Read Ebook: The Rival Trappers: or Old Pegs The Mountaineer by Aiken Albert W
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There was certainly personal magnetism about this man, for those who were to all outward seeming beaten beyond recall, turned at his slightest word and for a moment bore back the rushing tide of the trappers. But the Blackfeet, creeping from ledge to ledge, again reached a place from which they could rain destruction on the heads of their enemies, who were again forced to retire, but sullenly, contesting every foot of ground.
"That cursed Blackfoot has ruined us, Jim," groaned Rafe, looking up at the cliffs. "But for him they never could have broken through."
"The boys fought like devils, I tell ye," said Jim Diggs. "Oh, I forgot to tell ye thet 'Old Pegs' tried to leg it and we had to pop him over."
"Let him go," replied Rafe, quietly. "If it had been Dave Farrell I would have felt better, and yet the old man has done me wrong. Look out!"
A great rock hurled from the hand of Whirlwind, struck Jim Diggs on the head and brought him to the earth with a hollow groan, while a wild triumphant yell pealed up from the throat of Whirlwind as he noted the result of the throw. The last and most unscrupulous of the lieutenants of Rafe Norris had gone to his last home. Rafe shook his clenched hand at the Indians on the cliff, and ordered his men to fall back to the mouth of the pass which opened into the Spirit Spring Valley, resolved to hold it to the last.
The Modoc Sioux, greatly thinned by the battles of the last two weeks, sullenly took their stations behind the bowlders, ready to die in their tracks if need be. The whites looked over their cartridges, saw to it that every weapon was in order, and stood ready to obey the commands of their chief.
"I'd like to revenge myself on them, boys," hissed Rafe Norris. "If it did not look like deserting you, I have a way yet if it would suit you."
"Let's hear it, Cap," said Boston Jake. "We'll do any thing for you."
"I don't doubt it, Jake. Come with me and I'll tell you my plan."
The two stood in close conference for a moment and then Jake passed to and fro among the men, telling them what the captain meant to do and they agreed to it at once. Then leaving them to keep off the forces of Dave Farrell as long as possible, Norris stepped hastily to the side of Myrtle.
"Come, my darling," he said, mockingly. "It is time that we were on the way."
"I am not going anywhere with you," was the answer.
"I will not."
"I have no time to waste. Will you go with me quietly or shall I call some of the Indians to carry you? They are not very courteous knights, and perhaps--"
"I will go with you," she said, quickly, "but woe to you if you cherish any evil thought against me, for with the first weapon I can reach I will kill you."
He made no answer but took her hand and led her at a rapid pace up the little valley until he reached the south end. Two Indians bearing a number of new lariats accompanied them and they stopped at the base of the almost perpendicular cliff and began to climb like cats until they reached a ledge fifty feet above the bottom of the canon. Then they sent down the ends of a doubled lariat which was formed into a sort of chair at the bottom, and at a sign from Rafe, Myrtle took her place in it and was raised to the ledge above. The rope was lowered again and Rafe came up, hand over hand, and reached the ledge panting for breath. The Indians slid down the lariats, which Rafe flung down to them and the two departed, leaving Rafe and Myrtle standing on the ledge.
"It will trouble your good friends to follow us here," said Rafe, laughing. "Capital scouts they may be but I doubt if they could track us up this cliff."
"You will find it hard to deceive my father," she replied, "if he once takes your trail."
"I don't think he will trouble me any more," replied Rafe, with a grim smile, turning away his head. "Your father was a plucky and keen-witted man, but it is out of his power to harm me now."
"Have you murdered him?" she gasped, looking at him wildly.
"I am not a murderer," was the calm answer. "He tried to escape from my men while I was basking in the sunlight of your smiles, and got hit. That is all I know about it."
"I will remember how it was done," cried Myrtle, with a lurid gleam in her beautiful eyes. "But I will speak to you no more until the time comes for you to die."
He took her hand again and led her by wild paths across the mountain, until she was nearly ready to sink from fatigue. Through all this, he had shown a certain chivalrous care of her which was hardly to be looked for after all that had happened. When he saw that she was tired, he stopped and pulled moss from the rocks, which he spread to make her a couch.
"Do not fear me," he said, as she seemed to shrink from his touch. "I would not do you a wrong, for I worship the ground your feet have trod."
"It may be so," she said, quietly. "Let us say that you really love me, then. But, do you not take a strange way of showing it?"
"I will change all that," he cried. "Look you, Myrtle Forrester--you start at the name, do you?--I will show you that I know more of you than you suppose. On the fourteenth of June, twelve years ago, a train was run into by Sioux on the plain toward the Three Buttes. It was supposed that every person was killed, but as it turned out, an old prairie-man, known as Old Pegs, was some miles from camp, having in charge a child six years of age, the daughter of an Indian agent named Forrester, who was going to Bent's Fort. These two were all who escaped, and Old Pegs came back to find the camp in ruins, and every man and woman killed and scalped."
"No matter; I know that it is true, and so do you. Forrester was not quite dead, and after leaving his daughter to the care of Old Pegs, with an injunction to guard her as his life, Forrester died. Old Pegs kept his word, and Myrtle Forrester is now my prisoner, and destined soon to be my wife."
"You dare not say that my brave guardian did not keep his promise well," cried Myrtle. "No father could be more tender or true than he has been to me, and I can not bring myself to think that he has been foully murdered."
"You still cling to that word, Myrtle. If I had been his prisoner, and had attempted to escape, he would not have hesitated to fire at me."
"Doubtless you are right," she said; "but I shall not pardon you for that. Why have you told my story to me here?"
"That you may know that I am not entirely unacquainted with your history, and that I knew who and where you were before I came to the Indian country. Myrtle, I came to find you and win your love!"
"You came here for that!" she cried, with dilating eyes, "Who and what are you, then?"
"Rafe Norris, at your service! Curly-headed Ned, so called at the forts upon Hudson Bay; and Edward Forrester within the realms of civilization. But come--have you rested enough?"
She rose at once and followed him, but the name which he had given last troubled her. "Curly-headed Ned" she knew by report, as a chief over one section of the Modoc Sioux, and a man whose name was stained by a hundred crimes. But, why did he lay claim to the name of Forrester?
"I see that you are puzzled," he said, with a smile. "I am afraid that you doubt that the name of Forrester is really mine. Is it not so?"
"I can not see why you claim it."
"Because it is my right name. I have the honor to be your cousin, my dear girl, and this will in some sort account for the affection which I bear you."
"You claim kindred with me, and yet seek to wrong me in the basest manner. There--I believe that it is all false, and-- Where are you taking me? I have been in this pass before."
He smiled in a superior sort of way, and turning a sharp angle, stepped suddenly into the path down which she had forced Velveteens on the day when she made him prisoner. Her captor was taking her to her former home! A great fear came into her heart, for she knew that he would not dare to bring her to the cabin of Old Pegs unless that brave man had ceased to breathe.
Boston Jake and his men did not resist very long after the departure of Rafe Norris. They stood out long enough to give a good excuse for yielding, and then sent out a flag to sue for peace. The Sioux would not trust to that, but took to the mountain at once, and sought to find their way back to their own country in small parties. Boston Jake surrendered his party in person, and Dave received his submission.
"Where is the man who was captured while carrying a flag?" he demanded. "You know well whom I mean."
"Yes--I know that well enough, boss, but he's pegged out. 'Tain't my fault, you know."
"Who, then, is to blame?"
"Jim Diggs shot him on the jump, trying to escape. It were rough, but Jim couldn't help it."
"I shall hang three of your men for the murder," replied Dave, quietly, "and they will be selected by lot."
"That ain't according to Hoyle, boss," said Boston Jake. "I kain't see that play of yours, after we guv up."
"It were cussid mean, I know," replied Jake; "but it ain't right to do evil acause some one else did, eh?"
"Enough; where is Rafe Norris, better known as Curly-headed Ned?"
"Curly? Why, he went away, two hours ago. He don't hanker arter you chaps, you understand; they don't suit him, nohow."
"The scoundrel! It will go hard with him when we once lay hands on him. Where is the daughter of Old Pegs? Tell me quickly before I put a bullet through your head."
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