung erect on the backs of their horses, and in
thundering tones told the story of Frontier Shack’s victory on the
banks of the Platte.

A thousand yells of vengeance followed the narration.

“I must lead them,” muttered Tom Kyle. “That infernal trapper has
been too fresh of late; he hasn’t heeded my summons an accursed bit!”

Then he called for his horse: but a savage had anticipated the
command, and the renegade turned to find his steed at his side.

A few moments later two hundred Pawnees sat astride their horses.

At a motion from the renegade they sprung erect, uttered a thrilling
war-whoop, and then galloped from the village, shouting like demons,
standing like statues on the backs of their steeds.

The Pale Pawnee was ill at ease, and he bit his lips till they bled,
as he rode, like a fantastically-dressed circus performer, at the
head of his red band.

He felt that his reign was drawing to a close, and he was acting
through policy now.

“Curse that Indian!” he suddenly hissed, and, while the words still
quivered his lips, he heard his followers divide for the purpose of
allowing a horseman to gain the front.

A moment later that horseman joined the renegade.

It was Red Eagle.

“Red Eagle help punish the island pale-face, too,” said the chief.
“We catch and burn, or tie to wild horse, the beaver-catcher and the
pale boys.”

“Yes, yes, chief,” said Tom Kyle, but he added, under his breath,
“Mr. Red Eagle, you’ve seen the Gold Girl for the last time; that is,
if I can shoot straight enough to-morrow night, and, for ten years, I
haven’t missed a mark.”




                             CHAPTER IV.

                       CHARLEY SHAFER’S RIDE.


“Dash me, boys, if we ain’t in sight of the old place already,” cried
Frontier Shack, abruptly terminating a silence which had lasted for
many minutes, during which time Tecumseh had borne his riders rapidly
from the scene of the trapper’s victory. “Things look remarkably
quiet about the shanty, and I guess we’ll find everything in apple
pie order--just as I left ’em yesterday.”

The horse knew that he was near the trapper’s home, for he gave a
shrill, joyous neigh, and sprung forward with new zeal.

Daylight now flooded the plains once more, every vestige of darkness
had disappeared, and the scene that stretched before the young
hunters’ vision filled their souls with rapture, and caused them to
forget that they were riding over dangerous ground--that this fair
land was still inhabited by the fierce aborigine of America.

They were on rising ground, and the beautiful valley of the Platte
lay at their very feet. The water shone like silver in the strong
light that preceded the rising of the sun, and the islands that
dotted the stream--the cotton-wooded islands--resembled rich gems in
a magnificent setting. Far beyond the stream a black mass, imbued
with life, moved westward, like some giant cloud creeping along the
horizon’s bar.

That living blackness was a herd of buffalo. The young hunters had
encountered the emperors of the plains before, but not in such
numbers; and they could not repress an exclamation of wonderment when
they gazed upon the mighty bisonic legion.

“Yes, them’s buffler,” said Shackelford, “and they’re all brown
fellars, too.”

The boys exchanged looks and curious smiles.

“So you think there are no white ones in that herd?”

The frontiersman laughed.

“Nary a white one,” he said; “but look yonder--up-stream I mean. D’ye
see thet conical island?”

“Yes.”

“Well, I live there.”

“I see no house.”

“Ye’ll see it d’rectly. The cottonwoods hide it now.”

“How long have you dwelt yonder?”

“Nigh onto six years. I was with the ’Paches awhile, but we hed a
slight difficulty, so I came north, and squatted on Pawnee territory.
Tecumseh and I hev enjoyed life splendidly here.”

“Unmolested by the Indians?”

“Well--no. If it hadn’t been fur thet Tom Kyle, I’d hev been scalped
long ago. The red greasers caught me when I first squatted here; but
thet white devil happened to hev a streak of mercy on then, and he
made ’em let me go. Then he gave me liberty to trap on the Loup, and
its branches, so long as I behaved myself. But I haven’t done thet
of late. Tecumseh and Shack have helped more’n one emigrant out of a
scrape, and I’ve been looking for Tom Kyle every day for two months.
It’s human natur’ to help a suffering fellar human; and I’ve killed
nigh onto as many Pawnees as beaver within the last thirty days. But
the safety jig is up now, I feel it in my bones. Tom Kyle won’t keep
off much longer, and he is a reg’lar thunderbolt, he is, by Joshua!”

By this time the river had been reached, and a small hut was visible
on the island, that lay in the center of the glittering water.

“Every thing’s snug,” said the trapper, when a great mastiff bounded
from the cottonwoods and waded a short distance into the stream. “If
any thing was wrong, ye wouldn’t see Massasoit there.”

The next moment the steed had plunged into the water, which scarcely
touched his flanks, and after a brief spell the trio found themselves
on the island.

“This river beats all for quicksands,” said Shackelford; “but
Tecumseh understands ’em. If he’d hev stopped for one moment the
infernal sand would hev caught ’im, and then good-by, Tecumseh. I
shot a prowling Pawnee in this river about four years ago, and the
sand took him and his horse down, down, and he never come up again,
dash me! if he did.”

It was a relief to the white buffalo hunters to find themselves under
a roof once more. Everywhere they saw the fruits of the trapper’s
industry. A large quantity of valuable pelts was stored away in the
cabin, and the larder was well stocked with meat, and firearms also
abounded.

The hut was divided into two apartments on the ground, and a rough
unfinished dormitory lay above. One of these rooms served as
Tecumseh’s stable on stormy nights, or when horse-stealers infested
the neighborhood; and then Frontier Shack lay at the threshold,
guarding the noble horse he loved, while Massasoit slept in the
hollow trunk of a tree just beyond the cabin door.

The sun scaled the horizon and added a myriad of new beauties to
the Platte, while the western trapper and his new-found companions
discussed the contents of the cabin’s larder, with zest mingled with
merriment.

The frontiersman was in the midst of an exciting narration of life
in the Apache country, when a sharp bark from Massasoit saluted the
trio’s ears.

Frontier Shack sprung to his feet and griped his rifle.

“Wild horses!” he exclaimed, as handing the weapon to Charley Shafer,
he jerked the Spanish saddle from its pins, beside the door.

“Boys, select a rifle from the corner, and be quick about it! Mebbe
you can get good horses now, and God knows we’ll need ’em when we go
after the girls.”

The next moment the youths were well armed, and Tecumseh stood before
the cabin equipped for a battle with his wild brethren.

“They’re coming up the river,” said the trapper as he drew the boys
to a place behind the saddle. “I believe it’s the lost band.”

“The lost band?”

“Yes; the wild horses don’t belong to this latitude,” he answered;
“but, somehow or other, a gang hev been cavorting around here for
several months, and I b’lieve thet they’re actually lost. I’ve tried
to crease a black stallion among ’em, fur several weeks; but they
won’t let me get within range. Now, p’raps--dash me! I’ll get Blackey
this time.”

A word drove Tecumseh into the water, and amid the thundering of the
wild cavalcade, the bank was gained.

“Something is chasing ’em!” said Frontier Shack, listening to the
noise of the unshod hoofs which momentarily grew louder. “Mebbe it’s
Pawnees, and they’ll cheat us out of a horse if they can.”

The thunder of the curbless steeds seemed to shake the ground beneath
Tecumseh’s feet, and it was with difficulty that Shackelford could
restrain his horse from rushing forward. With arched neck, flashing
eyes, and distended nostrils the iron-gray stood on the river’s bank,
trembling from head to fetlocks with intense excitement.

Nearer and nearer, though still unseen, came the wild army, and it
was evident that they would pass the base of the rise that hid them
from the trio’s vision.

“Quiet, Tecumseh!” hoarsely commanded Frontier Shack.

“What’s got into ye to-day? Ye’ve heard wild horses afore. I creased
ye once, and now, mebbe, yer thinking of old times. Be still! I
say! Now they’re passing the round hill,” he said, addressing the
boys, and the next moment, cocking the rifle he carried, the trapper
ordered his steed forward.

Tecumseh obeyed with a snort.

The top of the rise was gained, and the magnificent sight at his base
burst upon the trio’s gaze.

Three hundred wild horses, black, white, iron-gray, and piebald, were
sweeping along in the glory of majestic beauty and strength. Uncurbed
by bit, and unbled by spurs, each looked like a monarch, as with head
erect, and flecked with foam, he rushed westward toward the land of
the setting sun.

“There’s my horse!” cried the trapper, “there’s the black, and on
the edge of the band, too. I’ll crease him now. Be ready with your
rifle, George, for we must have two horses to-day; and when I drop
the black, poke the gun over my shoulder.”

Frontier Shack had creased more than one wild horse, and for six
years he had not fractured a single vertebra.

_Creasing_ a wild horse consists in shooting him through the upper
crease of the neck, above the cervical vertebrae, when, the ball
cutting a principal nerve, he falls as suddenly as if shot in the
brain, and remains senseless for a few moments, during which he is
secured with a rope. He is easily tamed after this, and the wound
heals without leaving any physical injury.

For the first time the “lost band” was passing within rifle-shot of
the trapper, and with a countenance flushed with mingled pride and
triumph, he raised the rifle.

His eyes were riveted upon the coal-black stallion; he seemed to see,
to think of nothing else, and the two youths watched the doomed horse
with an interest truly indescribable.

All at once their ears were saluted with a sharp report--they saw the
black horse stop, shake like a storm-tossed reed from head to foot,
and then drop to the ground!

“Dash me if I hevn’t dropped ’im at last!” cried Shackelford.
“No--no! I don’t want your rifle, George; the black can carry double
well enough. He’s as strong as a lion. Tecumseh!”

As the iron-gray shot forward toward the prostrate horse, the trapper
unloosed the coil of rope that hung at the saddle-bow, and presently
he leaped to the ground beside his victim.

“Now, Blackey!” he cried, in tones of triumph, but the next moment a
wild cry of horror followed.

He had scarcely touched the ground when Tecumseh, finding himself
masterless, reared on his haunches, then bounded forward with an
unearthly snort.

George Long dropped from his perch and fell at the trapper’s feet,
while Charley Shafer clung to the reins with the grim tenacity of
despair.

The “lost band” was yet in sight, and Tecumseh seemed to fly toward
them on the pinions of the wind.

He tried to unhorse his young rider; but the youth griped the gray
mane with his teeth and incircled the strong neck with his arms.
His hat and rifle had fallen to the ground at the outset of his
wild ride, and the horror-stricken spectators knew that he did not
possess a single weapon--not even a knife.

Tecumseh was beyond rifle-shot before the trapper recovered from his
fright, and George Long covered his face with his hands to hide his
young comrade’s doom from his sight!

“Curse that horse!” grated Frontier Shack, breaking the unearthly
silence. “He never had the devil in him afore like he hes to-day.
Them horses made ’im think what he was once, and now he’s gone back
to his old life.”

“And Charley--poor Charley--is riding to his death.”

Frontier Shack shook his head dolefully, as he gazed at the horse and
his despairing rider, now a dark speck in the distance.

“I wouldn’t give that for the boy’s chances,” and he snapped his
fingers at his side. “If Tecumseh catches the lost horses, may God
help Charley then. God help him, anyhow!”

George Long repeated the prayer away down among the deepest and
holiest shrines of his terror-frozen heart.

The next moment the runaway and his victim disappeared!

A snort from the black steed startled the couple, and with ready
rope the trapper sprung forward. But, before he could secure his
dearly-won prize, George Long touched his arm, and uttered a wild
shriek.

“My God! Indians!”

In an instant Frontier Shack was on his feet.

His hurried look north-eastward showed him a line of dark forms
between him and the horizon.

“Pawnees, by Joshua!”

The savages were distinctly visible, and the rider of the foremost
horse could be easily recognized from the spot where the couple stood.

“Tom Kyle wants me,” said the Westerner, gritting his teeth. “The
upper Pawnees hev told ’im about the fracas last night. We’re in for
it now, and blood hes got to flow!”

He snatched the rifle which had fallen from the ill-fated boy’s
hands, and then sprung to the black horse.

“They shan’t have Blackey!” he ejaculated, striking the animal’s rump
with his open hand, and the next moment the horse was flying over the
plains, free once more, but marked for life.

“Now for the river, boy!”

A wild yell broke from the Pawnees’ throats, as our friends sprung
toward the stream, and the red-skins were seen urging their horses
into a faster gait.

But they could not overtake the trapper and his protege, and at the
brink of the river they halted, afraid to trust their jaded steeds to
the mercies of the ingulfing sands.

“Poor Tecumseh!” sighed Frontier Shack, as he closed the cabin door
and barricaded it firmly. “I feel like one who has lost his best
friend. That horse was the only true friend Ote Shackelford ever had,
and if he gits out o’ this scrape, he’s going to hunt Tecumseh till
he finds him, dead or alive!”

George Long saw the trapper’s lips meet with terrible determination
behind the last word, and his mind was called from the contemplation
of Charley Shafer’s fate by the report of a score of rifles and the
thud of bullets, as they buried themselves in the cottonwood logs.

“Fort Shackelford is attacked,” said the trapper, with a grim smile,
“and the odds are somewhat enormous--two hundred against two.”




                             CHAPTER V.

                       RIFLE, FIRE AND LASSO.


Several minutes of silence followed the thud of the Pawnee bullets.

Then the voice of a white man came from the brink of the stream.

“Shackelford!”

The trapper glanced knowingly at George Long, and ascended to the
uncouth dormitory. In the gable that looked toward the besiegers a
small window was situated, and to this the frontiersman applied his
face.

“Well, what do you want, Kyle?”

“Reports which reached my ears say that you slew eight Pawnees last
night. Is it true?”

“I suppose it is,” was the reply, “though I counted but seven.”

“I fear that your deeds have sealed your doom.”

“You don’t fear any such thing, Tom Kyle.”

The renegade bit his lip, and said a few words to Red Eagle, who sat
on his horse near by.

“Shackelford, our errand here can not be a mystery to you,” he said,
turning toward the cabin again.

“It is not, Tom.”

“The odds are against you!”

“Decidedly so.”

“Then you had best surrender without further bloodshed.”

“What are your terms?”

“I have left all to the Indians; but I will do all I can for you.”

“We won’t surrender.”

“Consider, man.”

“We won’t surrender.”

“Shackelford--”

“_We won’t surrender!_ we’ll fight you and your cutthroats, Tom Kyle,
so help me God!”

Then the renegade consigned the inmates of the cabin to the depths of
perdition, and turned to his followers again.

The trapper remained for a few moments at the gable loop-hole, and
then ducked his head and disappeared.

“Did you hear everything, George?” he asked, as he struck the ground
before the youth.

“Yes.”

“Do you want to surrender?”

“No!”

The young lips closed emphatically behind the monosyllable, and
additional emphasis flashed from the young speaker’s dark eyes.

“You’re a man, by Joshua!” exclaimed Frontier Shack, grasping the
boy’s hand. “We’ll fight the hounds to-day, and when night comes
we’ll do suthing else, probably.”

After his failure in effecting a surrender, Tom Kyle moved his forces
further up-stream, and halted just beyond rifle-shot of the cabin.

He evidently did not care to trust himself within range of
Shackelford’s rifle, nor was Red Eagle loth to leave the spot where
they had first halted.

From his dormitory Shackelford could note the movements of his
foes. He saw them lounging about carelessly, or overhauling their
ammunition-pouches, and cleaning their weapons. He knew that they
were preparing for the darkness, that his island home would then be
invested, and stormed by the treacherous two hundred.

“I half expected that the hounds would wait till night,” he said,
addressing the boy adventurer, who was engaged in cleaning the
chambers of a revolver. “Tom Kyle is not going to attempt to reach
the island so long as I can cover his heart; but if they get to this
grove to-night, they’ll hear the biggest noise they ever heard.”

The youth looked up, inquiringly.

A minute later the trapper rose and unbarred the door. Opening it
boldly, he stepped out, and, in full view of the savages, walked to a
giant cottonwood which stood perhaps fifty feet from the cabin.

His movements, which, to say the least, were mysterious, caused the
Indians to suspend operations, and watch him.

He walked around the cottonwood several times, not appearing to
notice the Indians, then suddenly hastened to the cabin again.

He smiled as he barricaded the door, and George Long could not
restrain his curiosity.

“What do such movements mean?” he asked.

“You’ll see to-night if they come to the island.”

“They will come; I feel certain of that.”

“Of course they will.”

The day wore wearily on and as the shades of night gathered about the
scene, the Pawnee band seemed to gain new life. Ammunition-pouches
were carefully inspected, and adjusted for the last time, and Tom
Kyle was seen in the midst of eight or ten sub-chiefs, holding, as it
were, a pacific council of war.

When, at last, the council broke up, a young Pawnee, bearing a white
fabric on the point of his lance, ran down the river.

Opposite the center of the wooded cove, he hesitated.

“Pale faces give up now?”

“No!”

The undaunted reply caused the brave to whirl on his heel and dart
back to his brethren.

Then night, as if eager to witness appalling deeds, suddenly swooped
like a black eagle down upon the earth.

“They’re swimming the river!” said Frontier Shack, from the loop-hole
in the gable. “They were afraid to trust their horses among the sand.
Now look out, boy, for they’ve reached my island.”

For the last time Shackelford descended from the gable, and prepared
for the attack.

Large numbers of the attacking party had remained on the river banks
for the purpose of intercepting the white-faces’ escape, should they
be so fortunate as to leave the island safely.

The cabin was almost noiselessly surrounded; but the cautious
footsteps had been heard by Massasoit, and the faithful animal would
follow them around the limits of the hut, with flashing eyes and
bristling back.

“I hate this suspense,” said George Long, looking up into the
trapper’s face. “I wish the ball would open.”

“They’re hatching up something devilish. I know Tom Kyle, and what he
can’t think of, that Red Eagle can.”

At this juncture Massasoit sprung to one corner of the hut with a
fierce growl.

“The devils’ work has commenced,” said Shackelford, calmly. “They’re
burning us out!”

Without another word he began to ascend to the eaves, with the aid of
the rough logs that formed the cabin. George Long watched him by the
fire, that cracked in the center of the room.

Presently he heard the report of a pistol, and the sound of a heavy
body falling on brushwood quickly followed.

“One Pawnee won’t kindle any more fires,” said Frontier Shack,
descending. “First blood for Ote Shack. Next!”

A wild yell drowned his last words, and again a volley was poured
against the door.

The hunter sprung from the logs and snatched a torch from the fire.

“Dash me if they ain’t standing around the tree!” he exclaimed, his
eyes lighting up with fierce triumph. “I’ll make a scatteration ’mong
their ranks now, by Joshua! I will!”

He sprung toward a heavy tinned box which sat in one corner of the
apartment, and threw back the lid with his left hand. The next moment
he stepped back, thrusting the torch into the box as he executed
the movement. A slight noise, like the explosion of a few grains of
powder succeeded, and a white smoke rose from the recesses of the box.

But the noise that followed the explosion of the fuse was most
terrific. It shook the cabin from gable to foundation and drove our
young buffalo-hunter from the crevice by which he was standing. His
eyes, too, were blinded by a bright light, and before the noise died
away he heard the shrieks of Indians, frightened, wounded, and dying!

“By Joshua! it set the tree on fire!” cried the trapper, gazing at
the large cottonwood, now terribly lacerated by the mine which so
long had slept in its recesses.

From behind the magnificent trees, the Pawnees were now raining balls
upon the cabin, and burning arrows were hissing toward the dry roof.

The destruction must have been fearful, for the burning tree revealed
more than a score of forms, mangled and motionless, on the ground,
while others, badly injured, were crawling from the spot.

“Listen!”

The dry stuff that formed the roof of the cabin was crackling beneath
the blaze of the fiery arrows, and the object of the Pawnees to fire
the cabin seemed at last attained.

“They’ll burn us out.”

“Yes; the old house is bound to go, and we’re going, too, presently.”

“Going where?”

“To Fort Kearny, mebbe; p’r’aps to the Pawnee village.”

“As prisoners?”

“Yes, if we go thar at all, _to-night_.”

Then the trapper suddenly walked into the apartment which had served
as Tecumseh’s stable.

Three minutes later he returned and startled the youth with cocked
rifle near the door.

“Did you shoot?”

“No.”

“But you heard the report?”

“Yes; it seemed to come from a spot above us.”

Frontier Shack lifted his eyes, and placed his index finger on his
lip.

Somebody was on the burning roof.

Frontier Shack climbed up the logs, and waited at the aperture
between the eave and the uppermost log, for the person on the roof.

Presently he heard the unknown person descending, and sustaining
himself with one hand, the trapper cocked a revolver.

But he hesitated; the person might be a friend, for the shot, which
had been fired from the roof, had killed an Indian, and who among the
Pawnees would attempt such a deed?

The unknown let himself over the eave hurriedly yet cautiously.

The legs first descended, then came the body, and when the head
appeared between the trapper and the stars, a low hiss sounded:

“I hit him between the eyes; the Gold Girl is mine now!”

Frontier Shack raised the pistol, but the head had disappeared before
he could scatter the brains he wished to.

“Tom Kyle was on the roof.”

“Tom Kyle?” echoed George Long.

“Yes, and he shot an Indian, too.”

“What can he mean?”

“A girl’s at the bottom of the thing,” said Shackelford. “He shot
somebody important, for listen at them Indians.”

Loud cries, which indicated the death of some Indian of distinction,
came from beyond the burning tree, and dark forms could be seen
moving wildly in every direction.

“Dash me if he hasn’t audacity!” suddenly exclaimed Shackelford, who
was watching the savages from a crack near the door. “After killing
the Pawnee, Tom Kyle walks right among ’em, no doubt swearing I
plugged ’im.”

Almost wholly absorbed in the scene before them, the twain continued
to look until a burning brand fell at their feet.

“By Joshua! it’s getting too hot here, boy. Now for Fort Kearney or
Pawneedom.”

“I’m ready.”

“We must hurry. The Indians won’t do much till the chief dies, I
calculate; but we must move rapidly.”

For a moment the trapper disappeared in Tecumseh’s stable, and when
he faced the youth again he held a light boat in his arms.

“I hev two boats, but, of course, the dirty dogs found the one at
the western point of the island,” he said, standing the canoe on end
against the logs and clambering to the eaves. “The renegade’s bullet
has drawn the Indians from behind the cabin, and now is the accepted
time.”

His strong hands tore the heated roof timbers aside, and almost in
less time than I can record the fact, the couple had safely landed
themselves with the boat on the island.

George Long breathed freer.

Frontier Shack picked up the canoe and bounded toward the eastern
extremity of the cottonwood cone.

They reached it safely, and the boat was launched.

“Silence,” admonished the trapper, in the lowest of whispers, and the
next minute a noiseless stroke sent the light craft with the speed of
a rocket down the quick-sanded river toward Fort Kearney.

The oars were lifted from the clear waves for a second stroke,
when a score of rifles sent their leaden contents after the daring
fugitives. But the bullets whistled harmlessly past their heads, and
George Long uttered an ejaculation of joy.

“We ain’t out of the frying-pan yet,” whispered the Westerner.
“There’s a sunken island hyarabouts, and if we strike it, there’ll be
the deuce to pay.”

With the utterance of the final word, Frontier Shack suddenly guided
the canoe to the right, and the next second several rifles flashed on
the bank.

An oar dropped from the strong hand that griped it, and the boat was
borne around by the rapids.

Suddenly it struck!

“The island, by Joshua!”

George Long sprung to his feet, and the following moment the light
craft capsized, hurling him out into the water!

He could not repress a shriek, as he struck the sand, and felt it
ingulfing his nether limbs, drawing him, slowly yet surely, down to a
terrible death!

Frontier Shack had suddenly disappeared, nor was Massasoit to be seen.

The unfortunate boy struggled bravely; but the accursed sand
continued to drag him down. He could not extricate himself.

Suddenly he saw two Indians spring to the water’s edge. The stars
revealed their forms and actions.

He saw the tallest of the twain whirl a rope above his head.

After three circles, the noose suddenly shot from the Pawnee’s hand,
quivered for a moment in mid-air, and then dropped over the boy’s
head!

A quick jerk, which almost threw the young Ohioan on his face,
tightened the lasso around his body, and he saw the savages grip the
lariat tightly, while a yell of triumph pealed from their throats.

It was now a battle between the Pawnee and the quicksand!




                             CHAPTER VI.

                       WHITE LASSO’S CAPTURE.


“Heaven help me!” broke from Charley Shafer’s lips, when he found
himself in the perilous situation described in chapter _fourth_.

As Frontier Shack sprung to the ground to attend to the black
stallion, Charley immediately assumed the saddle. He feared that
Tecumseh’s restlessness might result in some wild freak, and he hoped
to reach the bridle and curb his ire while his master secured his
new prize. But the boy’s hand had not disengaged the bridle from the
thick mane, when the iron-gray bounded forward.

Young Shafer felt his comrade hurled from his perch, and found
himself jerked forward by the bridle which his fingers tightly
clutched.

Still, however, he retained his presence of mind, and discovering at
once that he could not stop Tecumseh with the bridle, he grappled the
long gray hairs of the mane with his hands, and held on for dear life.

Tecumseh was conscious that he had a rider, for he tried to shake the
youth off as he bounded over the prairie like a rocket; but he found
himself unable to do so.

On, on, still on; the horse actually seemed to gain strength as he
proceeded, and, by fearful glances ahead, the young Ohioan saw that
he was nearing the lost herd.

“I can’t hold out much longer!” he gasped between the clenched teeth,
“but I dare not release my hold. In a moment I would be trampled to
death by his hoofs, and father would never see his runaway boy again.”

Strangely Tecumseh would turn his head whenever a word fell from
rider’s lips; the horse seemed to think the voice that of his master;
but the desire to see his free comrades overruled the obedience he
had loved in days gone by, and kept the demon in his eyes.

All at once the boy saw the wild herd execute a sudden halt, but
the next moment they wheeled to the right, and dashed northward as
swiftly as before.

The halt enabled Tecumseh to approach very near the lost horses, and,
as he “cut corners” at break-neck speed, his rider saw the cause of
the horses’ sudden change of route.

A long line of dark forms appeared between him and the gray horizon.

They were Indians, scarce a mile away.

How Charley Shafer’s heart sprung into his throat at the sight.

If they could but see him!

He released one hand from Tecumseh’s mane, waved his handkerchief
above his head, wildly and with frantic gestures. But he found that
he occupied an insecure seat, and was soon forced to clasp the mane
again.

He groaned, as well he might, when he saw that his exertion for
salvation had accomplished nothing, for the Indians turned toward the
river and he soon lost sight of them.

At last Tecumseh reached his lost brethren. With wild neighs they
welcomed him back, and he returned the salute with sundry plunges
which almost unhorsed his despairing rider. The horse’s strength did
not seem weakened in the least degree, and this told Charley Shafer
that, in bygone days, he had been the monarch of some great equine
family.

For he skirted the edge of the wandering herd like a meteor, and
boldly threw himself in the van.

Now the boy clung closer than ever to the iron-gray, for eight
hundred hoofs were thundering behind him, and the sound fell
doomfully upon his ears.

He was riding, helpless, at the head of death.

The sun descended toward the grayish clouds that crowned the horizon,
and still over the rolling land the lost herd, and its new leader,
thundered on.

The boy at length became so weak and discouraged that it seemed as if
he must tumble off the horse’s back, and Tecumseh himself seemed to
know that his rider would soon drop from his perch.

Suddenly he thought of the Pawnee village, which Frontier Shack said
was north of the Platte; and he knew that the horses were running in
a northerly direction. Might they not encounter the Pawnee Loups,
and then might a lasso not fall near Tecumseh’s head, and he be saved?

He scarcely dared hope for such a finale to his wild ride, and yet he
prayed devoutly for it.

The prayers for such a deliverance still rose from his lips, when
Tecumseh snorted with rage and sprung to the right.

Almost unhorsed by the unexpected movement, the young white
buffalo-hunter raised himself, and uttered an ejaculation of joy
commingled with anxious fear.

The lost band, in scaling a prairie hillock, had suddenly come upon a
Pawnee village, and a band of Indians!

The latter were near, while far away he saw the former, resting idly
by a shining stream, which he felt must be the Loup fork of the
Platte.

The Pawnee horsemen, perhaps thirty in number, at once drove their
spurs into the rowels of the fresh animals, with a yell which the
lost steeds greeted with neighs of astonishment.

Charley saw lassoes made ready as the Pawnees rushed forward, and he
saw, too, with infinite joy, that they were gaining on him, at no
insignificant rate.

“God help them catch me!” he cried, for captivity was preferable to
the doom which had stared him in the face so long.

The singular turn which affairs had taken threw new strength into
his limbs; he reached forward, and griped the bridle which lay
on Tecumseh’s neck. Then, sitting bolt upright in his saddle, he
“see-sawed” on the Mexican bit with all his might.

His action bothered the horses that pressed in his rear, for Tecumseh
could not push forward with the alacrity he had known, and the others
crowded against him, much to his disquietude.

They tried to pull the brave boy from the saddle; they caught his
garments with their teeth, and lacerated his limbs with their frantic
exertions.

But, finding that Tecumseh’s rider was delaying his progress, they
suddenly divided ranks, and, without mercy, left the iron-gray in the
rear.

Charley Shafer could have shouted at his victory, but he was still
in the midst of great perils, and he realized his situation.

Still with the strength born of desperation he “see-sawed” on the
bit, each moment making the iron-gray more frantic than ever.

He did not look backward for the Pawnees; he feared that a backward
glance, like that of Lot’s wife, might prove his destruction, and he
was bent on conquering the trapper’s runaway.

Tecumseh tried to regain his position at the head of the band, but
failed, and at last he found himself quite a distance in the rear.
Foam now completely covered his fiery body, and he seemed more a
white horse than a gray one.

On, on, he pushed with splendid resolution, and so intent was his
rider in the work of conquering, that he did not hear the hoofs that
crushed the new-born grass in his rear.

But Tecumseh heard the sounds, and put forth every effort of strength.

“What ails the bridle?” suddenly cried the young Ohioan, discovering
that the reins had suddenly lengthened. “By my heart! the bit is out
of his mouth!”

He spoke truly; his eye had not deceived him.

Now the steed was ungovernable again, and the boy dropping the reins
fell forward on Tecumseh’s neck, too weak to sit upright.

Where were the Indians now? He turned, but could not see clearly. A
dazzling mist floated before his eyes, and the air to him suddenly
became dense.

He saw not, felt not, what Tecumseh did--the whirling rope, the
sudden tightening of the strong cord, and the throttling that quickly
followed.

He felt his hands unclasp, then came the sensation of being hurled
through the air--then insensibility!

He opened his eyes amid thirty anxious Pawnee Indians, and his
recovery was greeted with yells of delight and triumph.

“White boy ride hunter’s horse like young brave,” said the giant, who
had lassoed Tecumseh, kneeling beside the youth he had rescued. “How
he get off with the big steed?”

In a few words our hero acquainted the Pawnees with the circumstances
attending his perilous ride, and they admired his pluck in sticking
to the animal.

“Pale boy brave enough to be Pawnee,” the Indian, who was evidently a
chief, continued. “He made White Lasso catch him, by making hunter’s
horse tired. If gray horse stay at head of band, White Lasso no catch
’im and save boy.”

The youth smiled, and thanked the Pawnee for the life he had saved.

He felt that his pluck had gained him a friend among the Indians, and
the thought was further strengthened by the Pawnee’s words.

“White boy sleep in White Lasso’s tent,” he said, lifting our
weakened hero from the ground.

“Red Eagle got Gold Girl, Pale Pawnee keep the darker rose, and White
Lasso make the young rider great chief.”

The youth instantly comprehended the Pawnee’s words. A division of
the captives had already been made, and Mabel Denison had fallen into
the hands of the renegade. He allowed a flush of mingled fear and
shame to overspread his face, and he clenched his white hands till
the nails blued the palms.

Perhaps he already loved the fair girl who had been his companion
across the plains, and well might he fear for her safety, if such was
the case.

“I will be near her,” he murmured, “and perhaps I may yet thank God
for my fearful ride through the jaws of death.”

The Indians watched the youth and the disappearing horses
alternately, until White Lasso strode toward his own steed, panting
near by. He bore our hero in his arms, and seated him on the
foam-flecked mustang, before vaulting into the Spanish saddle himself.

“White Lasso love white boy,” the Indian whispered to his charge. “He
had a boy once; but the Apaches scalp ’im ’fore he won his feathers.
Pale-face take that boy’s place now.”

The next moment a middle-aged Indian rode up to the chief.

“Upper Pawnees will want white boy. Kenoagla give him them other day.”

White Lasso’s face darkened, and fire flashed from his midnight orbs.
His hand flew to his knife.

“White boy is White Lasso’s son now. Upper Pawnees no git ’im again.
The Pale Pawnees can not give ’im back. Kenoagla not Pawnee’s true
king!”

He shot a glance burdened with passion around upon the band, and the
eyes which he met told that Tom Kyle’s days of mastery were drawing
to a close.

Charley Shafer shot a look of admiration into White Lasso’s face; but
the next words that fell from the Indian’s lips blanched his cheek.

“White Lasso cut boy’s heart ’fore he give ’im back to upper Pawnees.”

The night closed about the party before they entered the Indian
village, and without exciting many of its inhabitants. Charley Shafer
reached his captor’s tent.

“White boy tired; he sleep now,” said the chief, pointing to a couch
of buffalo skins, in one corner of the lodge. “Nobody hurt ’im. White
Lasso stand ’tween ’im and Upper Pawnees, Red Eagle and Kenoagla.”

The boy started.

If those three evils should combine against him, what could White
Lasso do? The answer to this interrogative came to him in the echo of
the Pawnee’s words.

“White Lasso cut boy’s heart ’fore he give ’im back to Upper Pawnee.”

With a sigh that indicated the prostration of a human frame,
the peril-environed Ohio youth threw himself upon the skins and
immediately went to sleep.

He dreamed of home in that peaceful slumber--not of his own danger,
nor of his young comrade, who, during his sleep, was being ingulfed
by the treacherous quicksand with a Pawnee lariat around his body.

After watching his captive awhile, White Lasso stole from the lodge,
on tip-toe, and walked away.

Scarcely had he disappeared when the skinny curtain slowly parted,
and a face was revealed by the fire which lighted up the small
apartment.

“How come pale boy here when Kenoagla still far off?” murmured the
secret visitant. “Where White Lasso find him? Ha! he pretty as river
lily; his skin fairer than Red Eagle’s.” Then, after a long pause,
“Red Eagle not so pretty as pale boy. But Winnesaw go tell Gold Girl
that her fair-skinned brother sleeps in White Lasso’s lodge.”

Then the face disappeared, and the curtains met again.

A new love was born in the Pawnee village that night.




                            CHAPTER VII.

                              TREASON.


Winnesaw, the Pawnee girl, could not conjecture how Charley Shafer
had fallen into the hands of the thirty braves. She had witnessed the
departure of Tom Kyle and his red marauders, the previous night, and
the upper Pawnees had informed her that the young pale-faces were
with Frontier Shack, and under his strong protecting care.

The return of the renegade was not looked for until some time the
coming day, for the savages knew that the trapper would defend
his charges to the last extremity, and that the cabin could not
be attacked successfully until nightfall. Bent on solving the
mystery that enveloped our hero’s appearance in the Indian village,
Winnesaw did not immediately return to Lina Aiken, the Gold Girl,
but proceeded to look up some brave who had composed a part of White
Lasso’s party.

She saw that individual himself talking in low tones to a young
warrior. Both stood in the gloomy shade of a lodge, and all at once
Winnesaw grew into a statue not far away.

She felt that she was the subject of the Indian’s conversation, and
with every sense on the alert she watched the half-naked twain.

“Wolf Eyes will do it all?” she heard White Lasso say in a half
interrogative manner.

Wolf Eyes answered, “Yes.”

A moment later the Indians parted in the shadows, and Winnesaw glided
after the younger, who walked toward the lodge occupied by Mr.
Denison and his daughter, Mabel.

She saw him approach the guard with a boldness for which she was not
prepared, when she knew that a secret hatred existed between the
sub-chief and the renegade, and, parting the curtains, Wolf Eyes
stood in a listening attitude a long time.

Some dark project was ripening; the girl felt it no longer now--she
knew it.

All at once Wolf Eyes turned from the door, and, in the moonlight
that bathed his dark but finely-chiseled face, she saw a smile of
triumph, dark, sinister, triumphant, which a Lucifer might covet and
be satisfied.

He said a few words in an undertone to the guard, who looked up at
the moon, pointed to a wall of black clouds, and nodded his plumed
head.

Then Wolf Eyes walked away, dogged by the form of the Indian girl.

She watched him to the door of his lodge, saw him enter, and,
approaching as near as she dared in the stillness of the night, she
heard the overhauling of revolvers, and the clicking of a rifle-lock.

“What must Winnesaw do now?” she asked herself, with a puzzled
expression. “Shall she go back and tell the Gold Girl what she has
seen, or shall she watch the traitors?”

Several times she repeated these puzzling questions, and in the
end she slowly walked away. A few moments later she passed two
Indians, who lay before a large lodge, conversing in low tones, and
disappeared beyond the skinny door.

The fire in the center of the apartment was burning low, but it
revealed the form of Lina Aiken, stretched upon Red Eagle’s couch,
fast asleep and dreaming, with a smile on her ripe lips.

For several minutes Winnesaw stood undecided over the sleeping one,
and then, stooping, she gently touched Lina’s rosy cheek.

The Gold Girl started up with a frightened look.

“Why, Winnesaw, how you frightened me!” she exclaimed, smiling, as
she recognized the face above her. “I was dreaming, and you broke my
dream in the most bewitching part.”

“Winnesaw sorry to wake Gold Girl,” said the Pawnee maiden; “but she
may dream of spirit-land again when she has told her white sister
what she saw to-night.”

Lina Aiken instantly became on the alert, and Winnesaw smiled at her
eagerness, which drove every vestige of slumber from her eyes.

“What has Winnesaw seen?” she questioned, grasping the girl’s arm,
and speaking in a tone which caused the Pawnee to shake her head.

“Guards not asleep,” she whispered, glancing fearfully at the door.
“The Pawnee village is full of red traitors; they seem to outnumber
the flowers of the prairies. Winnesaw saw and heard them to-night;
they talk low, but are as bold as the Sioux.” And then she told Lina
Aiken about the conference between White Lasso and Wolf Eyes, and the
subsequent actions of the latter.

“What does it all mean?” asked the Gold Girl.

“Cheatery.”

“But who is to be cheated?”

“Kenoagla and Red Eagle.”

“Explain, Winnesaw; your astounding declarations have confused my
poor brain, I can not comprehend you; explain, I say.”

“Wolf Eyes loves the Gold Girl’s brown sister,” the Indian went on,
“and White Lasso’s heart beats in fire for--for you, my fair-skinned
sister.”

“What! am I beloved or rather coveted by another red-skin?” groaned
the captive blonde, a pallor flitting over her face.

“White Lasso wants Gold Girl,” said Winnesaw.

“But, girl, may all this not be a plot of Red Eagle’s planning? You
know he hates Kenoagla, as your people call the renegade, and may
not the two chiefs be in his employ to rob him of Mabel while he is
absent?”

Winnesaw shook her head.

“White Lasso and Red Eagle disputed a deer once, and since that time
their lips have been scaled to each other and Wolf Eyes is White
Lasso’s brother’s son.”

Lina Aiken did not speak.

“If they waited until the war-party returned, they could not tear the
pale-face girls from their captors,” continued the Indian girl, after
a brief pause.

“Then you think that they intend to carry out their plots to-night?”

“Yes.”

“What of my guards?”

“They are the chief’s friends; they too are traitors!”

“Then why did Red Eagle place them here?”

“He did not. The Big Medicine put them where they stand.”

“Would he betray Red Eagle?”

“He would.”

“What dark-faced treachery! I have fallen into a den of traitors, and
treachery fills the very air I breathe. But the boy?”

A blush suffused the red girl’s face.

“White Lasso will take him along if he goes to-night.”

Lina Aiken was silent for a long time.

“I wonder where George is!” she murmured.

“The other pale-face?”

The white girl started and it was her time to blush.

“Did you hear me, Winnesaw?”

“Yes; Gold Girl loves other pale boy.”

Lina’s blue eyes dropped to her feet, and the crimson mounted to her
temples, and tarried there until the Indian girl arose.

“You are not going to leave me now, girl?” said the blonde,
imploringly.

“Winnesaw go watch traitors; she come back soon,” was the reply, and
before the last sound died away, Lina found herself alone.

The Pawnee girl soon perceived that her footsteps were dogged by a
black shadow, and she walked directly to her lodge. After dropping
the curtains, she turned, and saw the black detective approaching
with the tread of the cat.

After watching him a moment, she turned and threw herself upon her
couch like one who would soon yield to the wooings of the drowsy god.

The moonlight stole faintly into her lodge, and a stray beam fell
across her face. She threw an arm across her cheeks in sleepy
abandon; but peeped out under the bridge of the elbow, and saw the
eyes that regarded her from the outside of the wigwam. One of the
Indian’s hands clutched a silver-mounted revolver, but she had no
occasion to use it, for the eyes soon disappeared, and she heard
their owner walking away.

She arose and gazed upon the retreating form.

It was Wolf Eyes; the peculiar gait, the crest of hawk-feathers,
proclaimed his identity beyond question.

He disappeared among the shadowy lodges, satisfied, no doubt, that
the object of his espionage slept suspicionless and sound.

The girl had completely deceived him, and when his form no longer
obstructed her vision, she snatched a rifle from a corner, and left
the lodge.

“The traitors shall not carry out all their plans,” she muttered,
with determination; “they may have the pale-face girls; but they
shall not carry the white boy away. The Great Spirit made his pretty
face for Winnesaw, and he shall not be taken from her now.”

These words meant much, and the red lips closed over them with
fearful emphasis, which told what a woman would dare for love.

Once the Indian girl thought of arousing the village, and thus baffle
the designs which were to be carried out when the dark clouds settled
over the disk of the moon; but when she recollected that desperate
men would do desperate deeds, and that the entire village swarmed
with plots and counterplots, and traitors of the deepest dye, she
relinquished all such intentions and resolved to do it all herself.

She hurried toward White Lasso’s lodge; but now two Indians guarded
it, and the chief was not to be seen.

She felt that she was suspected.

For several minutes she watched the lodge, but the Pawnee did not
return. She crept to the base of the structure, and heard the regular
breathings of a sound sleeper.

Charley Shafer was still there.

While she listened, the whinny of a mustang reached her ears, and
drove her to her feet.

The next moment she was hurrying cautiously toward the western
suburbs of the village.

The whinny had told her much that was startling, and presently she
saw an Indian holding three horses by the bridles on the banks of the
Pawnee Loup.

Treason was hatching, and the shell would soon be broken by the giant
offspring.

The girl crept near the horses, taking good care to keep to windward,
and all at once she dropped in the grass, and griped the silvered
butt of the revolver which Pawnee ferocity had torn from the hand of
some murdered emigrant.

It was near midnight now, and the darkest hour was at hand. The black
cloud wall had blotted the moon, as it were, from the heavens, and
but four stars, toward the east, still illuminated the skies.

The horses were fresh and eager to rush over the prairies, in the
face of the cool breeze, that came from the west. They pawed the sod,
and arched their noble necks, until the Indian curbed their ire with
his voice, and made them seem statues in the darkness.

Winnesaw watched and waited with bated breath.

The consummation of treason seemed never to dawn. But what seemed
hours to the girl were but minutes, and at last footsteps broke the
ghastly silence.

The click, click, of rifle and revolver were drowned by the noise of
the swaying grass.

Three forms joined the single Pawnee, but two bore human-shaped
objects in their arms.

The next moment two Indians vaulted to the mustangs’ backs, and the
steed-watcher lifted the girls to their arms.

“Now the boy!”

It was White Lasso’s voice, and Winnesaw was near enough to see that
a tight bandage covered the boy’s mouth, and that Mabel Denison and
the Gold Girl were similarly secured.

The Indian addressed by the chief caught Charley Shafer in his arms,
threw him upon the back of the third horse, and then leaped up after
him.

“Now good-by Pawnee Loup,” said White Lasso, waving his hand toward
the river. “We ride to the Sioux, and with them we’ll hunt the
buffalo, and fight the Pawnee if he comes for White Lasso and his
friends.”

Quickly, then, the mustangs’ heads were turned toward the north, but
before the spurs touched the scarred rowels, a pistol cracked and the
Indian who held Charley Shafer groaned and dropped to the ground!

The boy still retained his seat, and as the horses started forward,
a slender form sprung from the grass, and threw herself before the
horse’s hoofs. A hand clutched the bridle, and the flash of powder
drove the animal back upon his haunches. Then, before he could
recover, his rider was jerked to the ground, and the hand released
the bridle.

White Lasso and Wolf Eyes did not pause; but the chief turned and
sent a bullet after the Pawnee girl, who darted forward as the weapon
cracked.

She stooped and snatched her rifle from the grass.

“Don’t, girl, you may shoot Mabel!”

Charley Shafer’s hands griped Winnesaw’s arm; but he could not
prevent the shot.

A wild cry came back over the prairie, and in a ray of moonlight
which shot through a break in the cloud wall, they saw two forms fall
from a horse.

The remaining horseman dashed on.

The young twain rushed forward.

White Lasso lay in the grass quite dead, and Lina Aiken stood over
him, transfixed with horror.

Charley Shafer snatched Winnesaw’s rifle from her hand; but the next
instant he threw it away with a despairing cry.

Wolf Eyes and his beautiful captive had entirely disappeared.

The young adventurer staggered back with a groan.

Lina Aiken stole to his side.

“Poor Mabel,” she said; “they killed her father but an hour ago, and
now the second sorrow of her life begins.”

The boy gritted his teeth.

“I would have been with her, to comfort and save perhaps, had it not
been for that red-skin,” and, as he turned to Winnesaw, he hissed:
“Girl, I hate you; may Heaven increase that hatred!”

Winnesaw dropped her eyes and turned away.

“Don’t hate her, Charley, don’t! she has been very kind to me.”

“Hark!”

The Indian girl started forward, but paused and turned to the couple
again.

“The Pawnees come!” she said. “The clouds gather, but Winnesaw will
stand by the pale faces through the storm!”

The next instant they were surrounded.




                            CHAPTER VIII.

                      AN UNEXPECTED ACCUSATION.


We left George Long among the devouring quicksands of the Platte, and
now, after a brief absence, we return to him.

His weight, though not great, seemed to take him down, and the
Indians, seeing this, set up wild yells for assistance. Meanwhile,
they tugged with all their strength at the lasso, and the boy thought
that they would rend him in twain. Tighter and tighter grew the
lariat about his body; his arms seemed to be forced into his sides,
and his breath became mere gasps, and brief ones at that.

“Let go! let go!” he shouted to the savages in the agony of mingled
pain and despair. “You can’t get me out! my knees are below the sand
now; my feet are lumps of ice. Drop the rope, and let me sink!”

But the savages did not obey. On the other hand, they braced
themselves anew, and pulled in quick, torturing jerks. The
unfortunate boy’s body lay on the water now, and the jerks would
submerge his face in the cold fluid, which seemed destined to be his
grave.

All at once several Pawnees joined the red twain, and presently five
pair of hands griped the sinewy rope.

“Steady!” shouted a new voice, and the next moment Tom Kyle, the
renegade, appeared on the scene, at the head of a score of warriors.

George looked up and saw the Pale Pawnee doff his serape and plumed
hat. Then he handed his pistol-belt to an Indian, and urged his horse
into the fatal river.

“Pull steady!” he cried, glancing over his shoulder at his red-men.
“We’ll get the boy out yet--the boy who shot Red Eagle!”

If George Long could have uttered an intelligible word, he would have
flung the lie into his would-be-rescuer’s teeth. He saw the motive
that prompted the renegade’s action; he would rescue him for the
purpose of covering up a dastardly crime of his own, for, as yet, the
youth had not shed a drop of Indian blood.

Nearer and nearer came the renegade. His steed sunk at each step, and
Tom Kyle spurred him out of the devouring sand before it could clutch
its victim, and at last he drew rein beside the youth. George had
sunk but a few inches since the tightning of the lasso; the Indians’
strength had counteracted the work of the sand; but they could not
extricate him. It wanted a strong upward pull, and that was coming in
the arm of the renegade.

“You’re in a bad fix, boy,” cried Tom Kyle, reaching down for the
motionless form lying on the water. “The Indians were about giving
you up when I came, and you couldn’t hire one to ride out here and
try and pull you out with all the scalps in Christendom.”

He caught the young Ohioan’s shoulder, and shouted to the Indians on
shore to loosen the tension of the lasso. Instantly it was done, and
steadily Tom Kyle rose in the heavy Spanish stirrups, pulling the boy
upward with all the strength he could command.

While he exerted his strength, his noble horse was sinking, and
thus loosening the sand about the boy’s legs. It sprung to its new
victim--the horse--and as the spur-scarred flanks touched the water,
George Long felt himself being pulled through the waves, while a
thousand hellish cries filled his ears.

The renegade saw that he could not save his horse, and stripping the
accouterments from him, he sprung into the water and swam ashore.

A few frantic struggles settled the brave steed’s fate, and at last
the water rushed over the sandy grave.

George Long fainted in the water; but four Indians rubbed him back
into life, and he was jerked upon his feet.

“Where’s white trapper?”

George pointed to the river, and the Indians who had fired the volley
which resulted so fatally to the voyagers, declared that Frontier
Shack had disappeared in one of the quicksand whirlpools which abound
in the Platte.

“I guess you’re able to sit on a horse,” said Tom Kyle, turning to
our hero. “We’re going home now.”

The boy declared that he felt stronger, and presently the party were
riding in a full gallop toward the north. While they were mounting,
a bright light illumined the cove, and several Pawnees, loaded
with pelts, rode up and joined the band. The island home of Otis
Shackelford was in flames, and it looked as if the entire island
would be devoured by the scarlet demon, fire.

“Where is the trapper’s horse?” questioned Tom Kyle, of the youth, as
they rode along.

George replied by relating the story of Charley Shafer’s sudden
departure.

“I wanted that horse,” replied the renegade, “and you must know that
I am terribly disappointed. There is no such steed as the trapper’s
in my nation; I would have given a thousand dollars for him, any day.”

Tom Kyle never dreamed that that coveted horse was to prove his death!

They rode into the Indian village an hour after midnight. Confusion
filled the square, which was illuminated by torches elevated on
poles, and a strange sight greeted George Long’s eyes as he took in
the wild scene.

He first saw Charley Shafer standing beside an Indian girl, while
Lina Aiken clung to his arm, looking with pallid features upon the
dark mob, which surrounded them with knives and tomahawks.

Near the chief who was haranguing the boisterous multitude, when
Kenoagla’s party rode into the village, lay two dead bodies. The
whitish lasso lying on the throbless breast proclaimed the identity
of one, while the absence of plumes from the other head, proclaimed
its owner a common warrior.

Tom Kyle’s eyes swept the entire scene in an instant, and he drove
the spurs into his animal’s flanks with an oath, which was a frequent
visitor to his lips.

The speaker ceased, and a shout of triumph pealed from his lips. He
had attained the object of his harangue--time; and at sight of the
returning band the red-skins divided, and the renegade halted in the
“square.”

“The other boy, by heavens!” exclaimed the renegade, his eyes
recognizing Tecumseh’s young rider. “Where’s the horse?”

“Safe in the Pawnee village,” answered an Indian.

“Good! he’s mine.”

The savages crowded about the band to learn the particulars of their
expedition, and terrible shouts rent the air when the bursting of the
cottonwood was made known. Fierce looks were shot at George Long, who
sat on the white mustang at the renegade’s side; but the red-man’s
anger reached its loftiest pinnacle when a certain corpse was brought
into the circle.

Tom Kyle had tried to prepare the savages for bad news; but his words
shot bitter arrows at the youthful captive, and when the warriors
laid the corpse of Red Eagle beside that of White Lasso, his secret
enemy, there was a perceptible movement toward the boy. Winnesaw bent
over the body.

“Back!” cried the renegade, rising in his stirrups. “Do not slay the
boy in the heat of your anger. The upper Pawnees are here; they claim
the two pale boys; we gave them to our river brethren when the white
man’s trail fell into our hands. We must listen to the upper Pawnees.”

At this harangue the Indians paused, and looked toward the group of
Indians whose peculiar garments told that they did not dwell on the
Loup fork. Fifty stalwart fellows composed the group, and all at once
the plumed heads of the chiefs came together in low conversation. The
Loup and Platte Pawnees were not ancient enemies, though, at times,
they had met as foemen on the battle-field; and a few words were
sufficient to rupture any peace that might exist between them.

The young white buffalo-hunters, as captives, belonged to the Platte
Pawnees, and when the survivors of Frontier Shack’s victory besought
their Loup brethren for aid, they thought that the boys would be
delivered over to them without a word.

But things had turned out strangely, to say the least. Frontier Shack
had not fallen into the Indians’ hands, and a ball had entered Red
Eagle’s brain. The chief’s death had, in the event of the trapper’s
disappearance, been charged to the young adventurer, and the Loup
Pawnees now clamored for his hot young blood, and for the gore of his
white comrade.

The Indians whom Charley Shafer tried to signal while flying over
the prairies on Tecumseh’s back, had proved to be the band of Platte
Pawnees, on a buffalo-hunt, and they had joined Tom Kyle’s avengers
a few minutes before the terrible explosion of the cottonwood. After
the siege, they had been persuaded to accompany Kenoagla’s band to
the Pawnee village, where a final disposition of George Long should
be made.

The whispered consultation of the Platte chiefs did not last long;
their lips closed firmly over certain words, and, at length, the
Samsonian leader of the party advanced from the group.

“The chiefs say, ‘Give us our property!’” he said, in a firm tone;
“give us the white boys and we will seek our lodges in peace.”

Tom Kyle saw that he stood on the crust of a crater, and his eye
calmly swept the sea of red faces beneath his perch.

The fifty mounted Plattes regarded him with anxious faces and their
hands clutched the rifles with terrible determination.

“Braves of the Loup, shall two pale boys dye Pawnee ground with
Pawnee blood?” asked the renegade, hurling his voice above the
clicking of a hundred rifle-locks, and the testing of twice as many
arrows. “This pale spawn will die in our brothers’ hands, and Red
Eagle will thus be avenged.”

“No! no!” shouted White Lasso’s brother, springing to his horse’s
back. “The slayer of Red Eagle shall die by his children’s hands. If
Kenoagla is a Loup no longer, let him go to the Apaches, in whose
lodges he may be safer than here.”

It was the first outbreak of treason, and the yells of approval that
followed it, blanched the renegade’s cheeks.

One glance at the Gold Girl, and he hastened to remedy his mistake.

“I spoke for peace,” he said; “not for the life of Red Eagle’s
slayer. The Plattes and Loups are brothers now; shall all brotherly
ties be severed?”

“If they do not say to the Loups, ‘Take the white boy and avenge Red
Eagle’--yes!” cried the Little Buffalo.

The fifty daring fellows in the midst of their three hundred mad
brethren bit their lips, and shook their heads resolutely.

“Then, Pawnee Loups, we keep the pale-faces or die!” cried the
renegade, as the fifty threw the deadly weapons to their shoulders.

The women and children, with wild shrieks, fled from the dangerous
ground and cowered in their lodges, pitiable objects of abject terror.

But still the red fingers refused to press the triggers.

Neither party seemed willing to inaugurate a conflict which might
grow into a war of extermination, and the silence which reigned could
almost have been _felt_.

The feelings of the captives at this dread moment can not be
described. Their lives hung on delicate threads; death, like the
sword of Damocles, quivered over their heads, and they waited with
throbless hearts for the volley of fire and lead.

All at once, after three minutes’ silence, the Platte chief spoke:

“Shall we have the pale boys?”

“_No!_”

The little monosyllable pealed from three hundred throats as from the
throat of one man.

Then the eyes that covered broad, bare breasts, dropped nearer the
rifle-barrels and bow-strings; but a voice, and the springing of a
girlish form from the body of Red Eagle, stayed the hand of massacre.

“Stay your hands, Plattes and Loups!” she cried, pausing between the
divided tribes. “The pale boy did not slay Red Eagle. The ball that
reached his brain came from Kenoagla’s rifle!”

The effect was electrical.

Every rifle was lowered, and every eye fell upon Tom Kyle.

His face became as pale as death, and, trembling visibly, he rose in
his stirrups.

“The red snake who basely shot White Lasso hates the Pawnee King.
She would save the pale boys, and see him die. The warriors will not
listen to her false tongue when they can read her heart.”

The red-girl’s voice quickly followed the renegade’s:

“The Pale Pawnee’s rifle shoots a big bullet,” she said, calmly,
firmly. “It will not enter the muzzle of the white boy’s gun. Take
Kenoagla’s lead and try it. It will not fit the white boy’s gun; but
it will fit the hole between Red Eagle’s eyes. And then, Kenoagla
hated Red Eagle because he got the Gold Girl.”

Three Pawnees sprung from their steeds and griped the rifle which
George Long had retained with a deathly grip while sinking in the
quicksand.

Tom Kyle tossed them a bullet.

“Take it!” he hissed. “That girl can make the Pawnee believe any
thing.”

The savages who were prominent actors in the cabal which existed
against the renegade, carried on the examination.

Tom Kyle’s bullet would not fit the boy’s gun; but it could be placed
in the hole in Red Eagle’s brain. It fitted that death-wound to a
nicety.

The examination concluded with a yell.

The renegade handed his rifle to a chief.

“If I slew Red Eagle I would fight; but, knowing that I never aimed
at his head, I surrender to my people.”

The next moment he sprung from his horse, and, guarded by a score of
warriors, he was hurried away.

“Curse that sharp-eyed girl!” he muttered. “I’ll have her blood
for this yet! And the Gold Girl shall be mine in spite of all the
red demons of the prairie! Though dethroned, the Pawnee king is not
friendless!”

In the jaws of death, villains plot anew.




                             CHAPTER IX.

                       “YOU’VE GOT MY HORSE.”


Tom Kyle was thrown into the only strong wooden structure that the
Pawnee village contained, while the young adventurers were placed in
a lodge and guarded by equal numbers of Platte and Loup Pawnees.

Lina Aiken was taken to the Medicine’s wigwam, while Winnesaw was,
also, closely guarded, for she was guilty of the death of two of
her people, and she must certainly atone for the crime with her own
blood. But she had baffled White Lasso, and succeeded in keeping the
white boy from the smoky lodges of the Sioux. That, at least, was a
source of comfort to her, when she knew that the Plattes would regain
their captives, and that she would die with her lips far from his.

Such a state of affairs had never before reigned in the Pawnee
village, and the Indians consequently were greatly excited over
it. The guilt and innocence of Tom Kyle were discussed everywhere
during the day; the Platte braves being obliged to remain to await
the result of the renegade’s trial, which would take place the
following day. The treason smothered so long had now broken forth,
and, in its strength, it swept every thing before it. The conspiring
chiefs chafed at the delay; they demanded an immediate trial; but
the majority of the oldest sachems counseled the postponement of the
crisis, and they prevailed.

Tom Kyle still possessed many true friends, and it was true policy
that their words should produce some effect.

The afternoon was rapidly fading away, when a solitary Crow Indian
rode into the Pawnee village. His rifle was thrown across his
back, as the sign of peace, and his scalping knife and tomahawk
were inverted in his belt. A single feather comprised his head
dress, and it was interwoven in his scalp-lock, in a curious and
somewhat artistic manner. He was an Indian of middle age, but the
thick painting hid many wrinkles, and several vermilion lines on his
massive breast revealed the presence of arrow or lance scars. His
leggings, as well as the sides of his horse, dripped with water,
which proclaimed that he had crossed the Loup fork at its deepest
point, and he busied himself in arranging the drenched fringes of his
nether garments, with a view to enhancing his appearance in the eyes
of his Pawnee brethren.

He found himself besieged by hundreds of women and children, long
before he reached the council square; but he resolutely pushed his
animal through the masses, nor did he draw rein until the warriors
gathered about and demanded his name and errand.

A singular smile played with the Crow’s lips as he gazed into the
fierce faces that surrounded him, and, all at once, he shook his head
and put his finger over his lips, which he drew close.

The Pawnees exchanged looks of wonder and awe. They seemed to
comprehend that their visitor was a mute.

Then one of the chiefs undertook to discover the Crow’s errand, and,
with a few motions of his hands, the visitor bade the Pawnees form a
great circle, which was done.

Instantly new life seemed to inspire the Indian; he performed a
buffalo-chase so admirably that the Pawnees clapped their hands, and
made the air ring with “wewas,” their word for “good!”

The Crow’s actions told his auditors that he and a number of his
countrymen had embarked upon a great buffalo-hunt, which had proved
quite successful, but disastrous so far as the Indians’ welfare was
concerned. They had lost a number of their party, and he had pursued
the buffaloes to the borders of the Pawnee country. His comrades,
grieved by the loss of two sub-chiefs, who had been killed by wounded
bulls, had returned, while he had embraced the opportunity of
visiting his Pawnee brethren for the first time.

His looks, his carriage, pleased the savages, and they gathered
about him with delight, mingled with profound respect. The American
Indian always respects an unfortunate person; they pity any one whom
the Great Spirit has touched, as they express affliction in any form,
and they received the mute Crow with dignified courtesy, mingled with
sympathy for his loss of hearing and speech.

After performing his journey from the Crow village beyond the Black
Hills to the Pawnee lodges, the Indian produced several pieces of
white bark, and charcoal pencils.

Upon the former he drew the picture of a sleeping bear, and then
pointed to himself.

Then he sketched Tom Kyle; held the picture up to the Pawnees, and
looked inquiringly around.

This was not a strange question, for the renegade’s person and
position was well known to the Crows, and it was quite natural for
the Indian to inquire about the king of such a great nation as the
Pawnees.

His question was answered by signs and picture-writing, and he
expressed great surprise at the unexpected turn affairs had taken.

Then he dismounted and confided his horse to the care of the
officiating chief. This announced his intention of remaining to
witness the renegade’s trial and doom.

A lodge was given him, food placed at his disposal, and the curtain
fell upon the Crow all alone.

He did not seem to hear the loudest sound, for a gun had been
discharged close to his head, and he had not exhibited the least
curiosity regarding the shot.

After remaining in the Pawnee lodge for the space of an hour,
Sleeping Bear raised the curtains and stepped out. The shades of
night were gathering from the four cardinal points, and the mute
wandered aimlessly, as it seemed, about the village.

He encountered a warrior whose age reached his own, and they walked,
at the Crow’s request, toward the corral, which contained perhaps a
hundred horses. These animals were newly captured or stolen ones,
while the old Pawnee steeds were browsing along the banks of the Loup
fork, or sleeping on the prairie near the village.

The Crow’s companion was suspicious, and he watched his nation’s
guest narrowly, as they walked along, conversing by signs. Sleeping
Bear did not notice the Pawnee’s suspicious nature; he seemed intent
on telling the story of a famous chase after the wild horses, and at
last they reached the corral.

The horses were biting and fighting each other like wild beasts, and
many already bled from wounds inflicted by hoof or teeth.

Prominent among them appeared a magnificent iron-gray whose fore
shoulders were branded with the letter S. This horse seemed the
king of the corral, for the others fled around the inclosure at his
approach, and many were cowed by his flashing eyes.

The two spectators watched the conqueror in silence, and the Pawnee’s
eyes dilated with triumph, when the horse suddenly galloped toward
them, and poked his neck forward at the Crow with a low whinny of
delight!

The next moment the mute found his throat griped by long fingers, and
the Pawnee was bearing him to the ground with quick ejaculations of
success.

“The horse has betrayed the white hunter,” hissed the Indian. “He
never leaves the Pawnee village, never!”

The keen edged scalping-knife quivered over the tufted head before
its owner could recover his equilibrium, for the Loup’s action was
the work of a single moment.

All at once the Pawnee felt his antagonist’s muscles swell to the
bulk of mill-ropes, and the next minute Sleeping Bear sprung to his
feet like the upward flash of the rocket, as sudden and as resistless.

The Pawnee tried to shriek; but the cry died in his throat and the
Crow’s hand choked him into the realms of insensibility. Once the red
hand opened partially, but suddenly closed again, held the Pawnee at
arm’s length, then let him drop.

One dead Indian lay at the edge of the corral!

During the conflict the Crow, as he styled himself, did not utter a
word, and after the victory he maintained the dogged silence which
had kept his lips sealed since his entrance into Pawneedom.

The iron-gray still stretched his neck over the corral, and the
victor approached and patted it affectionately, but did not utter a
word.

The tarry of the Crow in the village, and the scene at the horse-pen,
had occupied several hours, and the night was well advanced when the
last incident occurred. His absence was not missed; several Indians
had seen the Pawnee join him, and they, no doubt, thought that they
were yet together about the corral.

At length Sleeping Bear walked slowly back toward the village, and
entered his lodge, but a moment later he emerged again.

But few Indians were to be seen now, and the hunter joined a small
group standing near the lodge wherein slept Lina Aiken. The savages
noticed him and proceeded with their conversation. The expression
on the Crow’s face told them that he was a true mute, for they said
words designed to startle him, but without effect.

“The Plattes will take the pale boys to-morrow,” said one Indian. “We
do not want them. We will say that Kenoagla killed Red Eagle, whether
he did or not, and his blood will satisfy our people.”

It was agreed among the conspirators that, guilty or innocent, Tom
Kyle should die on the morrow, and it was evident that none of the
conspirators believed him guilty. They argued that he dared not slay
Red Eagle, when the chief had been a professed friend, and they could
not tell what kind of rifle George Long might have used while in the
trapper’s hut.

After a while the group dispersed, and the visitor returned to his
hut, or lodge.

       *       *       *       *       *

Half an hour later the door of Tom Kyle’s prison opened slowly. It
was opened by one of the guards, and an instant later the renegade
came forth unbound.

“Where’s the girl?” he asked, in a low tone.

“At the corral.”

“Good! now let us hurry. If Kenoagla is found here to-morrow, he’ll
be roasted or shot, as sure as fate.”

“And the braves who help their king.”

“Yes, Indians, the traitors would scorch you, too.”

With stealthy steps the trio moved toward the corral in the darkness,
and when they reached the inclosure, they were joined by another
Indian who held Lina Aiken in his arms.

“We’ll succeed better than White Lasso,” whispered the renegade,
when his eyes fell upon the Gold Girl. “He can’t steal women worth a
curse. Tom Kyle’s an old hand at the business. Now,” he said, in a
louder tone, but the savage who had waited for his coming clutched
his arm.

“Hist! Kenoagla.”

“What’s up?”

“Somebody’s among the Pawnee’s horses.”

“The devil!”

“Rattlesnake heard him when he came here; but he has not heard him
for a minute.”

“It’s some thieving Omaha,” hissed the renegade, “and he has stolen
away ere this. Catch the animals.”

In a few moments four horses were captured, and led from the corral
at the furthest side. Among them was Tecumseh, the iron-gray.

“By heaven! the gray is mine at last!” exclaimed the renegade, in a
low but exultant tone, as he fondly caressed the steed on whose back
the marks of Frontier Shack’s Spanish saddle were plainly visible.
“Here, Rattlesnake, hold the horse till I mount, and, Big Eyes, you
take the girl.”

The Indian grasped the bridle, and Tom Kyle threw himself upon the
iron-gray’s back. The next instant he gave Tecumseh the spurs, and
the horse dashed away, leaving the three Indians standing beside
their steeds.

They dared not follow Tom Kyle! in the last moment their courage had
signally failed them, and they looked into each others’s faces with
mingled shame and cowardice.

Tom was going to the Apaches, but they dared not ride into those
southern wigwams. They had stolen Apache horses; they were known, and
Tom, they now feared, could not protect them there. Perhaps, when
they had served his purpose, he would desert them. They knew the
treachery of the man they had served.

The renegade glanced over his shoulder and saw the motionless forms
in the starlight.

“The greasy cowards!” he hissed. “That’s Pawnee nature, to desert a
fellow when he needs help; but I don’t turn back now. I’m riding from
a stake, to authority over a thousand Indians, who will not conspire
for a fellow’s gaudy clothes.”

He sunk the spurs deeper than ever into Tecumseh’s rowels, and
glanced down into the pale face that looked up to him with a smile of
malicious triumph.

Flying from a stake to a kingdom!

It was a proud moment for Tom Kyle.

At last he reached a small tributary of the Loup fork and plunged
into the water.

Tecumseh gained the furthest bank, when three dark objects sprung
from the grass.

“Ho!”

Tecumseh halted suddenly, as if stricken by an arrow.

Tom Kyle drew a pistol.

An Indian sat bolt upright on a horse, not twenty yards in his front,
and he saw that a rifle covered his heart.

He discovered more than this. He recognized Sleeping Bear, the Crow,
whose visit to the village he had lately witnessed from his prison.

The Crow had seemed a mute; but had not the exclamation which brought
Tecumseh to a halt fallen from his lips?

The mental interrogative was soon answered to the renegade’s
satisfaction and astonishment.

“Tom Kyle, you’ve got my horse!”

The fugitive king saw all now.

Sleeping Bear was Frontier Shack!




                             CHAPTER X.

                       SHOT BY HIS OWN RIFLE.


“Tom Kyle, I say you’ve got Tecumseh!”

The reiteration of the trapper’s declaration followed a minute’s
silence.

“Well, what if I have?” hoarsely grated the White Pawnee.

“I want ’im.”

“You do?”

“Certainly; get off!”

Tom Kyle gritted his teeth till they fairly cracked. Then he lowered
half unconscious Lina Aiken to the ground, but remained on the
iron-gray.

“There’s the girl!” he said.

“But I want the horse. Tecumseh is worth more to me than all the
girls in America.”

“What will you do with me? Shackelford, I have saved your life.”

“And you would have saved it night before last if your devils had
caught me, too,” was the sarcastic rejoinder. “But to business; get
off that horse.”

Shackelford’s voice was as stern as a winter storm, and the renegade
saw his head drop once more to the rifle-stock.

“I mean business, Tom Kyle. We can’t wait here. If you will be
stubborn--”

The fugitive from Indian vengeance interrupted the hunter by
springing to the ground.

Frontier Shack now rode slowly forward, the remaining horsemen
following his example.

“I pulled wool over the Pawnees’ eyes this time, Tom,” he said,
familiarly, and with a broad smile. “The water tells me that I make
a handsome Indian. You see I can play the Crow pretty decently, for
I’ve trapped with the varmints but I never caught enough of their
lingo to gabble it off to advantage. Wonder what them Pawnees ’ud say
if they could hear Sleeping Bear talking like any other folks?”

He paused, and Tom Kyle saw fit to put a question.

“How did you know I was escaping?”

“I’ll tell ye. I first put an end to the two greasers what guarded
the boys, hyar, an’ then I sneaked around for the girl, fur one o’
these chaps wouldn’t budge a peg ’thout her. I found her nest empty,
an’ I knew that you had a hand in the pie. I knew that you would
take my horse, because you’ve wanted him for these several years. I
daren’t go back to the corral, for I thought I would run ag’in’ you,
and there’d hev been a game blocked. We caught Pawnee horses on the
prairie, and struck out for the Platte.”

“But how did you know that I would ride southward?”

“I knew your situation, Tom Kyle. The Pawnees hev told me about the
volcano that they were manufacturin’ beneath your feet, and I knew
that you had good inducements to join the Apaches. So we came here
and waited. This is the old Apache trail. You war a fool for takin’
it to-night.”

“I know it,” said the renegade; “but what can’t be cured must be
endured, I suppose.”

“It seems so; but we must be movin’. Allow me to tie your hands.”

The Pale Pawnee submitted to the operation with muttered curses.

Then he was placed upon the horse, which the trapper had ridden from
the Pawnee village, and his legs were lashed to the sinewy girth.

“Where are you going?” he asked, as Frontier Shack vaulted upon the
back of his favorite steed once more.

“To Fort Kearney.”

A pallor flitted across the renegade’s face.

He did not want to go the frontier station.

“Shackelford, this is the lowest kind of revenge.”

The trapper smiled.

“I can’t take vengeance for the Government,” he said. “Tom Kyle, I’m
going to turn you over to the authorities, and I hope that they will
deal justly with one who has massacred so many helpless emigrants.”

“Well, do as you like, but let me tell you now, Otis Shackelford,
that, should I escape, I will take your life if I am obliged to hunt
you a lifetime.”

Another smile curled the hunter’s lips, and then the ride over the
prairies continued in silence.

Fort Kearney, at that time, was a weak frontier post; but it awed the
savage in its vicinity, and kept him classed among the comparatively
harmless denizens of the West. The cannon had a terror for him, and,
as yet, he had not learned to laugh at the blue-coated soldiery, who
stood between him and the great father at Washington.

The western post, in question, was situated about sixty miles from
the point where Frontier Shack arrested the flight of the Pale
Pawnee, with his prize--the Gold Girl.

Shackelford took a trail not much frequented by Indians, but noted
for being crossed and trodden by buffaloes.

The quartette rode rapidly beneath the stars, which dotted the azure
vault, and wore a senescent aspect, which the trapper noted with a
half frown.

He almost wished that the night might be interminable.

At last day broke upon the vast prairie, and found the fugitives
still many miles from Fort Kearney.

Objects assumed shape gradually, and the first one to speak was Lina
Aiken, who sat before the trapper on his old steed.

“We must hurry,” she said, her eyes riveted upon a dark mass which
seemed to rest against the eastern horizon. “A storm will burst upon
us soon.”

“A storm, girl? Why, where’s the clouds?”

“Yonder.”

“That’s buffalo.”

Lina uttered an exclamation of wonder.

Presently the thunder of hoofs was heard, and the army of buffaloes
advanced directly toward the Platte, almost within sight of whose
waters our fugitives were.

The herd contained thousands, and the noise of their feet as they
rushed over the plain almost drowned the voice of the spectators.

“They’re makin’ for water,” remarked Shackelford. “There’s a place
hyarabouts where the river’s cl’ar of quicksands, and them knowing
beasts hev discovered it. It is further down river, though, so we’ll
sit hyar till they pass in our front. Now, boys, look out for white
bufflers! If thar’s any in this world, ye’ll see ’em in that herd.”

A crimson flush stole to the cheeks of the young adventurers, and
they exchanged smiles without glancing at the trapper.

Suddenly the line lengthened, and excitement faded from the young
Ohioan’s eyes.

They turned to the trapper.

“We’re in danger!”

Frontier Shack did not reply, but watched the animals whose extended
ranks endangered their lives to an imminent degree.

“We stand between them and the water,” said Tom Kyle, coolly, and
with infinite pleasure, despite his situation. “They are coming like
lightning, and they could catch us before we could reach the river.”

“I know it,” replied the hunter; “but we must not die here.”

“We can’t fire the prairie, although the wind is in our favor.”

“No; the grass is green now.”

“Then what will we do?”

It was Lina Aiken’s question.

“I can save the party. I could show you the Pawnees’ plan for
baffling buffalo.”

“We can ride through the ranks.”

“You can not, Shackelford: those ranks must be three hundred deep.
Through the ranks of a common herd we might ride to safety; but not
through those ranks.”

The hunter reseated himself in the saddle, after surveying the
bisonic legion, that rushed forward, completely infilading them,
crazed for water to cool their tongues.

Such a horde threatened to drain the Platte.

“That’s so, Tom; we can’t ride through them. If they war wild horses
we’d fix them, but--heavens! what thunder!”

“We’ve got to die when we can be saved,” grated the renegade.

“No! there!”

Tom Kyle stretched his limbs, and uttered a low ejaculation when he
found himself free.

“Now show us the Pawnee plan.”

“I will, God helping me,” said the renegade, with determination.
“Your rifle.”

Frontier Shack did not hesitate, but tossed Tom Kyle his rifle.

With a “Now,” which sounded terribly triumphant at that perilous
hour, the fugitive king rose in his stirrups and surveyed the
approaching herd, whose glaring eyes and long red tongues were now
distinctly visible.

What would the renegade do?

The spectators held their breath and fastened their eyes on him.

He seemed to be looking for a break in the dark-brown ranks.

Suddenly his eyes lit up with a strange, fierce fire, and Frontier
Shack, who also had risen in his stirrups with a revolver clutched in
either hand, saw what had rejoiced the renegade.

The buffaloes had extended their ranks until the files were not
dangerously deep, and two huge bulls, who were fighting most
furiously, promised to divide the herd.

“Now, Tom--”

The trapper suddenly paused, for the renegade had wheeled in his
stirrups, with an oath.

“This is the Pawnees’ plan!” he hissed.

There was the report of a rifle; the revolvers fell from
Shackelford’s hands, and he dropped on Tecumseh’s neck without a
sigh--without a groan!

A cry of horror burst from the lips of the spectators of this brutal
deed, and Lina Aiken found herself dragged from beneath the body of
her preserver by a hand that griped her like the jaws of a vise.

With the girl in his arms, the renegade wheeled toward the buffaloes.
He rose in his stirrups again, as he executed the movement, and
a moment later he was standing on the saddle with the ease of a
circus-rider.

One arm supported Lina Aiken and the trapper’s rifle, while the other
held his magnificent serape aloft, and flaunted it in the faces of
the thirsty herd.

Straight at the quadrupedal ranks the Pawnee “buck-skin” darted, and
the renegade accompanied the waving of his serape with yells that
might have frightened the fiends in Pandemonium.

The young adventurers’ eyes looked over white cheeks, and George
Long’s first intention was to cock his rifle.

“Don’t shoot!” cried his companion, putting forth his hand. “Our
safety lies in following him. If he rides through the ranks, why can
not we?”

The hammer fell gently on the percussion-cap.

“Forward!”

With a glance at Frontier Shack, whose hands griped Tecumseh’s mane
with the tenacity of death, the two boys shot forward in the wake of
the renegade.

Their safety did lie in following Tom Kyle, who uttered a light laugh
when he glanced over his shoulder and saw them giving their Pawnee
horses spur and rein.

The two heroes imitated the flying king as nearly as possible.

They stripped themselves to their jackets, and rising in the
stirrups, they waved their garments at the bisons.

For many moments it seemed that they were riding to a terrible death
beneath short horns and stony feet; but all at once, that dreadful
thought gave place to a wild cry of safety.

The renegade rode almost directly toward the rising sun, and the rich
gold trimmings of his Spanish cloak dazzled the eyes of the beasts;
and at length the brownish ranks divided.

A yell of triumph pealed from Tom Kyle’s lips, and a minute later he
passed the jaws of death! The young buffalo-hunters followed him, and
at their side dashed the iron-gray, as eager to bear his motionless
master through the dark ranks as horse well could be.

The renegade’s steed was no mean racer. He distanced the other
horses, and when the buffaloes had been baffled, he was almost beyond
rifle-range.

He shouted something back which the young Ohioans could not catch,
and then they saw him drop into the saddle again and turn his horse’s
head in a south-westerly direction.

“We can’t overtake him, George,” said Charley Shafer. “We must stop
here.”

They curbed their mustangs with little difficulty, for the beasts
were jaded, and a quick “’Ho!” brought Tecumseh to a sudden halt.

“I wonder if he’s dead,” said young Shafer, riding up to the trapper,
while his comrade gazed, with gritted teeth and clenched hands, at
the villain who bore from him, with terrible rapidity, the beautiful
being whom his young heart had learned to love.

Frontier Shack still lay motionless on the iron-gray’s back, and the
horse turned his head with a softened look as the youth put forth his
hand.

Tecumseh’s neck was crimsoned with blood; but the boy raised the
trapper’s head with flutterings of hope.

That head seemed a lump of lead; but as Charley lifted it high from
the blood-clotted mane, the expressionless eyeballs seemed to move.
He looked again, this time with an exclamation of joy!

The dark eyes moved again, and the hands released the horse’s mane.

“George! George!” cried the overjoyed boy, “he lives! he lives!”

Called from the contemplation of the dark speck oscillating against
the distant horizon, George Long bounded forward.

“Where’s the bufflers?”

“At the river.”

“Where’s that devil?”

“Out of sight now,” said George, with a sigh.

Frontier Shack was silent for a moment.

“He’s showed me the Pawnee mode of beating bufflers,” he said, at
length, with a smile which, on his bloody face, looked ludicrous
in the extreme; “but if I don’t show him Frontier Shack’s mode of
beating renegades, then may the wolves howl over my grave when the
grass dies ag’in! Are ye ready, boys?”

“Yes.”

“Then we move.”

“To Fort Kearney?” asked George, who saw that the trapper possessed
no weapons.

“I don’t see Fort Kearney nor the Stars and Stripes till I wipe out
that cussed pale whelp.”

“And save Lina?”

“Yes.”

“And Mabel?”

“Yes!”

The boys grasped the trapper’s hands.

“Boys, look hyar,” said Frontier Shack, solemnly, “you’ve got fathers
and mothers; I haven’t. I had parents once, but they’re up yonder. I
kin do what I’m going to do alone. I might get along better without
you; I really think I could. Now suppose I guide you to Fort Kearney,
and that you wait till I bring the girls back. I’ll do it, so help
me Heaven! I want yer parents to see ye once more, and I tell ye
truly that yonder, across that river, lies the valley of death, and
yonder,” pointing toward the land of the Sioux, “the highlands of
destruction.”

“Sir, dangers can not frighten us,” said Charley Shafer, breaking
the profound silence that followed the trapper’s last words. “We are
going with you, for we have determined to rescue our friends from
the red-skins or die in the attempt. You can not guide us to Fort
Kearney; there!”

The old trapper slowly shook his head, and muttered in a low tone:

“If white bufflers hed a-kept out o’ yer heads! Si Gregg hed no
business to write sech a lie!”

He loved the boys.




                             CHAPTER XI.

                        A VOICE IN THE NIGHT.


Near the close of a beautiful day, an Indian sat in a saddle on the
banks of the Arkansas, not far from James’ Peak, and gazed at an
object which rapidly approached from the north-east.

That object appeared to be a horse, and the Pawnee watched it
intently, with shaded eyes, as it rose and fell like a ball on the
plain that separated them.

He did not speak or look at the beautiful girl whose waist his bare
arm encircled, and held before him on his black steed.

She, too, saw the object which had attracted the savage’s attention,
and when its identity was plainly revealed, the Pawnee started and
uttered an exclamation of wonder.

Mabel Denison looked up at him, questioningly, curiously, but did not
speak.

“The Pale Pawnee seeks the Apaches,” said the Indian, Wolf Eyes, in a
low tone, which still bore traces of inward astonishment. “Why does
he ride thither now? Has the storm of the chiefs broken overhead? and
has he stolen from the Pawnees at night, and ridden like the wind
from the lodges where he once reigned like a king?”

The approaching horseman answered Wolf Eyes’ questions, for when he
suddenly checked the career of his beast, the Pawnee saw the burden
the “buck-skin” bore. He glanced at Mabel, but, seeing that she had
not recognized Lina Aiken, he kept his lips closed, and executed the
Pawnee signal of peace with the rich sash which he had plundered from
some New-Mexican hacienda in days gone by.

A peculiar motion proclaimed his identity, and presently the renegade
rode forward again.

They met on the river’s bank, and a sharp cry of recognition rose
from the throats of the captive girls.

Lovingly they put forth their arms for an embrace; but the distance
was too great for them to feel heart beat against heart. Tom Kyle saw
this and rode nearer Wolf Eyes.

“There, Lina, embrace your friend,” he said, softly, lifting his
captive forward. “God knows I wouldn’t deprive you of such happiness
at this hour. I thought Wolf Eyes far away from this spot, and I
expected to meet the Old Harry here as much as the chief.”

The girls encircled each others’ necks, and mingled their
tears--tears of joy at meeting in the darkest hour of adversity, when
not a hand was near to chase the clouds away, and show them the sun.

“I thought you were with the Sioux,” said Tom Kyle, addressing the
chief, who watched the captives with a stoicism that proved him as
devoid of feeling as a stone.

“When Wolf Eyes saw White Lasso fall, he knew that he dared not ride
into the wigwams of the Sioux alone; so, he turned his horse’s head
toward the Apaches’ land, and, behold! he has met his white brother
journeying to the same place.”

“Yes,” answered the renegade. “The storm broke at last over my head,
and for my life I had to fly. The Apaches have waited for me long;
Tarantulah has sent me offer after offer, and I told him that, in the
hour of need, I would fly to his lodge, and teach his people war, as
I have taught the Pawnees. Oh, the rich haciendas I can ride through!
Oh! the golden crosses I can snatch from gilded shrines!”

Wolf Eyes caught his king’s enthusiasm, and uttered an exclamation of
joy.

“If Gold Feather still lived, Wolf Eyes would not ride to Apache
land,” said the Indian, suddenly relapsing into seriousness again.

“Gold Feather is dead?”

“Yes,” and there was a flash in the midnight eyes. “Wolf Eyes found
him wounded once on the banks of the Platte--wounded by a buffalo
bull; and he tossed him into the water. The Manitou’s lights shone
then, and Wolf Eyes saw his enemy sink to the swallowing sand. He
rode toward the Pawnee lodges to slay Wolf Eyes, but the buffalo
stretched him by the clear water.

“Then, of course, you’ll be safe among the Apaches, and I will stand
by you. But, if Gold Feather was alive I could not rescue you from
his vengeance.”

The Pawnee shook his head.

A moment later the girls, who, during this time, had conversed in low
tones, were gently separated by the renegade.

Before departing, they surveyed the land that stretched from them to
the north and east, and the last rays of the setting sun fell upon
the two captors fording the Arkansas, with their horses’ heads turned
toward Apachedom.

Long, lone and drearisome days had intervened between Tom Kyle’s
escape from Frontier Shack, and meeting with Wolf Eyes on the bank of
the Arkansas.

He had encountered wandering bands of Indians; but, aided by his
knowledge of plains life, he had managed to elude them. Once he
narrowly escaped running into an emigrant train, which Lucy Aiken had
signaled, hoping thereby to escape from his clutches. The signal was
seen, a number of men had pursued the fugitive, but he outgeneraled
them completely.

After leaving the Arkansas in their rear they did not fear pursuit.
Tom Kyle knew that the boys would not attempt to follow, when their
friend the trapper was dead, for he believed that his ball had
penetrated Shackelford’s brain, instead of merely grazing his temple,
and rendering him half-paralyzed, as was the case. And, with the
start which he had from the Pawnee village, he felt assured that his
red enemies could not overtake him, even if they were to ride their
swiftest horses.

“They didn’t want my blood, particularly,” he would murmur, when he
thought about such matters as I have just penned; “they wanted me out
of their way, and they ought to be satisfied now. Ha! didn’t I outwit
Red Eagle! I never shoot at a creature twice. He won’t step into the
Pale Pawnee’s moccasins, and that leads me to think that blood will
flow over the question, ‘Who shall succeed Tom Kyle as ruler of the
Loups?’”

The renegade and his red companion gave their steeds but little rest.
They crossed the mountains in safety, and at last descended to the
beautiful plain-lands of New Mexico.

Here they were compelled to catch fresh horses, a duty which the
rifle and lasso performed, and after breaking the steeds, an
operation which lasted several days, the journey was resumed.

One morning, as the sun crept lazily over the mountains that border
Apache-land, the riders reached their journey’s end.

Boldly they rode into the great Apache village, amid demonstrations
of joy, for the renegade’s rich clothing had caused his recognition,
and Tarantulah had bidden his braves receive him as a great ally.

The council-square swarmed with savages of all ages and conditions,
and when the twain drew rein, a loud shout of triumph broke forth.

But, suddenly, Wolf Eyes uttered a low but terrible cry of terror,
and drawing back, he threw his horse upon his haunches.

The cause of the Pawnee’s agitation was easily discoverable.

A young chief, whose head-dress consisted of a single feather, dyed
to an ocherous tint, was fitting an arrow to a bowstring, and his
dark eyes were riveted upon Tom Kyle’s red comrade.

Tarantulah saw the action and sprung forward with a sharp, quick cry
of command, to arrest the frenzied arm.

Wolf Eyes still forced his horse back; but when he discovered that
stalwart Indians blocked his way, he tried to shield his heart with
Mabel Denison.

But the shaft left the bow as he threw the murdered agent’s daughter
before his brawny breast, and he fell from his horse with a loud cry!

Gold Feather complacently unstrung his bow, while he watched
Tarantulah snatch Mabel from under the mustang’s feet.

The old grudge between Pawnee and Apache had been settled at last.

Tom Kyle surveyed the sea of upturned faces. There existed, so far as
he could see, no enmity against him.

It is an Indian’s right to slay his enemy wherever he meets him, and
Gold Feather had exercised that right. He could not be arrested, by
savage law; it was justifiable homicide in the red-man’s eyes--not
cold-blooded murder, needing an expiation.

Tarantulah found a lodge for the pale captives, and when Tom Kyle had
departed, after wishing them happiness in their new quarters, they
came together in a sweet embrace.

“Now, Mabel, captivity begins in terrible earnest,” said Lina Aiken.
“The day for rescues has passed, for who is there to hunt us now?”

Mabel Denison looked up into the pale, sympathizing face that bent
over her, and answered, in a calm, determined tone:

“I do not despair, Lina. While there’s life there’s hope. We have
friends among these savages.”

“Friends!” echoed Lina Aiken, astonishment depicted on every
handsome lineament. “Friends among fiends! No, no, Mabel! You take
wishes for reality.”

Fair-eyed Mabel Denison glanced at the shadow of their guard, which
fell into the lodge, and drew nearer her sister.

“We have one friend, at least, among the fierce Apaches,” she
whispered, “and that friend is the chief whom we have heard called
Gold Feather.”

The night that succeeded the second day of the captives’ sojourn in
Apachedom was most beautiful to contemplate.

For hours Mabel Denison and Lina Aiken stood behind the lodge
curtains, and gazed through the narrow opening at the stars that
glittered in the azure deep of the sky.

They thought of friends who, secure in happy homes, far toward the
rising sun, slept and dreamed, perhaps of them.

Such thoughts sent more than one tear down the girls’ cheeks, and, as
they turned to the skin couches which red hands had prepared, a sigh
for the hopes, the joys, the pleasures of the past, escaped their
lips.

Sleep quickly followed their lying down, and near midnight Mabel
awoke from a strange dream, wherein home and deserts were wildly
commingled.

A slight noise, like the scratchings of a ’coon, against the back of
the lodge, saluted her ears. With her heart in her throat, she crept
from the couch without disturbing Lina, and put her ear against the
side of the structure directly opposite the noise.

Now she knew that a knife was at work, and at last the thin blade
slipped through the bark and grazed her cheek.

Then came a low voice.

“Do the pale girls sleep?”

“No!”

A slight exclamation of joy followed.

“Gold Feather’s mouth is full of good news. The pale-faces who love
the silver lilies are in the mountains! Can the pretty squaws be
ready to run for the hills?”

“Oh, yes, at once!” they both cried.

“Can the white squaws strike down the guard, if he opposes the way?”

“Try me!” said Mabel, with sudden fierceness which showed how much
she was willing to dare to escape.

“Then when you hear three owl-hoots, come forth, and Frontier Shack
and myself will be near at hand for the rescue,” and with that the
mysterious visitor glided away.




                            CHAPTER XII.

                        THE BLOW FOR FREEDOM.


A half-hour passed, of intense anxiety to both girls. Then they
distinctly heard a noise again in the wigwam’s rear.

“Gold Feather is not able to take the girls out through the village.
The guard sleeps soundly. Go forth; take his gun, and if he wakes
not, make for the hills with soft steps. Gold Feather will guard the
way.”

Parting the curtains, she peered out, but clouds obscured the stars,
and the blackness of darkness brooded over the village like some
monster eagle. The guard sat beside the door, half-asleep as it
seemed, for his head had fallen between his knees, and his rifle lay
on the ground.

A moment later the curtains were drawn aside, and Lina stepped out
into the pure night air.

Mabel followed, and as she dropped the curtain she stooped to deprive
the guard of his gun.

Her slender hand clutched the barrel of the weapon; but the butt,
which she did not see, struck the Apache’s foot as she drew it toward
her, and starting from his sleep, fully awake in an instant, he
leaped to his feet.

Lina Aiken uttered a low cry of horror and sprung backward as the
rifle shot upward, held by hands which, though a woman’s, were nerved
with fearful determination.

The Apache took in the situation at a glance, and, without a cry, he
strode forward. He saw the clutched rifle, and perhaps he caught the
dark eye that fell upon him warningly, for he threw his hand up to
break the blow. But the girl was too quick for him; the butt of the
weapon struck his head with a dull thud, and he staggered toward the
lodge. Once he tried to recover, and had almost succeeded, when the
rifle descended again, and then he sunk to the earth like a stricken
bullock.

“Now, Lina!”

The girls joined hands in the darkness, and started for the
mountains. They had miles to travel before dawn, and the path to the
fastnesses were beset with dangers.

An unseen hand seemed to guide them, for they avoided the somber
lodges with an ease scarcely ever equaled, and had proceeded to the
suburbs of the village when the barking of several dogs, quickly
followed by the yells of Indians, attracted their attention, and
riveted them to the earth.

“They’ve discovered the guard!” whispered Lina, breathlessly.

“No,” said Mabel, as the yells increased, “they’ve caught a white
man. Hark!”

“By heavens! Shackelford, I thought I had finished you! I never
missed a shot before, in all my life; but we’ll take care that your
life ends now. Where are the boys?”

The girls heard a coarse laugh, which Lina Aiken knew came from
Shackelford.

“What shall we do now, Mabel?”

“Continue our journey. They have not caught the two boys--only
Frontier Shack, as the hunter is called. We may yet escape.”

Again they started forward; but soon realized that all was lost.

Every lodge was pouring forth its living humanity, and the fugitives
suddenly dropped to the ground, where, with wildly-throbbing hearts
they awaited developments.

The winds blew from the mountains, and brought distant sounds
distinctly to their ears.

Suddenly they heard the tramp of horses, and knew that some persons
were flying from the Apache camp.

“Mabel, listen! we were so near _them_!”

A sigh, a low “yes,” told that the fugitives were on the brink of
safety and yet did not know it.

Charley Shafer and George Long were hurrying back to the mountains.

In the shadow of a lodge the girls continued to crouch, until
every Indian seemed to have reached the spot where the daring
trapper was held in durance vile. Then they rose to their feet and
started forward again; but were quickly seized--this time by the
squaws themselves, who, prowling around the lodges, had discovered
the girls, and a minute later full twenty furious hags surrounded
and held the girls, while a legion of feet approached with quick,
impatient strides.

Foremost among the warriors was Tom Kyle, minus serape, sword, hat
and moccasins. A pistol barrel glittered in either hand, and he
pushed his way through the captors with a series of oaths.

“So my birds tried to get away!” he said, with a grim smile of
satisfaction, when the torches revealed the pale faces, whose cheeks
touched each other, almost. “Well, you find it extremely difficult to
fly from Apachedom, eh, my eastern finches? Here, women, give me my
own. I return them to the cage, and take good care that they shall
not escape again.”

He tore the girls from their captors, and he and the Apaches started
back toward the center of the village.

“By George! girls,” he exclaimed, stepping nearer Lina Aiken, “that
trapper is in the village. I thought I had finished him; but, somehow
or other, I didn’t, and he has guided them two boys to Apache land. I
tell you that he never sees another night. He’s got to die to-morrow,
as sure as my name is Tom Kyle, and that, girls, is a fixed fact!”

The girls were silent, and, after a long period of quietude, the
renegade spoke again:

“Who killed the guard?”

“I did, sir.”

It was Mabel Denison who spoke.

“If the Indians find that out, it may go hard with you. Even Tom Kyle
may not be able to save you. Among the Apaches, it is an eye for an
eye and a tooth for a tooth. If they accuse you, girls, of the death
of the guard, deny it to the bitter end. They do not know that he is
dead.”

The girls soon afterward found themselves back in their old lodge
again. Then the renegade departed, after whispering a few commands
to the three Indians who now guarded the captives.

Borne to the council-square, Frontier Shack was soon pinioned to
the single post ever ready there for its captive, and the horrid
fire-torture. The old hunter well knew his danger but flinched not,
nor betrayed the least sign of uneasiness when the howling throng
pressed around him.

The death of the guard immensely excited the chief Tarantulah. _Who_
had killed the warrior? This secret he tried to wrest from Shack, but
the white man only laughed in his face.

“As if I would tell, even if I knowed!” was his contemptuous answer.

“And you have been helped by some red-man in your visit to the Apache
land. Who is he, that we may burn him with you?” demanded the chief,
fiercely.

“What do you take me for, Indian?” cried the trapper. “A durn fool, I
s’pose. When I go back on anybody, call me a craw-fish.”

Tarantulah bit his lips, and started toward his braves.

“The traitor is Gold Feather!” he cried, “and he has not been seen
to-night.”

“He rode to the mountains when the Manitou’s light hung in the sky,”
answered a sub-chief.

“But he returned,” said another.

“To his lodge, Squatting Bear! Hunt him down, warriors! He is the
traitor! The red-man with a treacherous white skin!”

“What’s that, chief: Gold Feather not a true red-skin?” asked the
renegade, with evident surprise.

“Gold Feather is a white man!”

“I would never have dreamed that. How long has he been with you?”

The chief studied a moment.

“Twenty summers.”

Tom Kyle started at the reply.

“I had a brother once,” he said. “My father took him to Mexico about
twenty years ago, for he and mother quarreled and parted. But the
Comanches caught and killed them. No, Gold Feather is not my brother;
he--”

An Indian suddenly paused before the twain, and broke the renegade’s
sentence.

It was Gold Feather.




                            CHAPTER XIII.

                      THE SWOOP OF THE AVENGER.


“Gold Feather is here. Is the chief angry with him that he should put
the warriors on his track?”

“Yes,” he cried; “why did Gold Feather ride to the mountains, and
meet the pale-faces in the shadows of the crags? Let him speak the
truth, for Tarantulah knows all.”

“Gold Feather’s skin is white,” was the firm reply, “and when he
accidentally met the pale-faces among the hills, his heart went out
to them, and he resolved to help them, even against the Pawnee king.”

“Then Gold Feather told the trapper where Kenoagla slept?”

“Yes.”

“Traitor!” hissed Tarantulah; “the Apaches shall mete out a terrible
punishment to the dog that betrays.”

With yells a score of Indians set to work to plant another stake,
which operation was completed in a short space of time, and the young
traitor was quickly lashed thereto.

“This is quite a change of fortune, Shackelford,” said the renegade,
approaching the trapper, and facing him with a devilish leer. “I
guess I will not go to Fort Kearney with you. I am quite content
here.”

“Had it not been for those bufflers you’d ’a swung in Fort Kearney
ere this,” responded Shackelford.

“What are they waiting on?” he cried, impatiently, turning to an old
chief who stood at his side. “I’m getting anxious to see the fun.”

“Gold Feather wants to die a pale-face,” was the reply, “and the
paint of the Apaches must be washed from his body before the strong
fire comes.”

“Well, it’s natural for him to want to die decently,” grated Tom
Kyle, “and I shall curb my eagerness for the burning with the
impatience to see what kind of a looking white man the traitor makes.”

Presently several warriors advanced to Gold Feather, and applied
strong alkali-water to his person. Then, after thoroughly soaking his
skin, as it seemed, they rubbed him with coarse skins which served as
towels.

Beneath this operation a startling metamorphosis manifested itself.

Gold Feather was a white man once more!

Tom Kyle stood off, and gazed on the singular spectacle; and stepped
to Tarantulah’s side.

“Now let them die!”

“When the pale-girls come.”

“What! must those sensitive creatures witness this horrible sight?”
cried the renegade. “No, chief, rather let them remain in the lodges,
and when the fire dies out let them view the blackened trees.”

“Tarantulah is sachem of the Apaches,” was the stern rejoinder.
“Kenoagla is an ally, not yet a great Apache chief; but he will be,
soon. The pale girl must fling the lie into Gold Feather’s teeth
before he dies. Ha! they come.”

The next moment the Apache ranks divided, and Mabel Denison and Lina
Aiken were led into the circle.

Though daylight was not far distant, it was very dark, but
innumerable torches revealed the terrible scene, and clothed it in a
garment which day could not own.

“Sir, must we witness this torture of two brave men?” asked Lina
Aiken, when the renegade stepped to her side. “Have you no authority
here? I find your boastings to be lies; yourself the lowest of
men--an Indian’s slave!”

Tom Kyle bit his lip, and muttered a few words which the Gold Girl
could not comprehend, for his voice shook with passion, and could
scarcely be heard.

“Girl,” cried Tarantulah, at this juncture, suddenly pausing before
Mabel Denison, and griping her slender arm, “who slew Long Arrow,
your Apache guard?”

“These hands,” was the undaunted reply, and Mabel put forth her
hands, which touched the sachem’s wampum. “I killed him--struck him
twice before he fell.”

“Long Arrow saved Tarantulah’s life.”

The chief’s whole frame shook with emotion.

“Another stake!” he cried.

Tom Kyle stepped between him and his new victim.

“The pale girl’s mind is wandering,” he said. “The minions of White
Lasso, the Pawnee, slew her father, when they drove her from the
lodges. Her head is cracked; she does not know what she is saying. It
was the trapper who slew Long Arrow.”

The executioners, who had caught the renegade’s words, paused and
looked at Tarantulah.

The chief heard Tom Kyle patiently, and his anger fled, when he
turned to them, slowly, deliberately.

“Another stake!”

The Pawnee king turned away with an oath.

“By George! I’m nobody here, after all,” followed the evil word. “I’m
no better than a dog in Tarantulah’s eyes, when the devil creeps into
his heart. To-morrow night, Miss Aiken and I will take another ride
into the city of Mexico. They will burn Miss Denison; I can’t help
her longer.”

When the words “another stake,” uttered for the second time, fell
from Tarantulah’s lips, Mabel Denison crept forward and threw her
arms about her fair, tearful companion in misfortune.

“Lina, we part forever here,” she murmured, as Lina’s lips touched
her cheek, and glued themselves there. “The stake is my portion; what
yours is, Heaven will disclose!”

“No! no! Mabel; if you die here, so will I,” was the determined
response, couched in a calm tone. “What were life to me without you,
girl? No, no, dear Mabel; our troubles end together. Chief! Tom Kyle
is my captor, I know; I am his, by your Indian law; but he is a white
man, and has no right to me; so give me leave, chief, to perish here
with my friend. Better--oh, a thousand times better this than a life
with the outlaw, Tom Kyle!” she cried, with a touching pathos.

“Kyle! Kyle!” cried Gold Feather, from his stake. “Is your white name
Kyle?”

The renegade was too astonished to speak for a moment, during which
time he moved nearer Gold Feather.

“Yes, my name’s Kyle--Tom Kyle,” said the renegade, at last. “What’s
your real name?”

“Ned Kyle, if I haven’t forgotten the past,” was the reply.

Tom snatched a torch from an Indian and shot forward like a startled
horse.

“If there’s a scar on your shoulder, you’re my brother,” he cried;
and the next moment a loud cry welled from his throat.

He dropped the torch, which revealed a scar on Gold Feather’s
shoulder, and his knife began to sever the young chief’s bonds.

This action was met by furious yells, and the Indians drew their
knives and tomahawks in a menacing manner. The dread circle,
bristling with iron and steel, also contracted.

“Gold Feather is a traitor--he shall die!”

“He’s my brother!” grated the renegade, in a fierce, determined tone,
and he shielded the marked man with his body. “Apaches, listen to me.
Many moons ago--”

The vengeful yells drowned Tom Kyle’s words, and he stopped in the
beginning of a narrative and cursed the red fiends from the depth of
his heart.

“I’ve been a devil, I have!” he shouted; “but I won’t desert my
brother. I’ll stand by him to the last, and if you get him, ’twill be
over the King of the Pawnees.”

“Tom Kyle, you’re a man once more. I wouldn’t shoot you now for the
world.”

It was Frontier Shack who spoke, and over the flames that were now
lighted up before him, he looked upon the striking tableau.

The Indians were furious.

Tom Kyle had not a red friend in the village now, and over all the
monster death spread his black wings and slowly descended.

The chord of life was being rent in twain for many.

Nearer and nearer came the Indians; the outer ones pushed the front
ranks, and Tom Kyle saw that he was to be taken alive.

His days of sovereignty were ended. He who had controlled a nation
could not now control a single man.

“You’re near enough now!” he shouted, raising the revolver which his
right hand clutched, and a click, click at his elbow told him that
Gold Feather was about to use the weapon which he had thrust into his
hand. “We’ve got twelve loads for you, and twelve wigwams shall be
without warriors, by heaven, if you come two paces nearer.”

The determined visage awed the Indians, and several involuntarily
shrunk from the muzzles of the weapons which the red-man dreads.

But the outer circle, with wild yells, still crowded their brothers
forward, and the renegade’s finger touched the trigger, when a war
cry, which palsied many a savage heart, drowned every shout of Apache
vengeance.

Tarantulah turned; the red circle broke, and in places disappeared
like mist before the sun.

The tramp of hundreds of horses was mingled with war-cries of the
most startling nature, and the flaring of torches revealed Pawnees,
Ogallahs and Omahas riding like demons of destruction through the
village.

“Great heavens!” cried Tom Kyle, as he cut Frontier Shack’s bonds,
“what an hour of destruction this is!”

“I never saw its like,” was the reply; “and if we’ve got to die, Tom,
let us die like men!”

“We will; but look yonder!”

Shackelford looked, and beheld Charley Shafer and George Long lashed
to horses whose bridles were held by a giant Ogallah.




                            CHAPTER XIV.

                         TECUMSEH’S VICTORY.


The confusion that followed gave the precious moment for action to
the whites.

“Now, Tom, be a man, and help us out of this!” cried Shack.

“I’m with you, Shack, now, to the last!” cried Tom. “Take the girls
and make at once for the boys on the horses. I’ll revolver every
red-skin in the way; so come on!” and forward they all started.

True to his promise, Tom Kyle shot down the Ogallahs guarding the
boys, and in a few moments more all were mounted for a desperate dash
for the hills, miles away.

Already the cries of the victors were ascending from the field of
slaughter; it was wonderful that the Apaches had withstood the
avalanche so long, and the shouts of the northern barbarians drove
the whites from the scene of their little victory.

Tom Kyle rode a fiery black mustang, and held Mabel Denison before
him, while Lina was encircled by the strong arm of Frontier Shack,
who rode beside Charley Shafer.

“How did the greasers come to catch you chaps?” he asked, as they
dashed over the plain that lay between life and death.

“We waited for you last night until we knew that something terrible
had transpired in the village,” was the reply. “Then we thought of
rescue, but a thousand feet drove us back to the mountains, but ere
we could reach them, the Pawnees came out from their fastnesses, and
we fell an easy prey. Not so easily after all,” and the boys’ eyes
lit up with pride; “we fought the whole troop for a while, and five
empty saddles told the story of the battle.”

And while they conversed as they rode, Tom Kyle and Ned were making
their explanations.

Gold Feather thus questioned his brother:

“Whither do you wish to go?”

“I want to see mother once more.”

“Then we go to Mexico.”

“To Mexico? I left mother in Baltimore, Maryland. Why should she be
in Mexico?”

“She would not believe that the Comanches had killed you. She yearned
to see her stolen boy again, and came thither to hunt you.”

A tear stood in Ned Kyle’s black eyes.

“But these people with us? They do not want to go to Mexico?”

“No, we go without them.”

“’Tis well; I know the trail, and we will safely reach mother’s side.
Oh, Tom, I never dreamed of such a meeting.”

The renegade smiled and glanced at Mabel Denison, who had been
transferred, at her own request, to a seat before the youth whom she
loved.

“Look here, Ned,” and Tom Kyle’s voice sunk to a whisper. “Don’t you
want a wife?”

“I leave one in the Apache camp.”

“Of course,” responded Tom, “but I’m talking about a white wife.”

“I may find one in Mexico.”

“Pshaw! can’t you see what I am driving at? I say, don’t you want
that black-haired girl behind us?”

“I don’t know. She has a lover already.”

“Don’t be so accursed conscientious. The other girl is mine, and you
might as well take the brunette.”

Gold Feather was silent; the battle between right and wrong was going
on in his mind, and when he looked up, the keen eyes of his brother
were fastened upon him.

“Tom, we can’t get them without spilling pure blood, and then we have
no right--”

“Pish! who cares for a little blood?” interrupted the Pawnee king.
“You didn’t the other day, when you dropped Wolf Eyes. Come, Ned,
don’t be so infernal scrupulous. Work with me. I owe that trapper
one. He tried to take me to Fort Kearney, and if I ever get there
I’ll swing, p’r’aps. He’ll try to get me there now, and you, too,
boy. He’s a veritable devil who smiles when he plots against us. I
hate him; he hates us both!”

“True, Ned?”

“As true as mother’s heart. We’ll take the girls?”

“Ned will help Tom.”

A sigh followed the youth’s words, and his lips closed with the
fearful determination behind it.

Half an hour later the party reached the mountains, and, far above
the level plain, Tom Kyle drew a highly ornamented field glass from
beneath his jacket, and turned it toward the Apache village.

A moment later an oath burst from his lips. He had descried a black
mass moving toward the mountains.

Shackelford took the glass.

“Chased, by Joshua!” he exclaimed; “but if we manage it right, they
won’t catch us.”

“No,” said the renegade, “but we must prepare for a long race.
They’re far away, as yet, and we have a few moments here.”

The next moment they had dismounted, for the purpose of tightening
their steeds’ girths. Frontier Shack was busily employed in this
operation, when a loud neigh saluted his ears, and looking down the
pass, he beheld a great iron-gray horse trotting forward.

“Tecumseh, by Joshua!” he exclaimed. “Boy, I thought he was captured
with you.”

“No!” answered young Shafer. “I should have told you. Tecumseh broke
from us when we rode from the village last night; and his wild
neighings soon died away to our left.”

“Dash me! if we ain’t lucky,” ejaculated Shackelford, leaving the
Ogallah mustang, and a moment later he griped the bridle of his own
dear horse.

In the exuberance of his joy, he was stroking Tecumseh’s neck, when a
shriek, followed by Tom Kyle’s stern voice, saluted his ears!

He turned and beheld Gold Feather covering the young buffalo-hunters
with a brace of revolvers, while the renegade’s rifle was aimed at
his own head. Kyle sat bolt upright in the saddle.

“Shackelford, we’re going to part here,” said the Pawnee king, “and I
guess we’ll leave you to the buzzards. Curse your heart! you tried to
take me to Fort Kearney once, but I didn’t go, eh, Shackelford? Now,
say your prayers. Ned, count twenty-five in the Apache tongue, and,
at the end of that count, we’ll empty our weapons and go to Mexico.”

The White Apache began in a low tone, and the doomed ones looked at
each other in silence.

There seemed no escape from death now; it had grown into a palpable
monster and was very near.

Frontier Shack stood beside the iron-gray whose jaws champed the bit
impatiently, and his eyes regarded the determined renegade.

Lina Aiken and Mabel Denison stood spellbound in the mountain pass,
feeling that they were the innocent cause of the dreadful tableau.

The “count” had reached the thirteenth numeral, when Frontier Shack
slowly stepped from his horse. As he executed the movement, his broad
palm struck Tecumseh’s shoulder, and, with a fearful plunge, that
would have overthrown the best human equilibrium, the horse shot
forward!

Tom Kyle blocked the narrow pass; his brother stood beside his horse,
and they uttered ejaculations of horror when they saw the trapper’s
steed’s intention.

Gold Feather lifted the revolvers from the boys, and poured two shot
at point blank range into Tecumseh’s front.

The brave horse reared, as blood spirted from the wounds, then
staggered forward, on his hind feet, and came down with a crash upon
Tom Kyle and his horse!

The renegade shrieked at the top of his voice, when he saw his fate;
but the cry was broken by Tecumseh’s attack, and he found himself
beneath his steed, crushed as it seemed, into the stony earth!

“Back, hunter,” cried Gold Feather, as Frontier Shack sprung forward
with drawn pistol; but the trapper would not obey.

Once, twice, the White Apache delivered his fire; but ere he could
send a third shot after the heart he would cleave, a report that
came from a place above their heads, saluted the ears of all, and he
staggered back upon the dying horse.

“Tom Kyle, you’ve deserved all this,” said Frontier Shack, drawing
the renegade from his terrible position. “I intended to part from you
in peace, for I owed you much; but all is over now. You are dying!”

“I know that, Shackelford. Your horse’s foot struck me squarely in
the breast. I never dreamed that he would prove my death. Look out
for the Indians.”

The trapper took the field-glass, and brought it to bear upon the
plains below.

“They’re not far off, now,” he said, lowering the instrument. “Tom,
we must go. They’ll never find you alive.”

“Thank Heaven for that!”

Then he tried to rise, but in vain; he fell back again, his hands
clawed the bloody earth, and he died, gasping:

“_Thank Heaven for that!_”

Tecumseh was already dead. Ned Kyle’s shot had finished the career of
the noble horse, and Frontier Shack clipped a bunch of the iron-gray
mane, ere he turned away:

“The old horse remembered his training to the last,” he said,
proudly. “He knew that that slap on the shoulder meant ‘charge!’ and
dash me! didn’t he go for them rascals lively?”

He brushed a tear from his eyes, as he thrust the lock of equine hair
into his bosom, and a few moments later they had left the spot.

But they had scarcely cleared a hundred yards when the trapper
suddenly drew rein. A human figure had dropped into a clump of bushes
beside the dusky trail.

“Indians!” he ejaculated, riding slowly forward again; but a moment
later he uttered a new cry.

The figure had crept from the bushes, and, with their support, was
standing erect.

“Winnesaw, upon my life!” exclaimed Charley Shafer, recognizing the
Pawnee girl who had loved him during his captivity.

The party soon reached the girl’s side, and saw at once that she
stood on the brink of the dark river.

“Winnesaw escaped from the Pawnees,” she said, in feeble tones,
“and she sought her mother who lives among the Apaches. She reached
the mountains, and in the darkness she met the bear. They fought;
Winnesaw conquered with her knife; but the beast tore her limbs.
She is dying; she shot the pale Indian when he fired at the white
trapper.”

She sunk to the earth from exhaustion, but Frontier Shack raised her
up.

“Gold Girl,” she gasped, her eyes falling upon Lina Aiken, “Winnesaw
love you. She loves boy with black eyes, too. But she give him up
now; she go to light the fires in Red Eagle’s lodge in Manitou
lands!”

Frontier Shack sprung into the saddle again.

       *       *       *       *       *

“Look here, youngster, don’t this mean you?”

The speaker was a United States soldier, and he thrust a small piece
of paper into the hands of a handsome youth who sat near an old
hunter within the walls of Fort Kearney.

The boy held the paragraph before his eyes, and read:

  “STILL UNKNOWN: We learn that the whereabouts of the sons of
  Messrs. Shafer and Long importers on Fourth street, still remain
  unknown. It is generally believed, now, that they have reached St.
  Louis, and joined some emigrant caravan at that place. A standing
  reward of $1,000 is offered for their persons, or for information
  that may lead to their recovery.”

“Read that to me, boy!” said the hunter, as the youth looked up with
a tear in his eye.

The youth complied.

“Well, I see you’re worth five hundred dollars to the old folks,”
said the old man, with a smile. “And I guess I’ll claim the reward.
But, I do wish you could take some white buffler hides home with you,
anyhow. This hes been a wild-goose chase, Charley, hesn’t it?”

“Yes, so far as white buffaloes are concerned,” replied the boy, with
a deep blush.

“Well, what have you gained by it?”

The youth drew nearer the hunter, and glanced at two beautiful girls
standing in the little barrack yard, conversing with a youth of about
their own age.

“Oh, I see!” exclaimed the man. “You needn’t tell me, Charley. This
has not been a wild-goose chase for you two boys. You’ve gained
something worth a million billion of buffler hides, and I’m going to
stay in Cincinnati till I see you hitched.”

“Oh, Frontier Shack, we owe you so much!”

“If you talk that away, I’ll be dashed if I go back with you. You
don’t owe me any thing. Boy, I thought that this thing was going
to turn out all right, when the boat struck the sunken island that
terrible night, and throwed George among the quicksands. I can’t tell
how I managed to git into the boat again, but heaven helped me, I
guess. The water carried me too far down-stream to help George then.
Golly! how ’stonished I war to find him in the Pawnee village, with
you at his side. But every thing has turned out right. I’m a lone man
now,” he continued, after a pause. “Tecumseh and Massasoit are gone;
they war my brothers. Peace to their ashes!”

A month later a happy reunion took place in the Queen City of the
West, and smiles came back to faces to which they had long been
strangers.

The runaways had returned, and when their overjoyed fathers asked to
behold the results of their escapade, they led the plain-found girls
blushingly forward.

“These girls are better nor white buffler-skins,” said Frontier
Shack, in his rough way. “The boys hev won ’em, and if they don’t git
’em, Frontier Shack will raise a rumpus and clean the ranche.”

Into the palatial homes of the Cincinnati merchants the fair girls
were warmly welcomed, and, in due time, a double wedding proved a
fitting sequel to the wild hunt for white buffalo-skins.

After the grand affair above mentioned, Frontier Shack returned to
the Plains, but, several years ago, he left them in disgust.

He said that the railroads were “spoiling a trapper’s fun” in the
wild West, and so, seeking retirement, he came to spend the remaining
days of his life with those whose lives his bravery had saved.

I need not say that he met a hearty welcome in two stately mansions
in Ohio’s proudest city, and to this day he relates to attentive
children the thrilling story which has called forth the service of my
humble pen.


                              THE END.




                         DIME POCKET NOVELS.

             PUBLISHED SEMI-MONTHLY, AT TEN CENTS EACH.

    =1  Hawkeye Harry.=	                    =83  The Specter Horseman.=
    =2  Dead Shot.=	                    =84  The Three Trappers.=
    =3  The Boy Miners.=	            =85  Kaleolah.=
    =4  Blue Dick.=	                    =86  The Hunter Hercules.=
    =5  Nat Wolfe.=	                    =87  Phil Hunter.=
    =6  The White Tracker.=	            =88  The Indian Scout.=
    =7  The Outlaw’s Wife.=	            =89  The Girl Avenger.=
    =8  The Tall Trapper.=	            =90  The Red Hermitess.=
    =9  Lightning Jo.=	                    =91  Star-Face, the Slayer.=
   =10  The Inland Pirate.=                 =92  The Antelope Boy.=
   =11  The Boy Ranger.=	            =93  The Phantom Hunter.=
   =12  Bess, the Trapper.=	            =94  Tom Pintle, the Pilot.=
   =13  The French Spy.=	            =95  The Red Wizard.=
   =14  Long Shot.=	                    =96  The Rival Trappers.=
   =15  The Gunmaker.=	                    =97  The Squaw Spy.=
   =16  Red Hand.=	                    =98  Dusky Dick.=
   =17  Ben, the Trapper.=	            =99  Colonel Crockett.=
   =18  Wild Raven.=	                   =100  Old Bear Paw.=
   =19  The Specter Chief.=	           =101  Redlaw.=
   =20  The B’ar-Killer.=	           =102  Wild Rube.=
   =21  Wild Nat.=	                   =103  The Indian Hunters.=
   =22  Indian Jo.=	                   =104  Scarred Eagle.=
   =23  Old Kent, the Ranger.=	           =105  Nick Doyle.=
   =24  The One-Eyed Trapper.=	           =106  The Indian Spy.=
   =25  Godbold, the Spy.=	           =107  Job Dean.=
   =26  The Black Ship.=	           =108  The Wood King.=
   =27  Single Eye.=	                   =109  The Scalped Hunter.=
   =28  Indian Jim.=	                   =110  Nick, the Scout.=
   =29  The Scout.=	                   =111  The Texas Tiger.=
   =30  Eagle Eye.=	                   =112  The Crossed Knives.=
   =31  The Mystic Canoe.=	           =113  Tiger-Heart.=
   =32  The Golden Harpoon.=               =114  The Masked Avenger.=
   =33  The Scalp King.=	           =115  The Pearl Pirates.=
   =34  Old Lute.=	                   =116  Black Panther.=
   =35  Rainbolt, Ranger.=	           =117  Abdiel, the Avenger.=
   =36  The Boy Pioneer.=	           =118  Cato, the Creeper.=
   =37  Carson, the Guide.=	           =119  Two-Handed Mat.=
   =38  The Heart Eater.=	           =120  Mad Trail Hunter.=
   =39  Wetzel, the Scout.=	           =121  Black Nick.=
   =40  The Huge Hunter.=	           =122  Kit Bird.=
   =41  Wild Nat, the Trapper.=	           =123  The Specter Riders.=
   =42  Lynx-cap.=	                   =124  Giant Pete.=
   =43  The White Outlaw.=	           =125  The Girl Captain.=
   =44  The Dog Trailer.=	           =126  Yankee Eph.=
   =45  The Elk King.=	                   =127  Silverspur.=
   =46  Adrian, the Pilot.=	           =128  Squatter Dick.=
   =47  The Man-hunter.=	           =129  The Child Spy.=
   =48  The Phantom Tracker.=	           =130  Mink Coat.=
   =49  Moccasin Bill.=	                   =131  Red Plume.=
   =50  The Wolf Queen.=	           =132  Clyde, the Trailer.=
   =51  Tom Hawk, Trailer.=	           =133  The Lost Cache.=
   =52  The Mad Chief.=	                   =134  The Cannibal Chief.=
   =53  The Black Wolf.=	           =135  Karaibo.=
   =54  Arkansas Jack.=	                   =136  Scarlet Moccasin.=
   =55  Blackbeard.=	                   =137  Kidnapped.=
   =56  The River Rifles.=	           =138  Maid of the Mountain.=
   =57  Hunter Ham.=	                   =139  The Scioto Scouts.=
   =58  Cloudwood.=	                   =140  Border Renegade.=
   =59  The Texas Hawks.=	           =141  The Mute Chief.=
   =60  Merciless Mat.=	                   =142  Boone, the Hunter.=
   =61  Mad Anthony’s Scouts.=	           =143  Mountain Kate.=
   =62  The Luckless Trapper.=	           =144  The Red Scalper.=
   =63  The Florida Scout.=	           =145  The Lone Chief.=
   =64  The Island Trapper.=	           =146  The Silver Bugle.=
   =65  Wolf-Cap.=	                   =147  Chinga, the Cheyenne.=
   =66  Rattling Dick.=	                   =148  The Tangled Trail.=
   =67  Sharp-Eye.=	                   =149  The Unseen Hand.=
   =68  Iron-Hand.=	                   =150  The Lone Indian.=
   =69  The Yellow Hunter.=	           =151  The Branded Brave.=
   =70  The Phantom Rider.=	           =152  Billy Bowlegs.=
   =71  Delaware Tom.=	                   =153  The Valley Scout.=
   =72  Silver Rifle.=	                   =154  Red Jacket.=
   =73  The Skeleton Scout.=	           =155  The Jungle Scout.=
   =74  Little Rifle.=	                   =156  Cherokee Chief.=
   =75  The Wood Witch.=       	           =157  The Bandit Hermit.=
   =76  Old Ruff, the Trapper.=	           =158  The Patriot Scouts.=
   =77  The Scarlet Shoulders.=	           =159  The Wood Rangers.=
   =78  The Border Rifleman.=	           =160  The Red Foe.=
   =79  Outlaw Jack.=	                   =161  Beautiful Unknown.=
   =80  Tiger-Tail, Seminole.=	           =162  Canebrake Mose.=
   =81  Death-Dealer.=	                   =163  Haak, the Guide.=
   =82  Kenton, the Ranger.=	           =164  The Border Scout.=

  =165 Wild Nat, the Gulch Terror=; or, The Border Huntress. By W.
       J. Hamilton. Ready

  =166 The Maid of Wyoming=; or, The Contest of the Clans. By James
       L. Bowen. Ready

  =167 The Three Captives.= A Tale of the Taos Valley. By Edward
       Willett. Ready

  =168 The Lost Hunters=; or, The Mohave Captive. By Capt. J. F. C.
       Adams. Ready

  =169 Border Law=; or, The Land Claim. By Mrs. Frances Fuller
       Barritt. Ready

  =170 The Lifted Trail=; or, The White Apache. By Edward Willett.
       Ready

  =171 The Trader Spy=; or, The Victim of the Fire-Raft. By J.
       Stanley Henderson. Ready

  =172 The Forest Specter=; or, The Young Hunter’s Foe. By Edward
       Willett. Ready


     BEADLE AND ADAMS, Publishers, 98 William Street, New York.




                         Transcriber’s Notes

  The Table of Contents at the beginning of the book was created by
  the transcriber.

  Inconsistencies in hyphenation such as “buffalo-hunters”/“buffalo
  hunters” have been maintained.

  Minor punctuation and spelling errors have been silently corrected
  and, except for those changes noted below, all misspellings in the
  text, especially in dialogue, and inconsistent or archaic usage,
  have been retained.

  Page 33: “A large quantity of valuaable” changed to “A large
  quantity of valuable”.

  Page 38: “young lips closed emphatically behind the monosylable”
  changed to “young lips closed emphatically behind the monosyllable”.

  Page 55: “but she had no occason” changed to “but she had no
  occasion”.

  Page 56: “two bore human-shaped objects in ther” changed to “two
  bore human-shaped objects in their”.