登陆注册
5211000000019

第19章

THE ILLUSIVE COPPERHEAD

Cameron's approach to the Piegan camp was greeted by a discordant chorus of yelps and howls from a pack of mangy, half-starved curs of all breeds, shapes and sizes, the invariable and inevitable concomitants of an Indian encampment.The squaws, who had been busy superintending the pots and pans in which simmered the morning meal of their lords and masters, faded from view at Cameron's approach, and from the teepees on every side men appeared and stood awaiting with stolid faces the white man's greeting.Cameron was known to them of old.

"Good-day!" he cried briefly, singling out the Chief.

"Huh!" replied the Chief, and awaited further parley.

"No grub yet, eh? You sleep too long, Chief."The Chief smiled grimly.

"I say, Chief," continued Cameron, "I have lost a couple of steers--big fellows, too--any of your fellows seen them?"Trotting Wolf turned to the group of Indians who had slouched toward them in the meantime and spoke to them in the singsong monotone of the Indian.

"No see cow," he replied briefly.

Cameron threw himself from his horse and, striding to a large pot simmering over a fire, stuck his knife into the mass and lifted up a large piece of flesh, the bones of which looked uncommonly like ribs of beef.

"What's this, Trotting Wolf?" he inquired with a stern ring in his voice.

"Deer," promptly and curtly replied the Chief.

"Who shot him?"

The Chief consulted the group of Indians standing near.

"This man," he replied, indicating a young Indian.

"What's your name?" said Cameron sharply."I know you."The young Indian shook his head.

"Oh, come now, you know English all right.What's your name?"Still the Indian shook his head, meeting Cameron's look with a fearless eye.

"He White Cloud," said the Chief.

"White Cloud! Big Chief, eh?" said Cameron.

"Huh!" replied Trotting Wolf, while a smile appeared on several faces.

"You shot this deer?"

"Huh!" replied the Indian, nodding.

"I thought you could speak English all right."Again a smile touched the faces of some of the group.

"Where did you shoot him?"

White Cloud pointed vaguely toward the mountains.

"How far? Two, three, four miles?" inquired Cameron, holding up his fingers.

"Huh!" grunted the Indian, holding up five fingers.

"Five miles, eh? Big deer, too," said Cameron, pointing to the ribs.

"Huh!"

"How did you carry him home?"

The Indian shook his head.

"How did he carry him these five miles?" continued Cameron, turning to Trotting Wolf.

"Pony," replied Trotting Wolf curtly.

"Good!" said Cameron."Now," said he, turning swiftly upon the young Indian, "where is the skin?"The Indian's eyes wavered for a fleeting instant.He spoke a few words to Trotting Wolf.Conversation followed.

"Well?" said Cameron.

"He says dogs eat him up."

"And the head? This big fellow had a big head.Where is it?"Again the Indian's eyes wavered and again the conversation followed.

"Left him up in bush," replied the chief.

"We will ride up and see it, then," said Cameron.

The Indians became voluble among themselves.

"No find," said the Chief."Wolf eat him up."Cameron raised the meat to his nose, sniffed its odor and dropped it back into the pot.With a single stride he was close to White Cloud.

"White Cloud," he said sternly, "you speak with a forked tongue.

In plain English, White Cloud, you lie.Trotting Wolf, you know that is no deer.That is cow.That is my cow."Trotting Wolf shrugged his shoulders.

"No see cow me," he said sullenly.

"White Cloud," said Cameron, swiftly turning again upon the young Indian, "where did you shoot my cow?"The young Indian stared back at Cameron, never blinking an eyelid.

Cameron felt his wrath rising, but kept himself well in hand, remembering the purpose of his visit.During this conversation he had been searching the gathering crowd of Indians for the tall form of his friend of the previous night, but he was nowhere to be seen.

Cameron felt he must continue the conversation, and, raising his voice as if in anger--and indeed there was no need of pretense for he longed to seize White Cloud by the throat and shake the truth out of him--he said:

"Trotting Wolf, your young men have been killing my cattle for many days.You know that this is a serious offense with the Police.

Indians go to jail for this.And the Police will hold you responsible.You are the Chief on this reserve.The Police will ask why you cannot keep your young men from stealing cattle."The number of Indians was increasing every moment and still Cameron's eyes searched the group, but in vain.Murmurs arose from the Indians, which he easily interpreted to mean resentment, but he paid no heed.

"The Police do not want a Chief," he cried in a still louder voice, "who cannot control his young men and keep them from breaking the law."He paused abruptly.From behind a teepee some distance away there appeared the figure of the "Big Chief" whom he so greatly desired to see.Giving no sign of his discovery, he continued his exhortation to Trotting Wolf, to that worthy's mingled rage and embarrassment.The suggestion of jail for cattle-thieves the Chief knew well was no empty threat, for two of his band even at that moment were in prison for this very crime.This knowledge rendered him uneasy.He had no desire himself to undergo a like experience, and it irked his tribe and made them restless and impatient of his control that their Chief could not protect them from these unhappy consequences of their misdeeds.They knew that with old Crowfoot, the Chief of the Blackfeet band, such untoward consequences rarely befell the members of that tribe.Already Trotting Wolf could distinguish the murmurs of his young men, who were resenting the charge against White Cloud, as well as the tone and manner in which it was delivered.Most gladly would he have defied this truculent rancher to do his worst, but his courage was not equal to the plunge, and, besides, the circumstances for such a break were not yet favorable.

同类推荐
  • 银瓶梅

    银瓶梅

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说是法非法经

    佛说是法非法经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 伤寒辨要笺记

    伤寒辨要笺记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 徐氏笔精

    徐氏笔精

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 上清明堂元真经诀

    上清明堂元真经诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 穿越之极品凰妃

    穿越之极品凰妃

    抱歉,不小心挖错坟了,大活人居然被鬼给坑了!尼玛,一朝穿越成弃妃,姐有多惨你们造吗!不怕,安抚一下受伤的小心脏,看我如何斗强敌,虐奴才,一脚踹翻小王爷……【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 废柴封神:神笔小兽妃

    废柴封神:神笔小兽妃

    穿成残废?没事,至少四肢健全,能拿画笔。被乘虚而入,成了别人的魔宠,她忍。她不争不抢,但不代表她没心!一场夹杂阴谋的爱恋,她怨。自家骨肉被偷被毒被虐待,她恨。若是实力能让不安分的因子统统泯灭,她不介意踏平整个天下!【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 后宫尔珍公主

    后宫尔珍公主

    她,21世纪都市女性常紫苏穿越到清朝。复活于一个公主的身上。从此她便是爱新觉罗·尔珍,有一个不受宠的额娘秋沁柔。宫廷里的那些女人们永远都是斗争不断,常紫苏冷眼看这宫斗不停。由于秋沁柔遭人所害,得了不治之症,为了报答秋沁柔的救命之恩她溜出宫求医。他,说:“紫苏花为你开,清风为你来,雪影为你倾倒。你是我这辈子都值得爱的女人,此生永不负你。”他,说:“有朝一日,我要让天下美食都是出自我的手。让我给你做一辈子的山珍海味。”他,说:“医者本仁心,而我不是仁心的医者,但为了你我愿下山救治你的额娘。”他,说:“我原是佛门中人,因为犯了戒律被逐出师门。既然已不是佛门人,那么我也有追求自己幸福的权利。”他,说:“我愿意等你一生一世,你可愿等我凯旋之时来娶你?”她,在清宫中原本是想清静的过日子,却没想到树欲止而风不停。聪颖的她是如何巧妙的应对这群后宫里的女人,又是如何溜出宫,流浪于江湖苦寻救命之药。
  • 嘉莉妹妹

    嘉莉妹妹

    《嘉莉妹妹》是美国现实主义作家德莱塞的重要作品之一,是《珍妮姑娘》的姐妹篇。嘉莉到芝加哥探亲,在火车上结识了推销员杜洛埃,她不堪工厂的艰苦生活,和杜洛埃同居,从而结识酒店经理赫斯渥。赫斯渥迷恋她的美色,竟盗用公款和她逃到纽约,过起同居生活。嘉莉因偶然的机会登台演出,渐渐获得成功,赫斯渥却逐步潦倒。两人分手,赫斯渥最后自杀。1900年3月德莱塞完成了《嘉莉妹妹》的初稿。一个世纪以来,《嘉莉妹妹》尽管受到某些非议,但始终是读者爱不释手的一部名著。
  • 写给女人的心灵能量书

    写给女人的心灵能量书

    本书所精选的世界上最有影响力的50位财智女性将会用她们的商战经历、职场际遇将所有读者关心的问题一一揭晓。她们有的是在商场上叱咤风云的CEO,有的是用自己的知性魅力传播文明的女主播,有的是在广告界呼风唤雨的女斗士,她们背景不一、性格迥异,但同样都具有能够让我们受益匪浅的财富智慧:永不放弃梦想的执著、战胜自我的勇气、坚韧与责任、仁爱和细致……这些成功的潜质,加上本书详尽的分析,将给读者呈现一本最具有指导意义的商道真经。
  • 怦然心动唯有你

    怦然心动唯有你

    君玉穿书了,穿到了一本女主在娱乐圈重生逆袭文中,并且成了书中男主的一枚烂桃花。行吧!既然是烂桃花,那就别开了。能成为男女主,定是被作者亲妈眷顾的孩子,她决定远离是非,拒绝成为男主的舔狗,女主的情敌。可没想到,我不就山,山来就我。她怎么穿书没几天,就遇到跟男主争夺女主的大反派了?看小说的时候,没这层关系啊!仅次于男主的大反派,竟然还是她的亲戚?虽说没有血缘关系,但也不是她能招惹地起的。但为什么每次她努力维持高冷面瘫人设的样子,都能正好戳中反派顾尘的笑点?(人设和行为完全不符但总是努力维持高冷面瘫人设的男主烂桃花VS越看越觉得一直在崩人设的某人很有趣的书中大反派)顾尘:人设崩了!君玉:拒绝承认·JPG
  • 李鸿章的成事之道

    李鸿章的成事之道

    李鸿章是中国清朝末期重臣,洋务运动的主要倡导者之一,淮军创始人和统帅,晚清最杰出的外交家。他的后半生致力于外交事业。李鸿章不仅是一位中国近代史上争议最大的历史人物,而且也是一位影响了近代中国近半个世纪的晚清军政重臣。
  • 聊斋志异精装分类全评本

    聊斋志异精装分类全评本

    清初作家蒲松龄所著《聊斋志异》,是中国古典文学的奇葩。问世300多年来,该书流传甚广,饮誉中外,妇孺皆知,但真正通读全书并读懂原文的人并不多。文言文、不分类、缺评语,是令现代人难以走进这部名著的3只拦路虎。为打掉3只拦路虎,让《聊斋》重返民间,王咏赋(网名“红庙老王”)耗时8年,编著了这部《聊斋志异精装分类全评本》。
  • 基落岛

    基落岛

    诚邀本月二十五号前往基落岛,轮船已在港口等待,于傍晚五点二十分出航。
  • 古怪的乘客

    古怪的乘客

    选取了亚森?罗宾探案故事中的精彩篇目,包含少年罗宾、结婚戒指的秘密、失窃的黑珍珠、罗宾大失败、古怪的乘客等5个独立的短篇悬疑故事。小说风格怪异离奇,充满悬疑气氛,且短小精致,便于携带,是读者旅途或工作途中及闲暇阅读的方便读本。