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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/36888-8.txt b/36888-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f0e025c --- /dev/null +++ b/36888-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6457 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The War Trail, by Elmer Russell Gregor + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The War Trail + +Author: Elmer Russell Gregor + +Release Date: July 29, 2011 [EBook #36888] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WAR TRAIL *** + + + + +Produced by Chris Curnow, Barbara Kosker, Michael and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + + + _By ELMER R. GREGOR_ + + + JIM MASON, BACKWOODSMAN + JIM MASON, SCOUT + + _Western Indian Series_ + + WHITE OTTER + THE WAR TRAIL + THREE SIOUX SCOUTS + + _Eastern Indian Series_ + + SPOTTED DEER + RUNNING FOX + THE WHITE WOLF + +[Illustration: NOW WE MUST WATCH OUT! [Page 186]] + + + + + THE WAR TRAIL + + + + + BY + ELMER RUSSELL GREGOR + + AUTHOR OF "THE WHITE WOLF," + "RUNNING FOX," "WHITE OTTER," ETC. + + + + + [Illustration] + + + + + D. APPLETON AND COMPANY + NEW YORK :: 1924 :: LONDON + + + + + COPYRIGHT, 1921, BY + D. APPLETON AND COMPANY + + PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA + + + + + CONTENTS + + + CHAPTER PAGE + + I. A COURIER FROM THE WEST 1 + + II. OFF ON THE WAR TRAIL 13 + + III. THE COUNCIL FIRE 30 + + IV. AWAY INTO THE NORTH 44 + + V. SIOUX SCOUTS 56 + + VI. THE LONE RIDER 68 + + VII. SMOKE SIGNALS 75 + + VIII. A CLOSE CALL 87 + + IX. ANXIOUS MOMENTS 101 + + X. REBELLIOUS PONIES 115 + + XI. AN UNUSUAL ADVENTURE 128 + + XII. AN ENCOUNTER WITH THE FLATHEADS 147 + + XIII. A CLEVER STRATAGEM 158 + + XIV. THE BLACKFEET CAMP 167 + + XV. A PERILOUS RECONNAISSANCE 181 + + XVI. OFF WITH THE PONIES 197 + + XVII. HOTLY PURSUED 207 + + XVIII. THE STAMPEDE 224 + + XIX. TRAILING THE RUNAWAYS 236 + + XX. SAFE AT LAST 251 + + + + +THE WAR TRAIL + + + + +CHAPTER I + +A COURIER FROM THE WEST + + +The sun was setting behind the western rim of the plain, as White Otter, +a famous young war-chief of the Ogalala Sioux, drew near the low ridge +of foothills which he had been approaching since daylight. He was bound +on a hunting expedition for deer, having promised to kill a fat young +buck for his grandfather, old Wolf Robe, the aged Sioux chief. + +White Otter approached the timber with his usual caution. He knew that +the forest often concealed foes as well as game, and he determined to +take no risks. He rode slowly toward the cover, therefore, watching for +the slightest warning of danger. He was within easy arrow range of the +woods when his pony suddenly stopped and snorted nervously. White Otter +instantly became alert. Drawing his bow, he slid to the ground, and +sheltered himself behind his pony. Then for some time pony and rider +watched the forest. + +A loud crackling of undergrowth, and a number of soft, bounding +footfalls told him the cause of his alarm. He had startled a deer from +its feeding ground at the edge of the plain. Convinced that the place +was free of foes, he mounted his pony, and rode to the edge of the +timber. + +This range of heavily timbered foothills was a favorite hunting ground +of the Ogalalas, and White Otter had visited the locality many times. He +was entirely familiar with the usual haunts of game, and knew the +location of every spring and salt lick. Once in the timber, therefore, +the young Sioux rode slowly along a well-worn game trail which brought +him to a small grassy park in the dip of the hills. A little stream +trickled through one end of it, and made it an ideal feeding ground for +deer and elk. As it was also an attractive and sheltered camp site, and +offered an abundance of feed for his pony, White Otter decided to remain +there for the night. + +The twilight shadows were already gathering as the Sioux tied his pony +in the woods and seated himself at the edge of the little park to watch +and listen. Although the day was about gone he hoped that he might +secure his game before darkness finally settled down. It was not long +before he was roused by a rustling of wings above his head. Looking up, +he saw a pair of plump spruce grouse on a limb directly over him. As the +birds stretched their necks and cocked their heads to look at him, he +drove an arrow through the body of the cock grouse. The bird fluttered +helplessly to the ground, and White Otter immediately broke its neck. +The remaining grouse still sat peering down at him. He made no attempt +to kill it. It was a law of his people to kill only what they required +that there might always be sufficient game to replenish the supply. + +"Wakantunka, the Great Mystery, has sent me something to eat," White +Otter said, reverently. "It is good." + +As it was getting quite dark, and as there seemed little probability of +seeing game, the Sioux decided to abandon his vigil until daylight. He +brought his pony from the timber and tied it in the center of the park +to graze. Then he selected his camp site and made a tiny fire of dry +sticks. As a precaution against being seen by some prowling foe, he +inclosed it with a barricade of rocks to hide its feeble glow. He +plucked the grouse and spitted it on a forked stick before the fire. +Then he drew his elk skin robe about his shoulders and seated himself to +enjoy his evening meal. + +After he had eaten the grouse White Otter allowed the fire to die out. +Then for a long time he sat in the darkness, listening to the night +sounds. The wind whispered softly in the tree tops. The shrill yelping +of the coyotes came from the open plain. Then the plaintive cry of the +little red owl sounded within bowshot. White Otter listened anxiously. +He knew that the call often was used as a signal, and he determined to +be on his guard. However, he soon convinced himself that it was genuine, +and dismissed it from his mind. Shortly afterward he brought his pony +from the park and tied it near him. Then he wrapped himself in his robe +and lay down to sleep. + +White Otter awakened at daylight and crept stealthily to the edge of the +park. As he saw no game, he sat down to watch. He felt quite sure that +either deer or elk would soon come there for food and water. In fact he +had waited only a short time when he heard something approaching through +the undergrowth. Fitting an arrow to his bow, White Otter looked +anxiously in the direction of the sound. In a few minutes he saw an old +bull elk standing in the shadows at the edge of the woods. It was thin +and emaciated, and White Otter knew that its flesh would be tough and +unpalatable. It was well within bowshot, but he had no thought of +killing it. He had promised his aged grandfather a fat young buck, and +he had no intention of disappointing him. As the old bull walked slowly +into the open, White Otter grunted, and the elk instantly stopped and +looked toward him. Then as the Sioux rose to his feet and showed himself +the aged bull turned awkwardly and trotted stiffly into the cover. + +"Go, old man," laughed White Otter. "You have lived a long time. I will +let you live on. I am----" + +He stopped abruptly, for at that moment he heard a loud snort, and a +great crackling of brush, as the buck for which he had been waiting +raced safely away through the woods. The young hunter flushed with +anger. + +"I am like a noisy old woman," he grumbled, savagely. + +After he had gone to examine the trail of the buck, he again seated +himself at the edge of the woods to watch for game. A long time passed +before he heard anything. Then he was surprised to hear something coming +directly toward him through the woods. It made a great noise, and +sounded like a deer or an elk in wild flight. White Otter sprang to his +feet and held his arrow in readiness. + +In a few moments a splendid blacktail buck leaped into the open. White +Otter was astonished to see a huge gray lynx clinging to the buck. As it +reached the park, the deer was dragged to its haunches. Then, apparently +unmindful of the interested young hunter, the lynx relaxed its hold and +sprang at the throat of its victim. The cruel fangs sank deep into the +flesh, and although the buck struggled desperately it was soon overcome. + +Then White Otter drove his arrow through the lynx. It fell dead with the +arrow through its heart. A second arrow ended the agony of the blacktail +buck. Elated at his luck the Sioux ran forward to examine his game. He +lifted the head of the lynx and gazed intently into the cruel face. Then +he addressed the dead animal and made excuses for having killed it, so +that its spirit would not depart in anger and seek to avenge itself upon +him at some future time. + +"Ho, old man, you were very fierce," White Otter said, softly. "You were +a good hunter. If I had not come here you would have had something good +to eat. Well, I saw you. I came here to get meat for my grandfather, the +great chief Wolf Robe. When I saw that buck I decided to take it. That +is why I killed you. But you must not feel bad about it. You have done +many bad things to my people. Yes, that is why I felt like killing you. +You have killed many young ponies. You have driven away many deer. You +have made it hard for our hunters to find meat. Now you know why I +killed you. But you must not feel bad about it. Now I am going to do +something good for you. I am going to give you some meat to take with +you on the Long Trail. Then I am going to tell my people about you. I +will speak good words about you. Now you must feel good about this +thing." + +Having complied with the ancient custom of his people, White Otter +opened the carcass of the deer and placed the entrails beside the lynx. +Then he packed the buck upon his pony with a long lariat of twisted +rawhide and rode from the park. + +When he reached the edge of the timber, White Otter stopped to search +the plain. A prairie wolf trotted slowly from sight over a rise of +ground. It was the only sign of life on the vast sage-grown waste. +Assured that there was nothing to fear, White Otter set out upon his +journey. + +White Otter had covered two thirds of the distance to the Sioux camp +when his pony suddenly turned its nose toward the wind and whinnied +shrilly. White Otter looked about him with considerable alarm. He felt +certain that other horses were somewhere in the vicinity. The +possibility roused his suspicions. He dismounted and grasped his pony +by the nose to keep it silent. It was snorting and nervously watching a +low grassy knoll several arrow flights away. + +"There are horses behind that hill," White Otter told himself. + +Two possibilities suggested themselves. Perhaps there was a small bunch +of stray ponies grazing on the opposite side of the hill. Perhaps his +foes had discovered him and were lying in ambush behind the knoll. The +thought made him uneasy, as the day was far spent, and he was still a +considerable distance from his people. He had great confidence in the +ability of his pony, however, which was one of the best in the entire +Sioux tribe. He believed that in an open chase he would have little +difficulty in keeping well beyond range of any pursuers who might set +out upon his trail. + +"I will find out about this thing," he declared. + +He planned to ride about the knoll at a safe distance in the hope of +discovering what lay hidden on the other side. As he was about to mount +his pony, however, he saw a warrior rise to his feet, and stand boldly +outlined on the top of the hill. It was an entirely unexpected maneuver, +and White Otter instantly became suspicious. He feared that it was a +trick to lead him into a trap. He looked anxiously about the plain to +make sure that other crafty foes were not circling around behind him to +cut off his retreat. He saw no one except the mysterious stranger on the +top of the hill. He seemed to be watching White Otter as intently as the +latter was watching him. For some time neither moved. + +White Otter finally decided that, as the unknown scout was too far away +to be identified, it would be foolish to waste more time watching him. +He determined to continue on his way toward the Sioux camp. If he +learned that he was being followed he planned to turn aside on a false +trail until it grew dark. Then he would circle back toward the Ogalala +village. + +As White Otter mounted his pony and started away, however, the warrior +on the knoll suddenly showed signs of life. The Sioux had ridden less +than an arrow flight when the sentinel disappeared over the brow of the +hill. White Otter felt quite certain that his pursuit had begun. He +watched anxiously over his shoulder for the first glimpse of his foes. +The Crows had lately been seen in that vicinity, and he wondered if a +company of those hated enemies were about to come racing along his +trail. He did not force his pony, however, as he was eager to learn the +identity of his pursuers before he raced away for the Sioux camp. + +White Otter did not have long to wait. In a few moments a solitary +horseman swept over a rise of the plain and galloped toward him. The +Sioux felt sure that it was the warrior who had been watching him. As +the stranger appeared to be alone, and eager to fight, White Otter +prepared for battle. Before venturing within arrow range, however, the +rider suddenly wheeled his pony, and raced around White Otter at great +speed. The Sioux immediately stopped and prepared to defend himself. +Then he suddenly discovered that the horseman was a friend. + +"Ho, Dacotah! Ho, my brother!" shouted the rider. + +"Yes, yes, now I see who you are," cried White Otter, as he lowered his +bow. + +A moment later they dismounted beside each other. White Otter recognized +the rider as a Minneconjoux warrior named Lean Wolf, an old friend with +whom he had shared several perilous adventures. + +"I have brought you some words from your brother, Sun Bird," said Lean +Wolf. + +"It is good," White Otter replied, eagerly, as his eyes lighted with +pleasure. + +"It is bad," Lean Wolf said, soberly. + +"Has something bad happened to my brother Sun Bird?" the young Ogalala +inquired anxiously. + +"No, I have not come to tell you that," Lean Wolf assured him. "I have +come to tell you that our enemies, the Blackfeet, came to our camp. They +crawled around the village in the dark like dogs. We did not hear them. +They ran off many ponies. Sun Bird is going to bring back those ponies. +He is the leader of a war party. He is going to fight the boastful +Blackfeet. He wants his brother White Otter to go with him." + +Lean Wolf finished speaking, and looked inquiringly at the young Ogalala +war chief. For some moments the latter remained silent. He knew that a +warrior must not speak hastily, or pledge himself too eagerly. Although +his heart beat wildly at the thought of joining his friend in a war +expedition against the Blackfeet, he carefully concealed his emotion +lest he might lose respect in the eyes of the stern Minneconjoux scout. +Then, after the proper interval, White Otter replied: + +"Lean Wolf, tell my brother Sun Bird that I will go with him to fight +the Blackfeet," he said, quietly. + +"It is good," replied Lean Wolf. + +"See, pretty soon it will be dark," said White Otter. "You must go with +me to my people." + +"No, I will go back," Lean Wolf told him. "I was going to your village +to find you. Then I saw you here. It is good. I have brought you the +words of your brother Sun Bird. It is what I set out to do. I have done +it. Now I will turn back. Sun Bird is waiting." + +"Go, my brother," replied White Otter. "Tell Sun Bird that I will come +to meet him at the end of three suns. If I do not come then he must wait +one sun more. Then if I do not come he will know that something bad has +happened to me. Now I am going away." + +They parted without further ceremony, riding away into the twilight in +opposite directions. Once they had separated neither looked back. After +he had ridden a short distance, however, White Otter raised his head and +uttered the wild, piercing war cry of the Dacotahs. It echoed defiantly +across the plain, and the young war chief thrilled at the sound. Then, +after a short silence, it was answered from the west. White Otter +laughed gleefully as he raced his pony toward the Sioux camp. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +OFF ON THE WAR TRAIL + + +When White Otter reached the Sioux camp he rode directly to the lodge of +old Wolf Robe, the famous Ogalala war chief. + +"Ho, grandfather, see, I have brought you some meat," he cried gayly. + +"Ho, I see that you have killed a fat young buck," said Wolf Robe, as +his eyes lighted with pleasure. "Come, woman, cut some meat." + +At his command, old Singing Wind, the grandmother of White Otter, came +from the lodge. White Otter dragged the buck from his pony. Then, as +Singing Wind called some of the younger women to help her, White Otter +asked if he might talk with Wolf Robe. + +"Yes, my son, come into the lodge and sit down with me," said Wolf Robe. + +The old chief listened attentively while White Otter described his +unusual adventure with the lynx. Then he told of his meeting with Lean +Wolf, the Minneconjoux scout, and the message which the latter had +brought from Sun Bird. Wolf Robe looked sharply at his grandson. + +"I am going with Sun Bird to fight the Blackfeet," declared White Otter. + +Wolf Robe nodded understandingly, but made no reply. For a long time he +gazed thoughtfully at his battle-scarred war shield which hung on a +tripod of poles at the rear of the lodge. It appeared as if the aged war +leader was recalling his own glorious achievements on the war trail in +the days of his youth. White Otter waited patiently for him to speak. + +"It is good," Wolf Robe said, finally. "The voice of a friend travels +far. The ears of a Dacotah are open for the words of a friend. Sun Bird +has called you. He is your friend. You must go." + +Having given this advice, Wolf Robe again subsided into silent +meditation. As White Otter rose to leave, however, his grandfather +motioned for him to be seated. + +"Wait, my son, I have some words for you," he said. + +"It is good," replied White Otter. + +"You say that you are going to fight the Blackfeet," said Wolf Robe. +"Those people are strong. They are braver than the boastful Pawnees. I +have fought with them many times. When I was a young man I was taken to +their village. They kept me there many moons. Those were bad days. Then +I got away. After that I fought many battles against those people. Once +I went to their camp, and took away some ponies. It was a hard thing to +do. Yes, my son, the Blackfeet are great warriors. Well, I have told you +about them. Now you can tell our brothers, the Minneconjoux, about it. I +believe you will have a big fight to get back those ponies. My son, you +are a Dacotah. It is enough. I have spoken. Go!" + +The following day, at sunrise, White Otter set out to join the +Minneconjoux war party. He was dressed and decorated for the war trail. +Naked above the waist, he had daubed and streaked his face, chest and +arms with yellow clay. A great war bonnet of eagle plumes proclaimed his +rank as a famous Ogalala war chief. His dress consisted of buckskin +leggings, buffalo-hide moccasins, a buckskin breechcloth, and a silky +cow buffalo robe for protection against wind and storm. He carried a +wolfskin case containing his bow and arrows, a flint knife in a buckskin +sheath, his buffalo-hide war shield, and a weasel-skin pouch containing +his fire sticks and some dried meat. Mounted upon his best war pony, +the dashing young warrior made a striking appearance as he rode proudly +from the great Sioux camp. + +Many friends shouted good wishes from the edge of the village. White +Otter turned his pony, and answered them with the thrilling war-cry of +the Dacotahs. Then he raced away toward the west. + +Once beyond range of the camp, however, White Otter drew his pony to a +walk, and carefully scanned the plain. He had little fear of +encountering foes so near the Ogalala village, but he determined to take +every precaution. A small band of antelope were feeding far away toward +the south, and as they seemed to be the only living creatures on the +vast expanse of plain White Otter urged his pony into a canter and +proceeded on his way. + +It was a glorious day in early summer. The sky was blue and cloudless. +The prairie was dotted with flowers. Birds sang gayly from the thickets. +The air was perfumed with the fragrance of blossoms, the sweet aroma of +growing grass, and the faint, spicy scent of distant sage. + +White Otter rode on his way in high spirits. He was carefree, and happy, +and eager for adventure. The fact that he was about to expose himself +to the perils of the war trail caused him slight concern. He had +implicit confidence in the ability and courage of his tribesmen, the +fearless Minneconjoux, and he had little doubt that their expedition +against the powerful Blackfeet would be entirely successful. The thought +of being injured or killed in the adventure never entered his mind. If +it had he would have wasted little time upon it, as he had long since +learned to scoff at danger, and to accept injury and death as inevitable +possibilities in the life of every warrior. + +Toward the end of the day White Otter came in sight of a familiar little +grove of aspens which marked a former camp site. He had encountered a +company of Ute warriors at that spot the previous year, and he was +somewhat suspicious of it. It offered a splendid hiding place to foes, +and the wily young Sioux determined to make sure that the place was +unoccupied before he ventured within arrow range. He stopped at a safe +distance out on the plain, and watched the grove with considerable +anxiety. Then, as he saw nothing to arouse his suspicions, he rode +slowly about the camp site, looking for fresh pony tracks. He soon +discovered them. They led away from the grove. White Otter dismounted, +and studied them with great care. He saw that it was the trail of a +single pony, and the tracks were several days old. Having learned that +much, he walked slowly ahead of his horse, watching carefully to +discover where the trail had entered the grove. + +"Perhaps it was Lean Wolf," he told himself. + +He soon learned otherwise, as the trail approached the grove from the +south. White Otter followed the tracks a short distance out on the +plain, and found evidence which convinced him that the pony had carried +a rider. As there seemed little to be gained by following the trail +farther in that direction, he turned and followed it to the grove. + +The camp site was unoccupied, and as there was a spring, and plenty of +grass for his horse, White Otter decided to stop there for the night. He +picketed his pony, and then began to examine the place for signs. The +ashes from a small fire, and some charred bones scattered near by, told +him that some one had spent the night at that spot several days before. +He worked diligently to find a clew to the identity of the traveler, but +found nothing which would tell him what he wished to know. The little +mound of ashes, the remnants of a meal, and the pony tracks were his +only clews. + +The fact that the unknown horseman had come from the south aroused White +Otter's interest. Both the Pawnees and the Utes lived to the southward. +As he had already encountered a war party of the latter at the grove he +wondered if it was a favorite stopping place for those mysterious foes. +However, as the signs were at least two days old, the possibility caused +him little concern. + +Having finished his reconnaissance, White Otter seated himself at the +edge of the grove to watch the plain. The sun had already set, and the +purple evening shadows were creeping out of the east. The prairie +appeared lifeless. The Sioux was at a loss to account for the scarcity +of game. He feared that foes of some sort had driven it from the +locality. The thought suggested the possibility that the lone rider was +a scout, loitering behind a hunting party to watch for enemies. + +At dark White Otter returned to his pony. He feared to make a fire, lest +the gleam might betray him to his foes. He sat beside the little spring, +and ate several cakes of pemmican, composed of dried meat and berries, +which he had brought for just such an emergency. + +Before he ventured to sleep, White Otter returned to the edge of the +plain, and spent a long time listening for a warning of approaching +enemies. The howling of some distant prairie wolves, the gentle rustling +of the aspens, and an occasional grunt from his pony were the only +sounds. He continued to listen, however, until the night was half gone. +Then he returned to the camp site, and lay down to sleep. + +Dawn was just breaking when White Otter was suddenly awakened by the +snorting of his pony. Seizing his bow, he moved cautiously to the edge +of the grove. A buck antelope was standing within easy bowshot. It had +scented the pony, and stopped to investigate. Unable to resist the +temptation, White Otter drove his arrow through its heart. It was a +yearling in prime condition, and he cut a choice steak from the carcass. +Then, as the light strengthened, and he saw no evidence of foes, he made +a tiny fire and broiled the antelope meat. He ate heartily, and gave +thanks to Wakantunka, the Great Mystery, for sending him food. + +Shortly after sunrise White Otter resumed his journey toward the +Minneconjoux camp. As the pony tracks led in that direction he followed +them with keen interest. If the lone horseman really were a hostile +scout, White Otter knew that to follow him would be the surest and +safest way of locating any enemies who might be in the vicinity. He kept +a sharp watch, therefore, and approached the knolls and ridges with +great caution. + +It was midday before he saw anything to make him suspicious. Then he +discovered a dense cloud of dust rising behind a slight elevation of the +plain. He immediately stopped to watch it. It suggested two +possibilities--a herd of frightened buffaloes or a company of horsemen. +White Otter longed to peep over the top of the ridge, but he realized +that it would be folly to take the risk until he knew what was before +him. He knew that hostile scouts might be watching from that spot, and +the possibility made him cautious. + +"Perhaps some one is hunting buffaloes," he said. + +Realizing that he might have been seen, White Otter looked for a place +of concealment. The plain was open and bare of shelter, however, and +there was no chance to hide. He determined to remain where he was, +hoping that something might appear along the crest of the ridge. + +It was soon evident that whatever was raising the dust was moving +rapidly toward the north. White Otter felt quite certain that it was a +herd of buffaloes in wild flight. Perhaps they were pursued by wolves, +which were always loitering about the herds at that season to prey upon +the young calves. It was just as probable, however, that a hunting +party of foes had invaded the great Sioux hunting grounds. + +"Well, I will wait here and see what comes of it," declared White Otter. + +The dust cloud finally faded out some distance farther toward the north. +White Otter was perplexed. He was undecided as to what he should do. The +ridge extended like a barrier directly across his path, and it would be +necessary to cross it to continue his journey. Still, he realized the +peril of venturing within bow range. + +White Otter waited a long time, and then finally turned his pony toward +the south, and rode along parallel with the ridge. Having seen nothing +which would lead him to suspect enemies, he planned to cross the ridge +some distance to the southward. When he believed that he had gone a +sufficient distance, he turned and approached the ridge. As he finally +came within arrow range he stopped and searched the top of the slope for +signs of foes. Although he failed to discover them, he realized that +they might be lying just below the top of the ridge, in which event it +would be impossible to see them. He rode forward with great caution, +therefore, and was prepared to flee at the first hint of danger. + +White Otter had actually begun to climb the slope when he was startled +by a chorus of whoops and yells, and turning toward the left he saw a +company of horsemen racing toward him. He lashed his pony up the slope +and crossed the ridge. Then he rode furiously toward the west. + +The maneuver completely fooled the Pawnees who had expected him to turn +down the ridge and flee in the opposite direction. Their confusion gave +White Otter a chance to get beyond arrow range before they dashed over +the ridge in pursuit of him. He looked over his shoulder and counted +eight riders whom he instantly recognized as Pawnees. His eyes flashed +dangerously as he thought of those hated foes. + +White Otter was holding his lead over his pursuers when he suddenly saw +a solitary rider gallop from a little grove of trees, and race +diagonally across the plain in an effort to intercept him. The Pawnee +was mounted on a particularly fast little buckskin, and White Otter +realized that unless he swerved from his course he would soon come +within easy bow range of him. The Sioux however, refused to give way. + +"I will kill that man," White Otter declared, grimly. + +The other Pawnees had failed to come within bowshot, and although they +were yelling fiercely, and forcing their ponies to the limit, White +Otter gave little attention to them. His eyes were fixed on the daring +rider who was racing recklessly across the plain in an attempt to get in +front of him. The Pawnee seemed equally intent upon watching White +Otter. The ponies appeared well matched, and the race was a thrilling +one. + +When they finally came within bow range, White Otter was sufficiently in +the lead to foil the plan of the Pawnee. The latter, however, +immediately began to shoot his arrows, and one of them penetrated deep +behind the shoulder of the Sioux pony. Mortally wounded, the unfortunate +animal made one great bound and then crashed to its knees, and White +Otter was thrown heavily over its head. + +Jarred and stunned, the Sioux staggered to his feet to find the Pawnee +almost upon him. Quick to realize his peril, White Otter dropped behind +his dying pony as the Pawnee shot his arrow. The next moment he drove +his own arrow through the body of his foe, as the latter rode at him +with his war club raised for the fatal stroke. As the Pawnee toppled to +the plain, White Otter sprang forward and seized the bewildered pony. An +instant later he was racing away through a volley of Pawnee arrows. + +Enraged at the fate of their comrade, the Pawnees were risking their +necks to overtake the Sioux. White Otter feared that at any moment +either he or the captured pony would be pierced by their arrows. In +their frenzy, however, they shot wildly, and their arrows flew wide of +the mark. White Otter lashed the Pawnee pony without mercy in an effort +to place himself beyond arrow range. He was astonished at the speed and +stamina of the buckskin, and he soon realized that it was the equal of +the horse he had lost. The discovery gave him confidence. A glance +backward told him that two of his pursuers were steadily losing ground, +and he was holding his lead against the others. He was still within +arrow range, however, and he crouched low upon the buckskin, and urged +it to still greater efforts. It responded nobly, and the fierce yells +from his enemies convinced him that they were falling farther behind. +The Pawnee pony was speeding over the plain with great bounds, and White +Otter was forced to admit that his favorite war pony would have been +sorely tried to maintain the pace. + +Having begun to increase his lead, White Otter took hope. The little +buckskin had won his confidence, and he had little fear of being +overtaken. The day was far spent, and he believed that he would have +little difficulty in keeping well ahead of his pursuers until darkness +came to his aid. Then he knew that it would be a simple task to shake +them from his trail. Feeling sure of escape, therefore, he sat erect and +shook his bow defiantly at the helpless Pawnees. They replied with wild +yells of rage, and White Otter laughed mockingly. + +The Pawnees continued the chase until darkness finally blotted them from +sight. Then White Otter turned sharply from his course, and rode +directly toward the north. Feeling confident that the maneuver would +baffle his foes, he slackened the pace of his pony to an easy canter. +Thus he rode until the night was half gone, and then he stopped and +dismounted from the tired little buckskin. + +Fearing that the Pawnees might continue to search for him, White Otter +made no attempt to sleep. He sat close beside his pony, watching and +listening for a warning of his foes. He hoped that if they failed to +find him before daylight they would abandon the pursuit rather than +venture farther into the Minneconjoux hunting grounds. + +Shortly before daylight White Otter mounted his pony and rode away +toward the west. Having heard nothing from the Pawnees he felt quite +certain that he had thrown them from his trail. His confidence was +rudely shaken, however, when he suddenly heard the sharp, husky bark of +the little gray fox a short distance at his left. A few moments +afterward a horse whinnied, and before he could interfere the little +buckskin replied. + +"That is bad," White Otter murmured, uneasily. + +He was fearful and perplexed. The signal was a favorite one among the +Sioux, and still under the circumstances he mistrusted it. He waited, +therefore, listening anxiously to locate whoever confronted him. In a +few moments the call was repeated at his right. He knew that either +friends or foes were on both sides of him. At length he answered the +challenge. A voice sounded from the darkness. + +"Ho, Dacotah." + +"Ho, my brother Sun Bird," White Otter replied, joyfully, as he +recognized the voice of his friend. + +Then Sun Bird and his brother Little Raven rode forward to meet him. The +three young warriors had shared many perilous adventures, and they +greeted one another with boyish enthusiasm. Then Sun Bird repeated the +call of the little gray fox three times in quick succession, and fifteen +grim Minneconjoux warriors came to join them. + +"Lean Wolf told us about this thing," Sun Bird explained. "Come, Lean +Wolf, here is White Otter, tell him about it." + +"Ho, my brother," said Lean Wolf, as he rode up beside White Otter. + +"Ho, my brother Lean Wolf," White Otter replied, heartily. + +"When I was riding back to my people I saw some Pawnee hunters," +explained Lean Wolf. "They saw me, but I was a long ways off. They did +not come after me. I told my people about it. Sun Bird said, 'It is bad. +Those Pawnees may kill White Otter. Perhaps we can help him. Come, my +friends, who will go with me to find White Otter?' That is how we came +here." + +"It is good," said White Otter. "The brave Minneconjoux are my brothers. +I believe when the Pawnees heard your ponies they ran away. But see, my +friends, I am riding one of their ponies. It is very fast. I will tell +you how I come to have it." + +The Minneconjoux listened with great interest while White Otter told of +his adventure with the Pawnees. When he finished speaking there were +many exclamations of approval from the stern warriors who had gathered +about him. + +"White Otter, you have done a good thing," declared Sun Bird. "See, it +is getting light. Come, we will go and tell our people how you fooled +the boastful Pawnees." + +They turned their ponies toward the west, and rode away singing +boastfully of White Otter's triumph over the Pawnees. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE COUNCIL FIRE + + +Late the second day the Sioux came in sight of the great Minneconjoux +camp. It was situated beside a wide stream that flowed down from great +snowy peaks farther to the westward. The little company of riders +stopped on the summit of a grassy knoll and looked with pride on the +great circle of lodges which dotted the plain. Their pride was somewhat +humbled, however, by the absence of the vast herd of ponies which +usually were to be seen grazing near the village. The few horses that +had escaped the Blackfeet raid were carefully guarded within the camp. + +The riders had already been discovered and recognized by watchers at the +edge of the village, and a company of horsemen was soon racing across +the plain to meet them. + +"See! my people are coming to take you to their village," Sun Bird told +White Otter. + +As the Minneconjoux dashed up to them White Otter recognized several old +friends in the company who had come out to welcome him. There was +Feather Dog, a famous scout, with whom he had shared a number of +thrilling adventures; and Sitting Eagle, another great scout, was in the +party. Then there was Kicking Bull, a renowned hunter, whom White Otter +had saved from death in a buffalo stampede. All those men greeted the +famous young Ogalala chief with great respect, and his heart filled with +pride as he realized the esteem in which he was held by those renowned +warriors. + +"You have come to help us fight the Blackfeet," said Feather Dog. "It is +good. We will do some big things." + +"I was going with my brother Sun Bird to find you, but the great chief +Curly Horse asked me to stay behind," explained Kicking Bull. "Some of +our young men saw smoke over near the mountains, and we were afraid that +the Blackfeet were coming back. That is why I held back." + +"It is good," declared White Otter. + +As the horsemen approached the camp the Minneconjoux began to shout the +name of White Otter and to sing songs of welcome. The daring exploits of +the young Ogalala war chief had made him famous throughout the great +Dacotah nation, and the Minneconjoux were prepared to honor him with +the courtesies due a great chief. When he reached the edge of the +village he was met by a delegation of noted warriors who led him through +the camp, so that all the people might have a chance to welcome him. + +"See, here is White Otter!" cried the Minneconjoux. "It is White Otter, +the great chief of the Ogalalas. It is White Otter, the great war +leader. See, White Otter, our lodges are open. We have cooked much meat. +You must come to our lodges, and eat with us." + +Men, women and children followed behind his pony, as his escort led him +toward the lodge of the famous chief, Curly Horse. The Minneconjoux war +chief was waiting to receive him. Beside him stood Rain Crow, the noted +Minneconjoux medicine man, who was the father of Sun Bird and Little +Raven. The most renowned men of the tribe composed the company which +Curly Horse had summoned to greet the Ogalala. They were dressed in +their choicest possessions and they made a splendid appearance. Each of +them wore the coveted war bonnet of eagle plumes, and carried his +coupstick with a record of his achievements on the war trail. It was a +notable gathering, and White Otter thrilled with pride as he looked upon +those splendid men of the great Dacotah nation. + +Curly Horse, the chief, was particularly imposing. He was a middle-aged +man, tall, and of powerful physique, with stern features, and steady, +penetrating eyes. His voice was deep and commanding, and he carried +himself with the pride and dignity appropriate to his rank. He wore a +great headdress of eagle feathers which extended to the ground. Each +feather was tipped with a small tuft of hair taken from the scalps of +his foes. His buckskin shirt was decorated with weasel tails, and mystic +symbols traced with colored porcupine quills. His buckskin breeches were +deeply fringed, and ornamented with porcupine quills and elk teeth. A +breastplate composed of the leg bones of deer covered his breast. About +his neck was a necklace of bear claws. His moccasins were of buffalo +hide, beautifully decorated with porcupine quills and colored grass. +Over his arm he carried a magnificent robe of the grizzly bear. + +"White Otter, you have come to my lodge--it is good," said Curly Horse. +"These great warriors have come here to meet you. Many moons have passed +since you came here before. My people have talked about you. They wanted +you to come back. Now I will tell you that we feel good because you have +come here." + +"I have listened to the words of the great chief, Curly Horse," replied +White Otter. "They make me feel good. I will keep them in my heart. The +Minneconjoux are my brothers. When my brothers call, I come. My brother +Sun Bird called me. I am here. I am going with my brothers to fight the +Blackfeet. We will bring back many ponies." + +As White Otter ceased speaking Curly Horse glanced at Rain Crow and the +famous medicine man stepped forward to greet the Ogalala. + +Rain Crow appeared older and less robust than his chief, but he, too, +was of striking appearance. His face was seamed and scarred, and his +hair was streaked with gray. His eyes, however, flashed with the fire of +youth. He wore a large wolfskin cap decorated with a great pair of +buffalo horns. His face was painted with white clay. His hair was +divided into two braids bound with otter skin. His buckskin shirt and +breeches were decorated with mysterious medicine symbols. About his neck +was a necklace of sacred charms or tokens, each believed to possess some +strange power which would aid him in overcoming the Evil Spirits, and +preserve him from the attacks of his foes. In his right hand he carried +the sacred medicine pipe. Over his left arm was a handsome robe of +wolfskins. + +"White Otter, Curly Horse has spoken," said Rain Crow. "Now I will give +you some words. I feel good when I see you here. You are a young man, +but you are a great chief. I believe you will do something big when you +meet the boastful Blackfeet. White Otter, you say that Sun Bird and +Little Raven are your brothers. It is good. I will make you my son. My +son, the lodge of Rain Crow is open for you. I have spoken." + +"Rain Crow, you are a great Medicine Person," replied White Otter. "You +have done some big things. I have heard my people talk about you. It is +true that Sun Bird and Little Raven are my brothers. You have called me +your son. It is a great thing. I feel good about it. I will tell my +people about it. It will make them feel big. My father, I will bring you +some ponies from the Blackfeet camp. I have finished." + +Many other noted warriors made speeches praising the ability and courage +of the young Ogalala, and welcoming him to the Minneconjoux camp. When +the ceremony was finally concluded Sun Bird escorted White Otter to the +lodge of Rain Crow. + +"Now I will tell you how the Blackfeet ran off all those ponies," Sun +Bird said, when they were alone. + +"Yes, tell me about it," urged White Otter. + +"We were dancing the Buffalo Dance," said Sun Bird. "My father was +singing the Medicine Songs. The people were sitting near the fire. The +fast war ponies were tied near the lodges, but many good hunting ponies +were out on the plain. We left them there because our scouts did not see +any signs of enemies. Only a few boys were watching those ponies. Well, +while the people were dancing and singing we heard a great noise. There +were many shouts. Then we heard many ponies running. Pretty soon a boy +rode into the village. He was shouting, 'The Blackfeet! The Blackfeet! +They have run off the ponies!' Then we jumped upon the war ponies, and +were going out to chase the Blackfeet, but Curly Horse held us back. +'Wait!' shouted Curly Horse. 'Perhaps it is a trick. Perhaps a great war +party is about to rush into the camp. We will watch, and see what comes +of it.' We knew that those were good words, and we waited to guard the +camp. Well, no one came. Then we knew that the Blackfeet had gone away +with the ponies. When it got light one of the boys came back. His pony +fell down and died when he came into the village. He rode a long ways to +get away from the Blackfeet. The other boy did not come back. The +Blackfeet must have carried him away." + +"Who is he?" inquired White Otter. + +"He is Dancing Rabbit," Sun Bird told him. + +"His father was Lame Wolf. He was killed by our enemies, the Crows. His +mother fell into the water, and was carried away by the fierce Water +Monsters. Old Spotted Face is his grandfather. He feels very bad about +this thing." + +"I know Spotted Face," said White Otter. "He is a great man. We must try +to help him." + +"Perhaps we will find Dancing Rabbit in the Blackfeet camp," replied Sun +Bird. + +The day had already ended, and as the evening shadows fell upon the camp +the Minneconjoux began preparations for the great war dance. A large +fire was lighted in the center of the village, and the entire tribe +assembled to honor the men who were going to fight the Blackfeet. The +warriors who had enlisted in the war party marched noisily about the +camp, singing their war songs, and shouting boastful threats against +their foes. As they finally approached the council fire they were +greeted with wild yells of approval from the great company who awaited +them. Then all subsided into respectful silence as Curly Horse and the +principal chiefs of the tribe walked solemnly into the council circle. + +After the chief and his escort had taken positions, the warriors lined +up before him and waited for him to address them. He looked upon them +with pride and affection. Most of them were young men in the prime of +their youth, and their bold, flashing eyes and fearless faces proclaimed +their courage. They were led by Sun Bird who had organized the war +party. He called White Otter to stand beside him, and the Minneconjoux +murmured approval of the honor. + +"My brothers, I see that you are ready for war," said Curly Horse. "You +are going to fight the Blackfeet. It is good. They are our enemies. They +have carried off many of our ponies. You must bring them back. You must +also bring some good Blackfeet ponies. Perhaps you will find Dancing +Rabbit in the Blackfeet camp. Then you must carry him away. Spotted Face +is waiting for him. I will not tell you how to fight. You are Dacotahs. +It is enough. Now I will ask Rain Crow to give you some words." + +Before speaking, Rain Crow drew an ember from the fire and lighted the +sacred medicine pipe. Then he puffed the smoke toward the heavens, +toward the earth, and toward each of the four winds. He kept up a weird, +high-pitched chant, and tossed small handfuls of dried sweet grass into +the flames. It was evident that he was asking success for the war party, +and the Minneconjoux watched him with grave interest. When he had +completed the ceremony, he stood some time staring fixedly at the stars. +Then he addressed the war company. + +"My friends, you have seen me smoke the great Medicine Pipe," he said. +"It is good. It will help you. I have asked Wakantunka, the Great +Mystery, to make you strong. I have asked the Good Spirits to help you. +I have asked the Bad Spirits to do you no harm. I believe everything +will be good. I believe you will overcome the Blackfeet. Listen, my +friends, I hear the noise of many ponies running. Yes, yes, those are +Sioux ponies. Yes, I hear some Blackfeet ponies. They are running toward +the Minneconjoux camp. I see these brave young men riding behind them." + +His prophecy roused the Minneconjoux. Men, women and children united +their voices in the war cry of the Dacotahs. It rang through the camp, +and echoed off across the plain as a challenge to their foes. Rain Crow +laughed, and shook his clenched hand toward the north. + +"Hi, you Blackfeet people, do you hear that noise?" he cried, excitedly. +"Pretty soon you will know what it means. Then you will shake, and cry +like young deer when they hear the wolf cry." + +His words again threw the people into a frenzy of excitement. The war +cry again rang out across the plain, and before the sound had died away +the warriors had assembled for the war dance. They formed a large circle +about the fire, and stood awaiting the word from Sun Bird, their leader. +A number of aged men had come forward with the war drums, and taken +places near the dancers. A hush fell upon the vast assemblage, as the +Minneconjoux watched eagerly for the interesting spectacle to begin. + +Then Sun Bird raised his voice in the familiar strains of the great war +song, and the dance began. Keeping time with the solemn, rhythmical +throbbing of the war drums, the dancers moved slowly about the fire +chanting the boastful words of the war song, and flourishing their +weapons. They had not circled many times about the fire, however, before +they cast off restraint, and flung themselves into ecstasies of the +dance with wild abandon. The war song was forgotten, as the dancers +began to shout their boasts and threats against the powerful foes in the +north. Each moment added to their excitement, and as the war drums +throbbed in shorter, quicker beats, the dancers quickened their steps to +hold the rhythm. Although each held his place in the circle, they had +abandoned all attempt to dance in unison, and each man was interpreting +the spirit of the dance to suit himself. All, however, kept time to the +beats of the war drums, and the droning chants of the aged musicians. As +quick and sinewy as mountain cats, the young warriors pranced about the +fire in a frenzy of enthusiasm. Each tried to surpass his fellows in the +mad antics of the dance, and their maneuvers brought yells of approval +from the fascinated onlookers. At one moment the dancers would stoop +near the ground, and dance forward with short, mincing steps, shading +their eyes with their hands, as if searching for the trail of their +foes. Then they would suddenly spring upright and announce their success +with a piercing whoop. A moment afterward they would leap forward with +war club raised to deliver the fatal stroke. Then they would begin a +wild dance about the fallen foe. Some of the older warriors carried +their coupsticks with the trophies won on former war expeditions. As +they danced they shook these priceless possessions before the envious +eyes of their tribesmen. Sometimes one of those dancers would drive his +coupstick in the ground while he and several companions danced wildly +about it, rushing up to touch it and reciting some great achievement as +they did so. Then all would suddenly stand transfixed in their places +while they raised their faces toward the stars, and united their voices +in the piercing Dacotah war cry. + +The spectacle was weird and fascinating. The grotesque contortions of +the dancers in the lurid glare of the fire, the fierce expression on +their faces, the solemn throbbing of the war drums, the picturesque +assemblage of spectators, the dim, ghostly outlines of the lodges in the +shadows, the gaunt, wolf-like dogs skulking along the edge of the camp, +made a striking impression on the memory. + +White Otter, as a famous war chief of the Ogalalas, was entitled to +stand with Curly Horse and the prominent men of the tribe. He declined +the honor, however, and took his place in the circle of dancers. The +Minneconjoux watched him with approving eyes as he threw himself into +the spirit of the dance. When the ceremony was finally brought to an end +toward daylight, Curly Horse called the Ogalala to his lodge. + +"White Otter, you are a great warrior," said Curly Horse. "A great +warrior must have a good horse. The Pawnees have killed your war pony. +It is true that you have taken a good pony from those boastful people. +Well, you are a Dacotah, and you must ride a Dacotah pony. I am going to +give you one of my fastest ponies to ride to the Blackfeet camp. I have +spoken." + +"Curly Horse, you have done a big thing," White Otter replied, +gratefully. "You are a great chief, and I know that you have the fastest +ponies. Yes, I will ride your pony to the Blackfeet camp." + +"It is good," declared Curly Horse. + +When White Otter told Sun Bird of the gift which he had received from +Curly Horse, Sun Bird beamed with pleasure. He believed that there were +few, if any, ponies in the entire Dacotah nation which possessed the +speed and endurance of those owned by the great Minneconjoux chief. + +"Perhaps when you ride that horse you will leave me far behind," Sun +Bird said, banteringly. + +"Well, my brother, if I get to the Blackfeet camp ahead of you I will +leave some Blackfeet for you to kill," laughed White Otter. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +AWAY INTO THE NORTH + + +As White Otter and Sun Bird came from the lodge at dawn they found a boy +waiting with a fiery little piebald pony. + +"Curly Horse has sent you this pony," said the lad, as he passed the +lariat to White Otter. + +"Tell the great chief Curly Horse that White Otter feels good about this +thing," said the Ogalala. + +"I know that pony," Sun Bird told him. "It is very fast, but it is very +wild. You must watch out for it." + +"I will ride it," White Otter assured him. + +He was no sooner upon its back, however, than the hot-tempered little +beast began to rear and plunge in a manner that would have proved +disastrous to a less expert rider. White Otter, however, refused to be +thrown, and Sun Bird whooped with boyish glee as he capered wildly about +the rearing pony and shouted encouragement to his friend. His shouts +soon brought an appreciative audience from the lodges, and White Otter +realized that his reputation as a horseman was at stake. He set his +sinewy thighs more closely behind the shoulders of the plunging piebald, +and pulled hard on the lariat which was twisted about the animal's lower +jaw. The Minneconjoux soon saw that he was an expert, and they offered +neither criticism nor advice. They watched with flashing eyes as horse +and rider fought for supremacy. Then the pony suddenly whirled about and +dashed among them, and they scattered like a covey of frightened quail +to avoid the flying hoofs. The piebald bucked its way through the center +of the camp, with a great company of men and boys racing along behind it +and yelling at the top of their voices. Some women were broiling meat +near the end of the village, and as they heard the wild commotion, and +saw the pony racing directly toward them, they fled to the lodges in a +panic, crying out that the Blackfeet had invaded the camp. + +In the meantime the piebald had collided with a number of other +high-spirited ponies which were tied before the lodges of their owners, +and several of the animals broke loose and imitated the mad antics of +the piebald. In a few moments the entire camp was in an uproar. The +barking of the dogs, the shouts of the men, the screams of the women, +and the frightened cries of the children mingled in one great din which +turned the village into bedlam. + +"It is bad," cried Curly Horse, as he watched the disorder from the +entrance to his lodge. "Some Evil Spirit must have gone into that +horse." + +The piebald, however, had finally exhausted itself. It stood upon +trembling legs at the edge of the camp, with its head lowered in defeat. +White Otter reached over, and gently stroked the sweaty neck. Then he +raised its head and spoke sharply, and the piebald gave obedience to its +master. He rode directly to the lodge of Curly Horse. + +"That is a bad horse," said Curly Horse. "I will give you another pony." + +"No, no!" cried White Otter. "I will keep this pony. It is fast, and +strong. It will make a great war pony." + +"Well, I see that you can ride it, so I will say no more about it," +replied Curly Horse. + +The wild escapade of the little piebald had aroused the camp, and as the +members of the war party finally rounded up the loose ponies, and +assembled in the center of the village, the entire tribe gathered to +witness the departure. When the gallant company was ready to leave, +Curly Horse came forward to address them. + +"My brothers, you are about to ride away to the great Blackfeet camp," +he said. "Before you lies a long and dangerous trail. We have many +enemies in that country. The Blackfeet are the strongest. They are very +sly. You must be as brave as great Matohota, the bear, and as cunning as +Tokala, the little gray fox. I see many brave warriors among you. I see +Sun Bird, your leader. He is a great warrior. I see White Otter, the +great Ogalala chief. I see Little Raven. He is very young, but he has +done big things. I see Short Bear. He is very brave. I see Feather Dog. +He is a great scout. I see Lean Wolf and Sitting Eagle. They have been +on many war trails. I see many more brave warriors. It is a great war +party. I believe you will do what you are setting out to do. I believe +you will bring back many ponies. I will ask Wakantunka, the Great +Mystery, to help you. I will ask our brother, Huya, the great war bird, +to lead you to the Blackfeet camp. Go, my brothers, Curly Horse has +spoken." + +"Curly Horse, you have given us big words," replied Sun Bird. "We will +keep them in our hearts. We will remember that we are Dacotahs. It is +enough. We will go." + +A few moments afterward the war party rode from the village. Many of the +older warriors who were remaining behind to guard the camp accompanied +the war party some distance across the plain. The old men, the boys, and +the women and children gathered at the edge of the camp, singing the war +songs, and calling upon Wakantunka to protect their warriors from the +fierce and warlike Blackfeet. + +Sun Bird asked White Otter to ride with him at the head of the company. +The youthful Minneconjoux war leader fully realized his responsibility, +and he was glad to have the aid and counsel of the famous young war +chief whom he had asked to accompany him. + +The war party was not a large one. It contained less than a third of the +fighting men of the tribe. The Minneconjoux feared to send a larger +force from the village, for they knew that their old enemies, the Crows, +as well as several scouting parties of Blackfeet, had recently been seen +within a day's travel of the Minneconjoux camp. They determined, +therefore, to send a small force of picked warriors against the +Blackfeet in the hope of recovering the stolen ponies, and learning the +fate of the young Minneconjoux who had been carried away. The company +chosen for the perilous undertaking was composed mostly of young +warriors famous for their courage and fighting ability, and a few older +veterans, like Lean Wolf and Sitting Eagle, whose mature judgment would +check the reckless impetuosity of their younger companions. + +"Well, my brother, how do you feel about this thing?" Sun Bird suddenly +asked White Otter, as they cantered along in advance of the war party. + +"The Blackfeet are very strong," White Otter replied, thoughtfully. +"Wolf Robe, my grandfather, has told me about them. I have never fought +those people. Wolf Robe says that they are braver than the Pawnees. Do +you know about them?" + +"Yes, I have fought against them many times," Sun Bird told him. "They +are the enemies of my people. They are brave. Many Buffaloes is their +chief. He is a great warrior. He rides a mysterious war pony. It is as +swift as the wind, and as black as the night. Its eyes shine like the +little lights up there in the High Place. My people believe it must be a +Medicine Pony. Curly Horse would give many good presents for that pony." + +At that moment their talk was interrupted by the appearance of a golden +eagle, the war bird of the Dacotahs, which was circling slowly some +distance toward the north. The superstitious Minneconjoux immediately +accepted it as a good omen, as they recalled the words of Curly Horse, +their chief. + +"See, there is Huya, the great war bird," they cried. "Curly Horse has +sent him to lead us to the Blackfeet camp. Come, Huya, our brother, look +about you, and show us where our enemies are hiding." + +The eagle, however, soon disappeared into the clouds, and the +Minneconjoux cried, "Huya has gone up there to look around. He is +looking for the Blackfeet. When he sees them he will fly over them, and +show us where they are." + +As they moved farther from the camp Sun Bird began to take precautions +against the possibility of encountering foes. Two scouts were detailed +on either flank of the war party, and other riders dropped back to guard +the rear. Sun Bird, White Otter and Little Raven rode some distance in +front. Thus the courageous band of Dacotahs made their way across the +great plain that extended for unknown leagues into the northward, the +stronghold of the mighty Blackfeet nation. + +The day was two thirds gone when White Otter suddenly discovered a +horseman on the summit of a low ridge far away toward the west. He +immediately stopped and showed him to Sun Bird and Little Raven. +Apparently aware that he had been seen, the distant rider began to ride +rapidly in a circle. It was the signal for danger. Sun Bird appeared +alarmed. + +"It is one of our scouts," he said, uneasily. "Running Dog and Lean Wolf +went that way. That man is far away, but I believe he is Lean Wolf. He +has seen something bad. Come, Little Raven, go and find out about it." + +As Little Raven raced away to meet the scout, the main company of riders +came up. They, too, had discovered the rider on the ridge, and many of +them were eager to go over there in the hope of finding foes. + +"No, that would be foolish," Sun Bird said, firmly. "We will wait here +until Little Raven comes back and tells us about it. That scout has not +called us. He is telling us that he has seen something. See, Little +Raven is a long ways off. Pretty soon we will know about this thing. We +must wait." + +"It is the only thing to do," agreed the famous warrior, Sitting Eagle. + +They watched anxiously as the scout turned his pony down the ridge, and +rode to meet Little Raven. The distance made positive identification +difficult, but most of them agreed that it was Lean Wolf. When the two +riders finally met, the members of the war party watched them with +breathless interest. They also watched the plain in all directions for +the sudden appearance of foes. Then the warriors who had been loitering +in the rear overtook them. + +"What has happened?" they inquired anxiously. "Who is over there?" + +"Lean Wolf has made the danger signal," explained their comrades. +"Little Raven has gone over to find out about it. Did you see anything?" + +"We saw some wolves," replied the scouts. + +"Perhaps they were Pawnees," suggested Sun Bird. + +"No, we saw them running on the plain, and they were wolves," declared +High Hawk, one of the warriors who had composed the rear guard. + +"See, Little Raven is coming back," White Otter told Sun Bird. "He is +riding fast. He has something to tell us." + +"Lean Wolf has gone back to the ridge," said Sun Bird. + +They waited impatiently as Little Raven rode toward them at top speed. +In the meantime the other rider was cantering toward the ridge. When he +reached it he rode up the low slope and disappeared over the summit. + +"Lean Wolf has gone to watch something," declared his tribesmen. + +When Little Raven finally reached them they listened with eager +attention while he told Sun Bird what he had learned. + +"That man is Lean Wolf," said Little Raven. "He found fresh pony tracks +over beyond that ridge. They were going the way we are going. There were +many ponies. They were riding ponies. There were no marks of lodge +poles. Lean Wolf says it must be a war party. He does not know who they +are. Running Dog is following the trail. Lean Wolf says that we must +watch sharp when night comes. He says that we must stop pretty soon at +the water place. Then he will know where to find us. Perhaps he will +come when it gets dark. Perhaps he will go to find the camp of those +people. My brothers, I have brought you the words of Lean Wolf." + +"It is good," replied Sun Bird. "My friends, you have heard the words of +our brother, Lean Wolf. I believe that some of our enemies are over +there behind that ridge. Lean Wolf says there are many pony tracks. +There must be many riders. Perhaps it is a big war party. We must watch +sharp. We will go ahead until we come to the water place. Then we will +stop. Perhaps Lean Wolf will come there after it gets dark." + +As they were about to resume their way they saw one of the scouts from +the east riding toward them. As he came nearer they recognized him as +Feather Dog. + +"Why have you stopped?" Feather Dog inquired, curiously. + +"Lean Wolf found many pony tracks over there behind that ridge," they +told him. + +"Perhaps those are the ponies which the Blackfeet took away," said +Feather Dog. + +"No, the tracks are fresh," Sun Bird explained. + +"Then we must watch out," declared the famous scout. + +"Did you see anything over there?" inquired the Minneconjoux. + +"We saw some buffaloes, but they were far away," replied Feather Dog. + +After he had learned where his comrades intended to stop for the night, +he immediately left them, and rode away to join his companion, a young +warrior named Proud Hawk. At the same time the war party resumed their +way toward the north. They were enthusiastic over the possibility of an +early encounter with their foes, and Sun Bird had considerable +difficulty in restraining some of the younger warriors who were eager to +ride after the unknown horsemen. His rank as war leader, however, gave +him authority to command. They accepted his orders, therefore, and +followed him across the plain, chanting their war songs, and boasting of +the deeds which they pledged themselves to perform. + +The evening shadows were already falling when the Sioux finally came in +sight of the appointed camp site. It was a small water hole in the midst +of a straggling growth of stunted trees. However, as it offered good +pasturage for the ponies, it was a favorite stopping place. It marked +the northern boundary of the Minneconjoux hunting grounds, and few of +even the most venturesome hunters cared to risk going farther into the +north unless accompanied by a strong force of their tribesmen. It was +dangerous ground, as both the Blackfeet and the Crows were constantly +roaming about those boundless northern plains. + +"Well, my friends, we will stop here until the next sun comes up," said +Sun Bird, as he dismounted from his pony. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +SIOUX SCOUTS + + +Alert to their peril, the Sioux took every precaution against an attack. +As the twilight slowly faded, and the night shadows settled upon the +plain, the ponies were picketed in a circle about the camp site, and +details of warriors were appointed to take turns in watching through the +night. There was no fire, and the evening meal consisted of the usual +war rations of dried buffalo meat and berries. + +The warriors who had been scouting behind the war party arrived at the +camp site before dark, but the scouts who had ridden along the flanks +failed to appear. The absence of Feather Dog and Proud Hawk, who had +been scouting toward the east, caused considerable comment. The Sioux +knew that some time might pass before Lean Wolf and Running Dog gained +the desired information about the mysterious horsemen to the westward, +but they were keenly curious to know what had detained Feather Dog and +his companion. + +"Perhaps something bad has happened to them," suggested a young warrior +named Many Feathers. + +"No, I do not believe it," Sun Bird declared, confidently. "Feather Dog +is a great scout. He has been on many war trails. It is hard to catch an +old wolf. Come, White Otter, you are a great war leader. Tell us how you +feel about it." + +"My brothers, what Sun Bird says is true," declared White Otter, +"Feather Dog is a great scout. Perhaps he is trying to find out about +something. I believe he will come here." + +While they were talking the familiar bark of the little gray fox sounded +from the eastward. It was speedily answered, and a few moments afterward +Feather Dog and Proud Hawk rode to the camp site. + +"Well, my brother, what did you find?" Sun Bird asked Feather Dog. + +"We saw three scouts," replied Feather Dog. "They were far away and they +did not see us. We hid behind a hill, and watched them a long time. Then +we followed them. When it got dark we could not find them. They did not +make a fire. I believe they were looking for enemies." + +"Do you know who they are?" Sun Bird inquired, eagerly. + +"No, we could not get close enough to find out about it," Feather Dog +told him. + +"Which way were they going?" asked Sun Bird. + +"They were going the same way we are going, but they were far away +toward the place where the sun comes up," replied the scout. + +"My brothers, you have heard the words of Feather Dog," said Sun Bird. +"Our enemies are on two sides of us. We must be very cautious. We will +wait here until it gets light. Perhaps Lean Wolf will come and tell us +something." + +In the meantime the wily Sioux prepared themselves against the +possibility of a sudden attack. The camp was surrounded by sharp-eared +scouts who stationed themselves some distance out on the plain to listen +for the approach of foes. The ponies were picketed inside the circle of +warriors, who lay upon the plain with their weapons beside them. + +Sun Bird and White Otter, however, remained awake. The young +Minneconjoux war leader was anxious to consult his friend concerning the +perilous advance across the Blackfeet hunting grounds. The young +warriors moved beyond earshot of their companions, therefore, and seated +themselves to talk. + +"White Otter, I believe we are in danger," said Sun Bird. + +"It is true," White Otter replied, soberly. "There are many enemies in +this country. I believe we will have some big fights before we get to +the Blackfeet camp." + +Sun Bird was about to reply when they were startled by a strange +rumbling noise toward the north. They listened a moment in anxious +suspense, and then they leaped to their feet in alarm. It sounded like +the hoofbeats of many ponies bearing down upon the camp site. + +"Call our people! Call our people!" cried Sun Bird, as he rushed to +arouse the sleeping Minneconjoux. + +At that moment they heard the guards, who had been stationed on the +plain, racing toward the camp. The picketed ponies were plunging and +snorting, and the alarmed Minneconjoux were frantically untying the +picket ropes. + +"The Blackfeet! The Blackfeet!" they shouted, excitedly. + +"Tatanka! Tatanka! The buffaloes! The buffaloes!" cried the sentinels +who had been watching on the north side of the camp. + +Then the Sioux suddenly realized the truth. A vast herd of stampeded +buffaloes were thundering down upon them. There was not a moment to +spare. Springing upon the frightened ponies, the Sioux rode madly into +the night to escape from the great mass of panic-stricken beasts behind +them. The buffaloes were sweeping across the plain with the irresistible +force of an avalanche, and the horsemen knew that only the speed of +their ponies could save them. They kept close together, and rode at a +breakneck pace. A false step meant destruction for horse and rider, and +the Sioux made little attempt to guide the agile little beasts beneath +them. + +Sun Bird and White Otter soon found themselves beside one another at the +head of the company. The two ponies were running evenly, and it was +apparent that neither of them had reached the limit of its speed. +Nevertheless, they were well in advance of all the other ponies, and +appeared to be increasing their lead with each stride. + +"That wild horse can run," laughed Sun Bird as his blood tingled with +the excitement of the race. "Come, we will see what that pony can do." + +"Hi!" shouted White Otter, as Sun Bird suddenly took the lead. + +He had carefully estimated the ability of the little roan which Sun Bird +rode, and felt sure that it was a worthy competitor for the piebald. +Now, as Sun Bird applied his rawhide quirt, the roan began to show its +speed. The piebald, however, quickly accepted the challenge, and +although White Otter made no effort to force it the fiery little beast +was soon at the shoulder of the roan. Then they raced madly through the +darkness at a speed which few if any of the ponies in the great Dacotah +nation could equal. Sun Bird was leaning forward and vigorously applying +his whip. White Otter, however, was still allowing the piebald to make +its own pace. Inch by inch it crept steadily forward until the roan's +lead was cut to a nose length. Then, as he perceived that the roan had +reached the limit of its powers, White Otter pulled heavily against the +lower jaw of the piebald. He knew that a few more strides would take it +into the lead, and regard for the pride of his friend made him unwilling +to claim the victory. + +"Listen," he cried, suddenly. "Our people have turned around. Come, we +must follow them." + +"No! No! I see what you are trying to do," Sun Bird cried, impatiently. +"Come, let me see that pony run." + +Then the Minneconjoux struck the piebald a sharp blow with his quirt, +and the marvelous beast bounded past him and raced away at a speed which +astounded its rider. White Otter could scarcely believe that he was +mounted upon a creature of real flesh and blood, for the piebald was +rushing through the night at a pace which seemed beyond the powers of +anything mortal. Carried away with enthusiasm, the Ogalala applied his +quirt for the first time, and the piebald reached the limit of its +speed. White Otter was forced to crouch close over the pony's neck to +keep his breath. He was dazed by the pace at which he was being carried +across the plain. It seemed as if he were flying through space on the +wings of a tempest. + +"It must be a Medicine Horse," he whispered, superstitiously. + +When he finally succeeded in pulling the piebald to a canter, he found +that he had completely lost Sun Bird, and the valiant little roan. He +had also raced beyond sound of the buffalo herd. The piebald was +breathing hard, but it showed no signs of exhaustion, and White Otter +believed that its stamina was equal to its speed. Then, as he stopped to +listen, he heard a signal some distance toward the east. He had heard +the Minneconjoux turn in that direction as Sun Bird forced him into the +last desperate sprint. It was evident, therefore, that having gained a +sufficient lead upon the buffaloes, the Minneconjoux were circling back +toward the camp site. He believed that the signal was from Sun Bird. To +reassure him, White Otter replied with the bark of the little gray fox. + +"Hi! the buffaloes are coming," he said, as he heard the distant rumble +of their hoof beats. + +Realizing that he was directly in their path, White Otter turned his +pony toward the east, and rode off at a brisk canter. The buffalo herd +was a long ways behind him, and he had little fear of being overtaken. +There were other perils, however, which caused him more concern. He had +heard Feather Dog tell of three mysterious riders to the eastward, and +it was possible that they were scouts from a larger company. Therefore, +White Otter determined to advance with caution. He believed that Sun +Bird was close at hand, and his first thought was to find him. It was +not long before he overtook him. + +"Ho, my brother, that pony did not come back as fast as he went away," +laughed Sun Bird. + +"It is foolish to run when the race is finished," replied White Otter. + +"That is the fastest horse I ever saw," Sun Bird declared, +enthusiastically. + +"Do you believe that this pony could catch that great horse of Many +Buffaloes, the Blackfeet chief?" White Otter asked, eagerly. + +"No," Sun Bird told him. "There is no Dacotah pony that can catch that +horse." + +White Otter was not so sure about it. He could not believe that any +horse had greater speed than the piebald. He kept his opinion to +himself, however, as he did not wish to appear boastful before his +friend. + +"Well, we got away from those buffaloes," said Sun Bird. "Now we must go +back to the water place. We will find our friends there." + +Feeling sure that they had passed beyond the edge of the great buffalo +herd, they began to circle toward the camp site. They were riding at an +easy canter, when they were suddenly halted by the howling of a prairie +wolf directly ahead of them. Determined to take no chances, they +listened to convince themselves that the call was genuine. + +"Yes, it is Mayash," declared Sun Bird. + +As White Otter agreed that it really was a wolf which had raised the +cry, they advanced on their way. However, they neither saw nor heard +anything of the skulking gray prowler. It was evident that the wolf had +slunk away at their approach. + +Then as they drew near the camp site the little piebald raised its head, +and whinnied softly. The cautious young Sioux again stopped to +investigate. They knew that the piebald had caught the scent of other +ponies. While they waited, listening for a clew, the familiar Dacotah +signal sounded within bow range of them. + +"It is good," said Sun Bird. "We have found our people." + +A few moments later they met the scout who had challenged them. He was +Hollow Bear, a famous Minneconjoux hunter. + +"We have been watching for you," Hollow Bear told them. "There is much +buffalo meat at the water place. Some of the buffaloes ran against the +trees. Some fell into the water hole. Some were dead. Some we killed. +There must have been many buffaloes in that herd. The ground is all +broken up." + +"Has Lean Wolf come here?" Sun Bird inquired, eagerly. + +"No," replied Hollow Bear. + +They left the scout, and rode on toward the camp site. They found the +members of the war party lying some distance out on the plain, as the +camp site was littered with the bodies of dead buffaloes. The Sioux said +that they had dragged several of the great beasts from the pool. + +"It is good that we got away," said Sun Bird. "Those buffaloes would +have pounded us into the ground." + +"Well, there is good meat over there but we cannot use it," complained +Sitting Eagle. "There are many robes, but there is little hair upon +them." + +The Minneconjoux said that they had ridden far enough to get a safe +distance in front of the herd, and then they had turned eastward and +circled back to the camp site. They seemed rather curious to know why +Sun Bird and White Otter had been so long returning. Those crafty young +warriors, however, made no explanation. White Otter had no desire to +proclaim the superiority of his pony, and Sun Bird was quite content to +keep silent concerning the defeat of his famous little roan. + +Dawn was breaking when Running Dog, the companion of Lean Wolf rode in +from the west. The war party crowded eagerly about him, asking for news +of the horsemen whom he and Lean Wolf had followed. + +"We followed those people a long ways," Running Dog told them. "When it +got dark we saw their fire. We went pretty close. Then we got down from +our ponies. We turned their heads out of the wind so they would not +call. I held the ponies. Lean Wolf crawled up near the fire. He was +away a long time. Then he came back, and told me about those people. +They are Crows. They are carrying meat. It is a great hunting party. +They are going straight ahead. Lean Wolf says that you must watch sharp. +Perhaps the Crows will send out scouts. Perhaps they will see you. Then +there will be a fight. Lean Wolf says to go straight ahead. We will keep +following the Crows until we find out where they are going. Then we will +come and tell you about it. I cannot tell you any more." + +"It is good," replied Sun Bird. "Tell Lean Wolf that we will do as he +tells us to do. We will keep a sharp watch for our enemies." + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +THE LONE RIDER + + +After Running Dog had left them, Sun Bird made preparations to resume +their advance toward the distant Blackfeet camp. Profiting by the +warning which the scouts had brought, the cautious young war leader +determined to make every provision for the safety of the war party. In +addition to the two expert scouts riding along each flank, Sun Bird +appointed a strong rear guard under command of Sitting Eagle. Then, as a +further precaution against blundering into a trap, he asked White Otter +and Little Raven to accompany him on a reconnaissance far in advance of +the war party. + +"My brothers, you must wait here until we are far ahead," he told the +Minneconjoux, as he rode away. + +Once beyond sight of their comrades, the three young scouts realized +that their mission was a perilous one. They had little doubt that foes +were on both sides of them, and it was possible that the Sioux war +party had already been discovered. In that event there was great +probability that crafty foes might circle around behind them, and +separate them from their companions. + +"We must watch sharp," cautioned Sun Bird. + +He hoped to lead the war party within an easy day's travel of the +Blackfeet camp. Then he planned to go into hiding and send scouts under +cover of the darkness to locate the Blackfeet ponies and reconnoiter +about the village. In the meantime Sun Bird realized the constant peril +of colliding with his enemies. However, he relied upon the skill and +daring of his scouts to give him timely warning of an approaching war +party. As they were riding cautiously across the plain they again saw +the war eagle circling high up toward the eastward. They stopped and +watched it with great interest. + +"See! our brother, Huya, has come down out of the clouds," said Sun +Bird. "I believe he is flying around over there to show us where our +enemies are hiding." + +Soon afterward they saw a solitary horseman ride over a distant rise of +the plain. He quickly discovered them, and immediately stopped his pony. +For some moments he continued to watch them. Then he turned about and +galloped from view. The Sioux also had stopped at sight of the +stranger, and now that he had disappeared Sun Bird was at a loss to +determine just what to do. The rider had been too far away to be +identified, but his actions made it plain that he was neither Feather +Dog nor Proud Hawk. + +"Perhaps he is one of the scouts that Feather Dog told about," suggested +Little Raven. + +"Yes, that may be true," said Sun Bird. "White Otter, what do you make +of it?" + +"I do not know what to make of it," acknowledged White Otter. "That man +saw us. If he is a scout he will go to tell his people about us. It is +bad. We must watch sharp." + +"We are scouts," said Sun Bird. "We must tell our brothers about this +thing." + +"It is the best thing to do," agreed White Otter. + +"I will go back, and tell them about it," Little Raven volunteered. + +As the others agreed, he immediately turned his pony, and rode back to +warn the war party. The main company of Minneconjoux had not come in +sight, and Sun Bird and White Otter felt somewhat anxious for the safety +of the youthful scout who had gone to meet his tribesmen. If a strong +force of foes were loitering in the vicinity, it would be easy for them +to intercept the solitary Minneconjoux. In spite of his youthfulness, +however, Little Raven was an experienced warrior, and Sun Bird felt +certain that he was competent to look after himself in an emergency. + +"Sun Bird, I believe that warrior is watching over the top of that +hill," White Otter declared, suspiciously. + +"How do you know that?" Sun Bird inquired, anxiously. + +"I do not know it, but I believe I saw him peeping over the top of that +hill," replied White Otter. + +They looked anxiously toward the grassy knoll, and strained their eyes +to discover the skulking foe. The thought that he was watching made them +uneasy, and they were eager to learn if their suspicions were true. It +was some moments before White Otter finally became convinced. + +"Yes, I see him," he declared, positively. "He is peeping over the top +of that hill. I see his head over there near that little bush. Watch +sharp." + +"Yes, yes, I see his head," Sun Bird declared, a moment later. + +Convinced that the mysterious horseman really was watching them, they +believed that he was waiting to learn if they were followed by a larger +company. They had little doubt that he was a scout reconnoitering in +advance of a force of their foes. + +"It is bad," White Otter said, uneasily. "That man saw Little Raven ride +away. He will know that some one is following behind us. He will watch +until our friends come. Then he will tell his people about it." + +"Yes, I see that it is bad," said Sun Bird. "Perhaps if we ride over +there we can chase him away." + +"Come," White Otter proposed, recklessly. + +As they cantered briskly toward the knoll, the scout withdrew from +sight. They felt quite sure that he had merely slipped farther down the +opposite side of the ridge, and was still peering cautiously over the +top. As they felt convinced that the horseman was alone, they had little +fear of running into an ambush. When they got within arrow range, +however, they approached with great care. As a precaution against +attack, they separated and rode forward several arrow flights apart. +Once at the foot of the slope they rushed their ponies to the top, and +prepared to attack whoever confronted them. The scout, however, was +nowhere in sight. They searched the plain in vain; the mysterious +stranger had entirely disappeared. For a moment or so they were +completely baffled. Then White Otter suddenly smiled, and nodded +understandingly. + +"I know about it," he told Sun Bird. + +"Tell me," Sun Bird asked, eagerly. + +"That scout is very sharp," declared White Otter. "He has thrown his +pony, and he is hiding over there in that high grass." + +"Yes, I believe that is where he is hiding," agreed Sun Bird. + +The spot where they believed the scout had concealed himself was many +arrow flights away, and they knew it would be difficult to discover him +at that distance. They felt almost certain, however, that he was still +watching them from his new hiding place. The thought disturbed them. His +persistence made them suspicious. They wondered if he were trying to +fool them with some wily bit of stratagem. + +"Well, we will ride over there and chase him out," proposed Sun Bird. + +They had not gone an arrow flight, when a pony suddenly rose to its feet +in the long grass. An instant later the rider sprang upon its back and +raced away toward the south. He was too far in the lead to be easily +overtaken, and besides, the Sioux realized that it would be perilous to +follow him. They watched, therefore, while he sped across the plain. + +"We have chased him away--it is good," said Sun Bird. + +"Perhaps something bad will come of it," White Otter warned him. "If +that man is a Blackfoot, he will tell his people about us. Then it will +be hard to get near the camp." + +"Perhaps he is a Crow," Sun Bird suggested, hopefully. + +"Lean Wolf has told us that the Crows are over there," White Otter +reminded him, as he pointed toward the west. + +"That is true," agreed Sun Bird. "But perhaps they sent scouts over here +to look for the Blackfeet." + +White Otter remained silent. The appearance and the actions of the +unknown scout had made him wary. He feared that the Sioux war party was +in imminent danger of being surrounded and attacked by a superior force +of foes. The possibility distressed him. There seemed little chance of +avoiding the peril. + +"Sun Bird, I believe the best thing to do is to find our people," White +Otter declared, finally. "Perhaps Lean Wolf and Feather Dog have told +them something." + +"Yes, we will go to find our brothers," agreed Sun Bird. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +SMOKE SIGNALS + + +As Sun Bird and White Otter rode cautiously over the ridge they saw the +Minneconjoux war party moving slowly across the plain. As soon as the +Minneconjoux discovered the two horsemen they immediately stopped to +watch them. + +"Our brothers are as cautious as Hitunkasan, the weasel," laughed Sun +Bird. "Well, we will tell them who we are." + +He raised his arms and clasped his hands together above his head. It was +the sign for friends. Then the two scouts rode rapidly toward the war +party. The Minneconjoux soon recognized them, and came across the plain. +Little Raven raced on in advance of his friends. + +"Well, my brothers, I see that you have come back," he said, as he rode +up to them. "It is good. What became of that scout?" + +"He has gone away," White Otter told him. + +"Did you kill him?" Little Raven inquired, eagerly. + +"No," replied Sun Bird. "When we rode after him he ran away." + +"Well, when he saw that you were Dacotahs he was frightened," Little +Raven said, boastfully. + +While they were talking the war party came up to them. Sun Bird found +Lean Wolf in command. He said that he had followed the Crows until he +felt sure that they were going to their village. Then he left Running +Dog to scout along the western flank of the war party, and returned to +his companions. + +"Do you believe those people know about us?" Sun Bird asked, anxiously. + +"No," Lean Wolf assured him. "They are far away. The scouts did not go +far from their people. Those Crows have killed plenty of game. They are +afraid the Blackfeet will catch them, and take it away." + +"Have you seen Feather Dog?" inquired Sun Bird. + +"No," replied Lean Wolf. + +Then the Minneconjoux inquired anxiously about the solitary horseman. +They said that Little Raven had told them about him, but they were eager +to know who he was and where he had gone. + +"I cannot tell you that," Sun Bird told them. "He was far away, and we +could not find out who he was. When we went after him he ran away. +Perhaps Feather Dog will tell us about him." + +"Yes, yes, perhaps Feather Dog will find out about him," the +Minneconjoux told one another, hopefully. + +"Well, my brothers, we will keep going ahead until we find a good place +to stop," said Sun Bird. "Then we will wait for Feather Dog and Proud +Hawk, and Running Dog. I believe they will have something to talk +about." + +The day was little more than half gone, however, when they saw three +riders approaching from the east. As the horsemen did not stop when they +discovered the war party, the Sioux believed that two of the riders must +be Feather Dog and Proud Hawk. As they came nearer they recognized them. + +"They are bringing a prisoner!" the Minneconjoux cried, excitedly. "It +must be that scout. Hi! now we will see who he is." + +Then they were suddenly astonished into silence. The three horsemen had +come sufficiently near so that the Minneconjoux could plainly discern +the dress and features of the third rider. They could scarcely believe +their eyes. They looked many moments before they were convinced. Then +they were thrown into an ecstasy of joy. + +"See! See! It is Dancing Rabbit!" they shouted. + +The young Minneconjoux who had disappeared when the Blackfeet ran off +the band of Sioux ponies was riding between Feather Dog and Proud Hawk. +He was mounted on a pinto pony, and as Sun Bird and White Otter +recognized it the mystery of the lone horseman was solved. + +"That is the pony we saw on the ridge," they told their friends. + +As the riders joined the war party, the Minneconjoux crowded eagerly +about their young tribesman to learn the story of his adventures. He was +a tall, sinewy youth of about fifteen winters, and he exhibited the +dignity and reserve of a seasoned warrior. + +"Come, Dancing Rabbit, tell us how you come to be here," said Sun Bird. + +"My brothers, you are great warriors," replied Dancing Rabbit. "I am a +young man. I cannot talk big. I will tell you that the Blackfeet carried +me away to their village. Well, they treated me very bad. Then I found a +chance to get away. I took this pony. It is fast. I got far ahead and +the Blackfeet did not come up with me. I was going to our village. Then +I saw three riders. I hid behind a ridge and watched them. They were far +away, and I could not make out who they were. I said, 'Perhaps they are +Blackfeet scouts. Perhaps they are Crows.' Then they rode after me and +I ran away. Then I found Feather Dog. That is how I come to be here." + +"It is good," Sun Bird told him. "Your words are the words of a +warrior." + +Feather Dog then explained how he had chanced to encounter the young +Minneconjoux. + +"I was watching for our enemies," said Feather Dog. "Then I saw some one +riding toward me. He was a long ways off, but he was coming fast. I rode +my pony down into a gully to hide. Then I crawled up the side of the +gully and peeped out. That rider was coming right where I was. I waited +for him. When he got near I was going to jump up and shoot my arrows at +him. Well, when I jumped up I saw who he was. Then we rode away and +found Proud Hawk. Then we came here. That is all I know about it." + +"Did you see any Blackfeet?" Sun Bird asked him. + +"Yes, we saw four Blackfeet scouts," said Feather Dog. "Two of them were +the same riders we saw before. This time they were close, and we could +see them. Then we saw that they were Blackfeet. They were going straight +ahead. I believe they are going to the Blackfeet village. I do not +believe they know about us." + +"It is good," declared the Minneconjoux. + +"Yes, it is good," Sun Bird told them. "But we must watch out. Perhaps +we will run into those scouts. The Blackfeet are sharp. If they see us +it will be hard to get near the camp." + +"I will tell you something about that," Dancing Rabbit said, suddenly. +"The Blackfeet have moved their lodges. Yes, they have gone away from +the place where they were. They have gone over there in the shadow of +the big mountains." + +The Minneconjoux were astounded at the announcement. They looked +anxiously toward the northwest, where a long range of dim, shadowy peaks +showed against the sky. They had expected to find the Blackfeet camp on +the open plain, a number of days' journey toward the north. It had never +occurred to their minds that the Blackfeet might have decided to change +the location of the village. The words of Dancing Rabbit gave them +several reasons for concern. First, they knew that they had already gone +considerably out of their way. Again, they realized that to reach the +new Blackfeet camp they must go far to the westward, where they would be +in peril from their old enemies the Crows, as well as from the +Blackfeet. + +"It is bad," declared Sun Bird. + +"It is bad," agreed his companions. + +As there seemed to be a difference of opinion as to just which way they +should proceed, Sun Bird immediately called a council. Some of the +Minneconjoux believed it would be safer to continue directly toward the +north until they were about in line with the Blackfeet camp, and then +turn toward the west. Others thought that they should move directly +toward the new camp, and reach the mountains as soon as possible. There +was considerable discussion. + +"My brothers, I believe the best thing to do is to turn toward the +mountains," said Sun Bird. "Then if we see our enemies we can hide. If +we go to the mountains we can climb high up, and look for the Blackfeet +camp. It will be hard for the Blackfeet to see us. In the day we will +hide in the timber. When it grows dark we will send scouts to find out +about the ponies. Yes, my friends, I believe it is the best way to get +near the camp." + +"My brothers, Sun Bird has given us good words," declared Lean Wolf. "I +believe he has told us the best way to go to the Blackfeet camp. He is a +good war leader. We must listen to his words." + +"My friends, what Lean Wolf says is true," said Feather Dog. "I believe +it would be foolish to keep going ahead. I have told you about those +four Blackfeet scouts. I believe they are going to the Blackfeet camp. +Pretty soon they will turn this way. If we keep going straight ahead we +will meet them. We must turn toward the mountains." + +"White Otter, how do you feel about this thing?" inquired Sun Bird. + +"My brother, I believe you have told the best way to go to the Blackfeet +camp," White Otter replied, quietly. "I believe what Feather Dog says is +true. If we keep going ahead perhaps we will run into those Blackfeet +scouts." + +The opinion of the famous young Ogalala seemed to make a deep impression +upon the Minneconjoux. It was only a few moments before those warriors +who had suggested traveling toward the north changed their views, and +agreed that it would be safer to ride toward the west. + +"Well, my brothers, I see that we all feel the same about this thing," +Sun Bird said, when all had agreed. "It is good. Come, we will ride +toward those great mountains." + +Having made their decision, they rode boldly toward the west, ready and +eager to meet their foes. It was late in the day, however, before they +saw any evidence of them. Then they discovered a smoke signal some +distance to the northward. Three columns of yellow smoke were ascending +into the sky. The Sioux watched them with considerable uneasiness. They +wondered if the Blackfeet scouts had discovered the war party. + +"No, I do not believe it," Feather Dog declared. "That smoke is a long +ways off. Those scouts could not get so far ahead of us. It must be some +one different." + +"Perhaps the Blackfeet are calling the scouts to the camp," suggested +Proud Hawk. + +"No, the camp is not in that place," Dancing Rabbit told them. + +Convinced that the smoke signals did not concern them, the Sioux +continued on their way. Feather Dog said that there was a good camp site +with plenty of grass and water a short distance ahead of them, and as +the day was drawing to a close they determined to stop there for the +night. They had not ridden far, however, before they saw three more +columns of smoke rising a considerable distance to the westward of the +first signals. + +"It must be the Blackfeet," declared the Minneconjoux. "It is the danger +signal. They are telling their people about us." + +"Perhaps they have found the Crows," suggested Feather Dog. + +A few moments later a horseman swept into view, far to the westward. He +was riding at a furious pace, and seemed to be coming directly toward +them. They had little doubt that it was Running Dog, and they watched +him in great suspense. + +"Running Dog is coming to tell us about something big," they cried. + +As the Minneconjoux scout came nearer, he began to point excitedly +behind him. The Sioux looked anxiously toward the west, expecting to see +a company of their foes racing along on the trail of Running Dog. + +"Perhaps the Crows are coming, we must be ready," said Sun Bird. + +Roused by the possibility, the hot-tempered Minneconjoux immediately got +ready to fight. Then, as Running Dog finally came within shouting +distance, they began to cry out and question him. + +"Are the Crows coming?" they inquired eagerly. + +"No! no!" shouted Running Dog. + +Then he dashed up to them. As he threw the panting pony upon its +haunches, his companions gathered about him to learn what had sent him +racing across the plain. + +"Listen, my brothers, I will tell you about it," said Running Dog. "The +Crows and the Blackfeet are getting ready for a big fight over there +behind that ridge. I was watching them. Then I saw you coming that way. +Then I came over here to tell you to hold back. Do you see that smoke up +there? Well, the Blackfeet are calling the people to fight. You must +watch sharp. I saw many warriors over there behind that ridge." + +The words of Running Dog were received in silence. The Minneconjoux +looked gravely into each other's faces. They realized the peril to which +they were exposed, and they waited for the war leaders to speak. All +eyes were turned upon Sun Bird. + +"My friends, Running Dog has told you about those warriors over there +behind that ridge," said Sun Bird. "We are in great danger. Something +must be done. We must try to find a place to hide in until it grows +dark. Then perhaps we can get away from here. If we meet our enemies we +must fight them. We are Dacotahs. It is enough." + +"My brother, I will tell you about a place to hide in," said Dancing +Rabbit. "I found it when I was running away from the Blackfeet. It is a +place where water used to run. Now it is dry. It is deep. It goes a long +way across the plain. We can ride into it, and no one will see us." + +"Where is this place?" Sun Bird asked anxiously. + +"Over there," said Dancing Rabbit, pointing toward the north. + +"Come, my brothers, we will go to this place, and hide until it grows +dark," proposed Sun Bird. "I will ask three scouts to go over to that +ridge to watch those warriors. I will ask White Otter to be the leader." + +"I will go," White Otter volunteered, eagerly. + +Most of the war party desired to accompany the Ogalala on his perilous +reconnaissance. Having been appointed as leader, however, White Otter +was privileged to choose his companions. + +"I will ask Lean Wolf and Little Raven to go with me," said White Otter. + +"I will go with you," replied Lean Wolf. + +"I will go," Little Raven said, eagerly, as his eyes flashed with boyish +enthusiasm. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +A CLOSE CALL + + +A few moments afterward White Otter and his companions rode away on +their hazardous mission. Running Dog had told them that the rival war +parties were a considerable distance beyond the ridge, and the Sioux +hoped to come in sight of them without being discovered. White Otter +turned directly toward the south, as he believed that there was less +chance of encountering hostile scouts in that direction. He rode a +considerable distance before he finally turned toward the west, and +approached the ridge. + +"The Crows have passed this place--the Blackfeet came the other +way--they will not pass the Crows--the Crows will not come back +here--this is a good place--we will stay here and watch," White Otter +told his companions. + +"It is good," agreed Lean Wolf, the famous Minneconjoux scout. + +They approached the ridge with great caution. The sun had already set, +but they knew the long summer twilight would give them ample time to +discover their foes. As they finally came within bow range of the grassy +slope, they stopped and spent many moments watching for signs of lurking +foes. Then they suddenly heard the sounds of battle. + +"The Crows and the Blackfeet are fighting--it is good," White Otter +declared, grimly. + +Then, while Little Raven remained with the ponies, White Otter and Lean +Wolf crawled slowly up the ridge. When they reached the top they parted +the long grass and looked anxiously across the plain. The Crows and the +Blackfeet were preparing to fight. They were a long distance from the +ridge, however, and the Sioux felt in little danger. They watched with +keen interest while their foes began the preliminaries of battle. The +experienced Sioux scouts read the situation at a glance. It was evident +that the Crows had been overtaken and brought to a stand by the +Blackfeet war party. The Crows had dismounted and taken shelter behind +their ponies, and the Blackfeet were riding about them in a great +circle, but keeping safely beyond bow range. There was much yelling and +singing of war songs, but no real attempt at actual fighting. + +"The Blackfeet are cautious," White Otter said, scornfully. "They are +making a great noise, but I do not see them killing any Crows. If they +rushed in there and frightened those ponies the Crows would have a hard +time of it." + +"It is true," agreed Lean Wolf. + +The Crows, however, appeared to be considerably stronger in numbers, and +it was apparent that the Blackfeet were cautious about beginning the +attack. The Sioux were surprised at the small size of the Blackfeet war +party. They had expected to see a much larger force of those savage foes +engaged against the Crows. + +"I do not see many Blackfeet--it is bad," said White Otter. "They have +left many warriors to guard the camp." + +When Running Dog brought word of the impending battle, the Sioux had +hoped that the Blackfeet would send a sufficient force against the Crows +to weaken the defense of the Blackfeet camp considerably. White Otter +realized, however, that the hope was false. It was evident that the +crafty Blackfeet had left most of their fighting men at the village. + +"Perhaps they are waiting for our people to come for those ponies," said +Lean Wolf. + +"Yes, I believe it is true," agreed White Otter. + +He had barely ceased speaking when the Blackfeet suddenly began their +attack. Whooping fiercely, they rushed upon their foes and made +desperate attempts to frighten and stampede the Crow ponies. The Crows, +however, had prepared for just such a maneuver, and the alarmed ponies +were unable to break away. In the meantime the Crows sent a deadly +volley of arrows against the Blackfeet, and the latter recoiled before +the fierceness of the defense. A number of warriors had already toppled +from their ponies, and it was evident that the loss somewhat discouraged +their comrades. For a moment they wavered, and then a reckless war +leader on a pinto pony rallied them and led them against their foes. + +They rode close up to the Crows, and fought with great bravery. The +Crows, however, had the double advantage of numbers and shelter, and the +Blackfeet soon realized that they were fighting a losing fight. The +fearless war leader had already forfeited his life to his gallantry, and +a number of his followers were either killed or wounded. In return, the +Blackfeet had done little harm to the Crows, except for killing a few +ponies, and wounding one reckless young Crow who had rushed from behind +his horse to attack them. Thoroughly disheartened, they became +demoralized and raced away in bad disorder. + +"See, see, the fierce Blackfeet are running like rabbits!" laughed White +Otter. + +"The Crows are too strong for them," declared Lean Wolf. + +Encouraged by their success, many of the Crows leaped upon their ponies +and set out after the fleeing Blackfeet. The maneuver threw the +Blackfeet into a rage. They immediately wheeled about and raced back to +meet their pursuers. Their boldness confused the Crows, and before they +had recovered from their surprise the Blackfeet were upon them. As less +than half of the Crow force had joined in the pursuit, the advantage had +suddenly turned to the Blackfeet. Smarting with the humiliation of their +recent repulse, the Blackfeet determined to take full vengeance upon the +misguided company of Crows who had blundered into their power. + +"They have fooled the Crows," White Otter cried, excitedly. "They will +wipe out that war party before their friends can come to help them." + +"The Blackfeet are sharp," laughed Lean Wolf. + +The Sioux suddenly realized that the wild flight of the Blackfeet had +been a clever bit of stratagem to deceive their foes. It was apparent +that the trick had been entirely successful, as the Blackfeet seemed to +have the Crows entirely at their mercy. + +"See, those poor Crows are calling their brothers to help them," White +Otter told Lean Wolf. + +Finding themselves completely overwhelmed by the ferocity and strength +of their crafty foes, the Crows were thrown into a panic. They had lost +all sense of order and discipline, and each man was fighting for +himself. Their one idea appeared to be to escape from the relentless +Blackfeet, who seemed determined to annihilate them. Aware that they +were facing destruction, the Crows were making frantic appeals to their +comrades to come to their assistance. The latter abandoned the pack +ponies and the hard-earned supply of meat and rode wildly across the +plain to assist their tribesmen. + +"Now we will see a big fight," White Otter cried, enthusiastically. + +"Yes, yes," agreed Lean Wolf, as his eyes flashed with excitement. + +The Crows who had come to the aid of their tribesmen fought with great +courage, but the Blackfeet were thoroughly aroused and they seemed +invincible. The Sioux were amazed at the bravery and skill displayed by +those hardy warriors from the north. Having duped their foes and gained +the advantage, they appeared determined to follow it through to a +complete victory. + +Although the Crows still outnumbered them, the Blackfeet pressed the +attack with a reckless ferocity that completely demoralized their foes. +Time after time the Crows tried to rally from their confusion, but each +attempt was the signal for a still fiercer assault by the Blackfeet. + +"Hi, the Blackfeet know how to fight!" White Otter whispered, tensely. + +The fighting was at close range, and many riderless ponies gave evidence +of the result. The Sioux witnessed many deeds of heroism. They saw a +wounded Crow warrior on a white pony ride recklessly at three of his +enemies, and overcome all three of them before a company of Blackfeet +finally killed him. They saw a Blackfoot dash among a company of +astounded Crows and rescue his comrade who had been desperately wounded. +They saw many thrilling hand-to-hand encounters which were fought to the +death. They saw dismounted warriors running boldly into the thick of the +fight in the hope of killing an enemy and securing his horse. Most of +them were killed. A few achieved the exploit, and galloped from the +encounter in triumph. + +Then as the light began to fade from the plain the Crows made a final, +heroic effort, and broke through the circle of foes. They raced directly +toward the spot where the Sioux were watching, and behind them thundered +the Blackfeet. + +"Run to the ponies!" cried White Otter, as he realized the peril which +threatened them. + +They scrambled wildly down the ridge and called to Little Raven to bring +the ponies. He had already guessed that something was wrong, and he lost +little time in joining them. + +"The Crows and the Blackfeet are almost here!" White Otter told him, as +he sprang upon the piebald. + +As the plain offered no hiding place in the vicinity of the ridge, White +Otter realized that their only chance of escape lay in open flight. He +also knew that to turn toward the north would arouse the suspicions of +the crafty Blackfeet. He raced away toward the east. + +"Keep low on your ponies, and perhaps our enemies will not know who we +are," he advised his companions. + +Crouching low upon the necks of their ponies, the Sioux rode furiously +to gain a safe lead upon their foes. Night was almost at hand, and the +dusky twilight shadows made it difficult for their enemies to identify +them. When the Crows finally dashed recklessly over the top of the +ridge the Dacotahs were many arrow flights away. At sight of the three +racing ponies, however, the Crows apparently became suspicious, and +fearful of being led into another trap. They immediately swerved from +their course, and rode toward the north. + +"That is bad," cried White Otter, who had been risking his neck to +glance back at his foes. "If they go that way they may find our people." + +"I believe our friends will be watching sharp," Lean Wolf assured him. + +Then they heard the wild, ringing whoops of the Blackfeet, and White +Otter again turned his head to look back. The heavy shadows had almost +wiped out the ridge, and it was difficult to see the company of riders +who were racing recklessly down the steep grassy slope. He made them +out, however, and was relieved to see them turn sharply and follow the +Crows. The latter had entirely faded from sight in the dusk. + +"The Blackfeet did not see us," White Otter told his companions. "See, +it is almost dark! We will ride slower." + +They could barely see an arrow flight before them, and they believed +there was slight probability of being seen. In fact they had high hopes +that the Blackfeet had entirely failed to notice them. Feeling quite +safe, therefore, they reined in the ponies and rode at a slow canter. +They heard the Blackfeet yelling savagely farther toward the north and +had little doubt that they were still pursuing the demoralized Crows. + +"They are making a great noise--it is good," declared Lean Wolf. "Our +people will hear them." + +"Yes, it is----" began White Otter. + +"Listen!" interrupted Little Raven. + +They heard the sound of galloping ponies directly ahead of them, and +they barely had time to turn aside before the unknown riders passed them +in the darkness. Then the nervous little piebald whinnied, and the +strangers instantly stopped. + +"Come!" cried White Otter, as he turned toward the north, and raced away +at top speed. + +"I believe those riders are the Blackfeet scouts that Feather Dog told +us about," said Lean Wolf. "Little Raven, your ears are as sharp as the +ears of Tokala, the fox." + +They rode some distance before they finally stopped to listen for sounds +from their foes. Night had fallen, and the great plain was cloaked in +darkness. For a long time the stillness was unbroken. It seemed as if +the Blackfeet had at last yelled themselves into silence. The Sioux +wondered if the Crows had escaped. + +"I do not believe the Blackfeet came up with them," Lean Wolf said, +softly. "When it got dark I believe the Blackfeet turned back to round +up those ponies that the Crows left behind." + +"Then we must watch sharp," declared White Otter. "Perhaps they will +ride over here and find us." + +Then they heard the wail of a prairie wolf a short distance to the +westward. There was something about it that made them suspicious. As a +precaution against being betrayed to prowling foes, White Otter +dismounted and seized the nose of the little piebald. The other ponies +also showed signs of nervousness, and their riders quickly followed the +example of the cautious Ogalala. Then the three anxious Sioux scouts +stood beside their ponies and strained their ears to catch a warning of +danger. Three times the dreary call of the prairie wolf sounded from the +west, and each time the suspicions of the Sioux grew stronger. They felt +almost certain that it was a signal from their enemies. + +"That does not sound like Mayash, the prowler," White Otter declared +suspiciously. + +"It is different," agreed Lean Wolf. + +At that moment they heard the cry repeated in the north. They knew at +once that it was an answer to the signal from the west. It was evident +that foes were on two sides of them, and the Sioux realized that they +were in a serious predicament. + +"It is bad," whispered White Otter. "I believe Blackfeet scouts are out +there in the darkness. They are close. We must watch out." + +"Do you believe they know us?" Little Raven inquired, anxiously. + +"No," White Otter told him. "Lean Wolf, how do you feel about it?" + +"I believe it is the Blackfeet," said Lean Wolf. "We must wait here +until we see what they are going to do. If we hear them coming here then +we will ride away before they find us." + +"It is the best thing to do," White Otter told him. + +They listened anxiously to learn if their foes were actually +approaching. They heard nothing to give them a clew. The signals had +ceased, and the calm, brooding night hush had fallen upon the plain. The +ponies, however, were still uneasy, and their actions made the Sioux +suspicious. They feared that other horses were close at hand, and the +possibility kept them alert. + +"Listen, my brothers," White Otter whispered, anxiously. "Something is +moving over there." + +The sound had come from the westward, and whatever had made it seemed to +be well within bowshot. The piebald was shaking its head, and struggling +to free its nose from the grasp of the Ogalala. The other ponies also +showed signs of recognition, and the Sioux felt sure that a horse was +moving slowly through the darkness. They listened with bated breath, +ready to jump upon their ponies and flee into the protection of the +night at the first hint that they had been discovered. They waited in +trying suspense while the rider slowly passed them, and the short, quick +footfalls of his pony died away in the distance. + +"He has gone," whispered Little Raven. + +"Sh!" cautioned Lean Wolf. + +Another pony was approaching. Again the Sioux waited in breathless +suspense, while the unseen rider moved cautiously through the darkness +within bow range of them. This time, however, they were not so +fortunate. For some reason the rider stopped directly opposite them. Was +he suspicious? the Sioux wondered. The piebald tried to call, but White +Otter strangled the cry in its throat. Then the strange horse winded the +Sioux ponies, and whinnied its challenge. The next moment a voice +questioned cautiously from the night. The Sioux remained silent. Each +stood grasping the mane of his pony, ready to mount and race away on the +instant of discovery. Then the horse which had already passed answered +the challenge, and the suspicions of the second rider were allayed. A +moment later the Sioux heard him riding on his way. They remained +silent, however, listening anxiously to learn if a third rider was +following after those who had passed. + +"There are no more," Lean Wolf whispered, finally. + +"It is good," replied White Otter. + +They waited until they felt sure that their enemies had gone beyond +hearing, and then they mounted and rode carefully toward the east. As +the mysterious scouts had gone toward the north, the Sioux determined to +make a wide detour to avoid an encounter. They walked the ponies until +they had gone a safe distance, and then they urged them into a brisk +canter, and began to circle back toward the north to reach the +Minneconjoux war party. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +ANXIOUS MOMENTS + + +After White Otter and his companions left them, the Minneconjoux war +party rode cautiously toward the north to find the hiding place of which +Dancing Rabbit had told. They realized the peril to which they were +exposing themselves, and Sun Bird took every precaution to guard against +blundering upon the Blackfeet. Running Dog and a companion scouted to +the westward, Feather Dog and Proud Hawk again reconnoitered toward the +east, and Sun Bird, Sitting Eagle and the lad, Dancing Rabbit, rode in +advance. + +"How far away is this place?" Sun Bird asked, anxiously. + +"It begins over there where you see those little trees," replied Dancing +Rabbit, as he pointed to a few stunted cottonwoods some distance ahead +of them. + +"Yes, I know about that place," declared Sitting Eagle. "I have been +there. It is a good place to hide in." + +Dancing Rabbit said that the shelter toward which they were moving was a +deep ravine which formerly had been the bed of a good-sized stream. It +extended directly across the plain from west to east, and went to the +very foothills of the great mountains. The young Minneconjoux declared +that, once in the bottom of that deep ravine, the war party would be +invisible to their foes, and it would be possible to remain hidden until +they reached the timbered ridges. + +"It is good," declared Sun Bird. "When we get to that place we will hide +in the day, and travel toward the mountains when it gets dark." + +Before they reached the ravine, however, they saw a horseman ride +cautiously over the ridge to the westward. When he reached the bottom of +the slope he rode rapidly to and fro, and appeared to be trying to +attract the attention of Sun Bird and his companions. It was the danger +signal, and the Minneconjoux watched him with grave attention. When he +saw that he had attracted their notice, he stopped and raised his right +hand above his head. Then he suddenly swept it downward and backward. It +was the signal to approach. Although he was a considerable distance +away, Sun Bird and Sitting Eagle agreed that it was Running Dog. + +"He wants to tell us about something," said Sun Bird. "Go, Dancing +Rabbit, and bring us his words." + +The lad immediately galloped away to meet the distant Minneconjoux +scout. Sun Bird and Sitting Eagle decided to wait where they were until +he returned. In a few moments they saw the war party riding toward them. +The Minneconjoux had discovered Running Dog, and were watching Dancing +Rabbit as he raced across the plain. When they reached Sun Bird, +however, they concealed their curiosity and waited for the youthful war +leader to tell them what had happened. + +"My friends, that scout over there is Running Dog," said Sun Bird. "He +has made the danger signal. Then he called us. Dancing Rabbit has gone +to bring us his words. We will wait here until he comes back." + +It was not long before they saw the eager lad racing toward them with +the message from Running Dog. He was urging his pony to top speed, and +the Sioux believed he brought word of great importance. Running Dog had +already disappeared into the dusk. + +"I have brought you the words of Running Dog," said Dancing Rabbit, as +he stopped beside Sun Bird. + +"Tell me what he says," replied Sun Bird. + +"Running Dog says that the Crows and the Blackfeet are fighting," +declared Dancing Rabbit. "He says it is a big fight. He says the Crows +are stronger than the Blackfeet. Running Dog says that is bad. He says +there must be many Blackfeet at the village. He believes that a big war +party may be coming this way. He says we must go to that gully and hide. +He says he will come there when it gets dark. Those are the words of +Running Dog." + +"Come, lead us to that place," said Sun Bird. + +The glow was fading from the western sky and the twilight shadows were +gathering upon the plain when the Sioux finally reached the dry stream +bed. It offered an ideal hiding place, and Sun Bird looked upon it with +delight. + +"See, my brothers, this great gully leads far over there toward the +mountains," he said. "If we follow it, I do not believe our enemies will +be able to find us." + +"It is good," declared the Minneconjoux. + +They picketed the ponies in the bottom of the ravine, and then most of +the war party crawled up the steep bank to watch the plain. It was +almost dark, and they wondered why Feather Dog and Proud Hawk had failed +to join them. They looked anxiously toward the east in the hope of +seeing the scouts. Then they suddenly heard a chorus of piercing yells +and whoops far across the plain and they looked toward the sounds. The +noise seemed to come from the vicinity of the ridge, and some distance +to the southward. + +"Perhaps our enemies have crossed the ridge; we must watch sharp," Sun +Bird cautioned them. + +The light was almost gone, and it was difficult to see far across the +plain. The wild commotion continued, however, and, guided by the sounds, +the Sioux strained their eyes in an attempt to learn the cause of the +disturbance. Then some of them discovered what appeared to be a company +of horsemen racing along parallel with the ridge. + +"It is the war party!" they cried. "It must be the Blackfeet. They are +riding this way!" + +"See, see, some one is chasing them!" said Sitting Eagle. + +They made out another company of riders who were apparently pursuing the +horsemen ahead of them. The discovery filled the Sioux with alarm. It +appeared as if both the Blackfeet and the Crows were racing toward the +ravine. In a few moments, however, darkness closed down and blotted them +from sight. Then the wild tumult suddenly ceased, and the Sioux were +left without a clew to the location of their foes. + +"It is bad," Sun Bird declared, uneasily. "Those riders were coming this +way. Now we do not know what has become of them. Perhaps they are in +this gully. Perhaps they will come here. We must watch and listen." + +The Minneconjoux heard him in silence. They were bewildered by the +sudden turn of fortune which shattered their fancied security and +threatened to expose them to their foes. The possibilities were +alarming. Thoroughly alive to their own peril, they were even more +concerned for the safety of their absent comrades. They wondered what +had happened to White Otter and his companions. Where were Feather Dog +and Proud Hawk? Why had Running Dog failed to warn them of the +approaching war parties? Had those brave scouts been trapped and +destroyed by their foes? The Sioux weakened at the thought. + +Sun Bird was particularly disturbed at the possibility of harm having +come to his friend, White Otter, and his brother, Little Raven. The hot +fighting blood surged to his brain as he pictured his tribesmen in the +hands of his foes. He soon dismissed that possibility, however, for he +knew that neither White Otter nor Lean Wolf would ever permit +themselves to be taken alive. The thought suggested the still more +alarming possibility that they had been killed. Sun Bird, however, +refused even to consider it. + +"No, my friends, I do not believe anything bad has happened to those +great scouts," he told his companions. "We will wait for them. They will +come." + +He had barely finished speaking when one of the Sioux ponies whinnied +softly, and a moment afterward they heard a pony scramble up the side of +the ravine a short distance to the eastward, and gallop off across the +plain. + +"Perhaps it is one of our friends," Sun Bird whispered, hopefully. + +He crawled to the plain, and imitated the bark of the little gray fox. +The Sioux listened anxiously. Many moments passed. There was no +response. Then Sun Bird again sounded the familiar signal. Still there +was no reply. The Sioux became suspicious. They feared that a hostile +scout had blundered upon their hiding place. Sun Bird, however, felt +more hopeful. He knew the wariness of the Dacotah scouts, and he still +hoped that the mysterious rider was one of his friends. He repeated the +sharp, quick bark of the little gray fox, and waited eagerly for a +reply. This time he got it. It came from the direction where he had +heard the hoofbeats of the retreating pony. + +"It is good," said Sun Bird. "That rider is a friend." + +A few moments later they heard ponies approaching the ravine. Determined +to be prepared for an emergency, the Sioux lay along the top of the +ravine, with arrows fitted to their bows, ready to repulse an attack. +The precaution proved to be unnecessary, however, as the riders were +Feather Dog and Proud Hawk. + +"My brothers, you have come--it is good," said Sun Bird. + +The scouts who had returned from the eastward said that they had seen +nothing of their foes, although they felt quite sure that they had heard +several ponies pass them in the darkness. They knew nothing of the +thrilling chase which their companions had witnessed from the ravine, +and were much interested in the recital. + +"Did you see anything of White Otter?" Sun Bird inquired, eagerly. + +"No, we did not see any one," replied Feather Dog. + +Sun Bird appeared serious. The continued absence of White Otter and his +companions worried him. He began to fear that they really had met with +some misfortune. The idea startled him. + +At that moment some of the Minneconjoux declared that they heard some +one approaching the ravine. Sun Bird held his breath to listen, and his +heart filled with hope. Perhaps White Otter and Little Raven had come. +The possibility thrilled him. He waited in trying suspense for the +signal which would verify his hopes. + +"Perhaps it is an enemy," suggested a warrior who was lying beside him. + +Sun Bird remained silent. For the moment the Blackfeet and the Crows had +been crowded from his mind by the hope of seeing White Otter and Little +Raven. He had entirely forgotten the peril which threatened the Sioux +war party. The warning of his tribesman aroused him to his +responsibility. He was the war leader. It was his duty to think first of +the welfare and safety of the men who had entrusted themselves to his +leadership. He at once dismissed White Otter and Little Raven from his +thoughts, and again became the stern, impassive war leader. + +"I do not hear anything," he told the man beside him. "What did you +hear?" + +"It sounded like ponies," replied the warrior. + +"Were they running?" inquired Sun Bird. + +"No, it sounded as if they were standing in one place, and stamping +their feet," declared the Minneconjoux. + +They listened a long time, but heard nothing. The warriors who had given +the warning, however, felt certain that they had not been mistaken. + +"Perhaps it was Tatanka, the buffalo, or Tatokadan, the antelope," said +Sitting Eagle. + +"No, no, it sounded like ponies," declared his friends. + +Then as they continued to listen they heard the cry of a prairie wolf, +far to the westward. The weird serenade lasted some moments, and then +all was still. The call had sounded entirely natural, but the Sioux +believed it was a clever imitation by their foes. They wondered if it +had any connection with the sounds which had been heard near the ravine. +They realized that Blackfeet scouts might have followed the stream bed +in search of their foes, and that the wolf call was a signal for them to +return to the war party. The Sioux listened anxiously for the sound of +hoof beats going toward the west. When they failed to hear them they +were completely baffled. Had the sharp-eared warriors who claimed to +have heard the ponies been deceived? It seemed unlikely. Then what had +become of the mysterious riders? The entire Minneconjoux war party was +listening breathlessly, and it seemed impossible for the horsemen to +steal away without being heard. Then a new possibility presented itself. + +"Perhaps they are Crows," the Sioux told one another. + +The thought threw them into a flurry of excitement. They realized that +if Crow scouts had come that far to the eastward, the entire Crow force +might follow them along the ravine. As a precaution against a sudden +attack, two Sioux scouts moved cautiously along the stream bed on foot +to watch for the approach of enemies. They had barely gone beyond +bowshot, when the Sioux heard the bark of the little gray fox directly +in front of them. It filled them with joy, and they lost little time in +replying. + +"Ho, my brothers, we have been waiting out here a long time," said +Running Dog, as he rode into the ravine with Big Crow, his fellow scout. + +"Did you see White Otter?" Sun Bird immediately inquired. + +"I do not know," replied Running Dog. "We saw three riders racing over +the ridge ahead of the Crows. They were far away. We could not tell +about them. Perhaps they were our brothers." + +"What became of them?" Sun Bird asked, eagerly. + +"They went that way," said Running Dog, as he pointed toward the east. +"The Crows did not follow them. They came this way. Then the Blackfeet +came after them." + +"Did you hear Mayash, the wolf?" inquired Sitting Eagle. + +"Yes, we heard his call, but he did not make it," Running Dog told him. +"It was the Blackfeet. I believe the Crows got away from them. Perhaps +they have turned this way. That is why we stayed out there in the +darkness. We did not know who was in this place." + +"Did you hear us?" Sun Bird asked, anxiously. + +"No, we did not hear you," said Running Dog. "Our ponies stopped and +tried to call, and we knew that some one was in this place." + +Running Dog told his tribesmen that he and Big Crow had seen the end of +the fight, and the desperate race between the Crows and the Blackfeet. +When the Crows turned toward the ravine the Sioux scouts had been +greatly alarmed for the safety of the Minneconjoux war party. However, +as they realized that they could not carry a warning to their friends, +they had determined to follow their enemies, and learn the result of +the wild chase across the plain. With the coming of darkness they had +lost sight of both the Crows and the Blackfeet, but they were sure that +both war parties had entered the ravine a considerable distance to the +westward. + +"Perhaps the Crows came this way--perhaps they crossed the gully and +went straight ahead," said Running Dog. "Anyway, I believe they fooled +the Blackfeet. We heard the Blackfeet scouts riding near us. I believe +they were trying to find the Crows." + +"If the Crows came this way they must be near us," said Sun Bird. + +"We did not hear anything----" + +Running Dog was interrupted by the sound of a familiar voice from the +darkness. + +"Ho, Dacotahs!" + +"It is White Otter!" cried Sun Bird. + +"Yes, my brother, I am here," replied White Otter, as he suddenly +appeared at the top of the ravine. + +The Ogalala was alone and on foot, and Sun Bird feared that he had met +with disaster. He was about to ask for Little Raven, and Lean Wolf, when +White Otter turned toward the plain and called softly. A moment +afterward his companions came forward with the ponies. Their appearance +filled Sun Bird with joy. He found it difficult to conceal the emotion +which welled up in his heart at the safe arrival of his beloved +companions. + +"My brothers, you have come--I feel good again," he said feelingly. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +REBELLIOUS PONIES + + +The Minneconjoux were eager to learn how White Otter had been able to +get so near them without being heard. They were equally curious to know +how he had located them. + +"I will tell you about it," said White Otter. "We were over there on +that ridge watching the fight. Then the Crows ran away. They came right +toward us. We rode away ahead of them. When it got dark we met some +riders. Then we turned this way. We heard some one riding past us. Then +we came on. We went over there near where the Blackfeet are, when we +heard Running Dog and Big Crow. We did not know them. They were coming +this way. We followed them. Then they stopped. We waited. Then we heard +the call of the little gray fox. That made us feel good. But we were not +sure about it. Then we heard those riders come into the gully. Then I +crawled up to find out about it. That is how we found you." + +"White Otter, you are a great warrior," Sun Bird declared, +enthusiastically. + +Then as the war party was complete he called a council of war to decide +what should be done. The Sioux were agreed that the wisest plan would be +to remain where they were until daylight. + +"It is the best thing to do," said Sun Bird. "We know that the Crows and +the Blackfeet are somewhere along this gully. It would be foolish to +move toward them. When it gets light we will try to find out where they +are." + +He posted scouts in and about the ravine to watch for the approach of +foes, while the war party lay down to sleep. There was no water, and +both the Sioux and their ponies suffered from thirst. The ponies were +particularly restless, and spent most of the night pawing the dry earth +in the bottom of the ravine. However, Dancing Rabbit assured his +companions that there was a good pool a half day's journey to the +westward, and Sitting Eagle confirmed his words. + +"Perhaps the Blackfeet are at that place," suggested Sun Bird. + +The night passed without incident, and at the first hint of dawn the +scouts hurried in from the plain. They said that they had neither seen +nor heard anything of their enemies. It seemed, therefore, that either +the Crows and the Blackfeet had continued their mad race through the +night, or else both had hidden themselves to wait for daylight. + +"Perhaps the Crows got away and the Blackfeet have gone back to their +village," suggested one of the Minneconjoux. + +His companions had serious doubts of it. As soon as it was light enough +to see across the plain, they crawled up the side of the ravine and +looked anxiously for signs of their foes. As they were nowhere in sight, +the Minneconjoux began to hope that the cheerful prophecy of their +comrade was correct. Still, they feared it would be dangerous to rely +upon it. + +"We must be cautious," said Lean Wolf. "There are some good hiding +places over there. Perhaps the Blackfeet are waiting for the Crows to +show themselves." + +There were a number of scattered stands of cottonwoods dotting the plain +to the westward, and the Sioux realized that one of them might shelter +their foes. They were particularly suspicious of the little grove which +Dancing Rabbit pointed out as the spot which sheltered the pool. + +"We must watch that place," declared White Otter. + +"Yes, we will stay here and watch," said Sun Bird. "If our enemies are +near us, pretty soon we will see their scouts." + +As time passed, and they saw nothing to indicate that either the Crows +or the Blackfeet were anywhere in the vicinity, the Sioux began to +discuss the advisability of moving cautiously along the bottom of the +ravine. The ponies were growing frantic from thirst and were raising +considerable dust by their wild pawing in the stream bed. Some were +beginning to snort and whinny, and the Sioux feared that the +unmanageable little beasts might betray them to their foes. Then, too, +their own throats were parched and aching, and they were eager to reach +the little pool as soon as possible. + +"We will go," Sun Bird said, finally. + +They believed that it would be folly to expose scouts upon the open +plain, and they determined to keep to the shelter of the ravine until +they were opposite the grove which sheltered the pool. The ponies +appeared to understand that they were moving toward water, and the Sioux +found it almost impossible to hold them in control. For some moments the +fractious little beasts created the wildest sort of disorder, and the +Minneconjoux looked anxiously upon the heavy dust cloud that rose above +the ravine. + +"It is bad," Sun Bird declared, uneasily, as he watched White Otter +struggling to subdue the hot-tempered piebald. + +When the ponies had finally been brought under subjection, several +warriors who rode quieter horses dismounted and crawled to the top of +the ravine to search the plain. A heavy pall of dust hung over them, and +they wondered if it had been seen by their foes. The latter, however, +were nowhere in sight, and the Sioux knew that unless they were watching +from one of the groves they must have ridden from the locality. + +"We saw no one," said the scouts when they overtook their companions. + +"It must be that our enemies went away while it was dark," said a young +warrior named Painted Bird. + +The Sioux, however, were suspicious. They determined to take nothing for +granted. As they approached the first of the little groves they sent +scouts along the ravine ahead of the war party to watch the plain and +guard against blundering into their foes. They were riding at a fast +pace, and they realized that they would arrive opposite the pool before +the day was half gone. + +"It is bad," said White Otter. "We cannot go to that place until it +grows dark. If we get near it, it will be hard to hold the ponies." + +"It is true," agreed Sun Bird. "I am thinking about it." + +He had planned to move along the ravine until he was opposite the pool, +and then wait until he could send scouts to reconnoiter the grove under +cover of the night. He, too, realized, however, that it might be +impossible to control the ponies once they got that near to the water. +The riders were already having considerable difficulty in restraining +them, and Sun Bird feared that at any moment they might stampede and +dash wildly up the side of the ravine. + +"We are raising a great dust," Lean Wolf said, soberly. "If our enemies +are watching they must see it." + +"Yes, yes, it is bad," Sun Bird replied, impatiently. "We must stop." + +He galloped to the head of the company and called upon the Minneconjoux +to halt. Many of them found difficulty in obeying the command. The +fiery, half-wild ponies had apparently scented the water and it seemed +to have driven them mad. In spite of their expert horsemanship the +Sioux were unable to control them. Although by sheer strength and skill +they finally brought them to a stop, they found it impossible to quiet +them. Crazed with their desire for water, the frantic beasts plunged and +reared and kicked and squealed and raised such a wild commotion that the +Sioux were thrown into a panic. They were certain that if enemies were +lurking at the pool they must surely have seen the dust and heard the +noise created by the unmanageable ponies. + +"It is useless to wait here," said some of the more impulsive warriors. +"We may as well go ahead and see what comes of it." + +"No, that would be foolish," declared Sun Bird. "If the Blackfeet are +hiding in that place they will see the dust. Perhaps they cannot hear +the noise. Anyway, if we stay in this gully they will not know who we +are. They must send scouts over here to find out about us. They will not +do that until it gets dark. Then it will be easy to fool them." + +"Those are good words," White Otter agreed, heartily. + +"Yes, that is the way I feel about it," declared Lean Wolf. + +"It is the only thing to do," Sitting Eagle cried, angrily. "Are we +like the women who are afraid of the war ponies! Are we like old men who +have no strength in their arms? Does a Dacotah run to his enemy for +water when he is thirsty? Come, my brothers, we are Dacotahs. We are +men. Hold those horses. Throw them down. Kill them if you cannot +overcome them. It is better to go against our enemies on foot than to +let those foolish ponies carry us to our deaths. Sun Bird is a good war +leader. You have heard his words. They are good. We will listen. We will +stay here until it is safe to go ahead." + +The words of the famous Minneconjoux scout created a deep impression +upon his comrades. He was a man whose daring achievements made him the +idol of his people, and his counsel was seldom disputed. His daring +challenge to their ability and manhood instantly roused the fighting +blood of the Sioux, and they immediately accepted the task of bringing +the fractious ponies under subjection. It was not easy, but the +Minneconjoux were on their mettle, and, as White Otter had already won +control over the piebald, they persevered until the ponies were finally +quieted. + +Order having been restored, many of the Sioux crept up the side of the +ravine to watch the distant stand of cottonwoods which they hoped to +reach at dark. They were suffering keenly from thirst, which had been +greatly aggravated by their desperate struggle with the ponies. Some of +them chewed mouthfuls of grass in an attempt to suck moisture into their +burning throats. Others placed small pebbles beneath their tongues to +increase the flow of saliva. All of them, however, bore their discomfort +without complaint. It was a common occurrence for a warrior to endure +both hunger and thirst, and they had been trained from infancy to suffer +in silence. + +"See, the day is passing," Sun Bird said, cheerfully, as the sun sank +slowly toward the west. "Pretty soon we will be under those trees, +drinking that water." + +"It is good," the Minneconjoux murmured, thickly. + +Although they watched closely until the grove finally faded from sight +in the evening shadows, they saw nothing of their foes. They were quite +convinced that the Crows had eluded the Blackfeet, and that the latter +had gone to their village to boast of their victory. + +"We will go," Sun Bird said, as darkness at last fell upon the plain. + +They moved eagerly along the ravine, and once more the parched ponies +tried to bolt from the control of their riders. The latter were still +smarting from the rebuke of Sitting Eagle, and they soon brought the +unruly little beasts under subjection. However, it was impossible to +quiet them. They snorted and squealed and whinnied, and the Sioux +realized that it was hopeless to try to reach the grove without being +heard. + +"Well, if our enemies are over there they know that we are coming," +Sitting Eagle declared, irritably. + +"It is true," agreed Sun Bird. "But they do not know who we are. If the +Blackfeet are over there they will take us for Crows. If the Crows are +over there they will take us for Blackfeet. It is good. When we get near +that place we will stop. Then we will send scouts over there to find out +about it. If our enemies are there we will find out who they are. Then +we will run away before they find out about us." + +"It is good," said Sitting Eagle. + +When they finally came opposite the grove which contained the pool they +again fought the desperate ponies into submission and made heroic +efforts to keep them quiet. Then Sun Bird selected White Otter and +Sitting Eagle to go forward on foot to reconnoiter the cottonwoods. + +"Those great scouts will find out about it," he boasted, as the two +famous Dacotahs slipped away as noiselessly as shadows. + +It seemed a long time to the anxious Sioux before White Otter finally +returned and said that the grove was free from foes. The announcement +filled them with joy. Throwing caution to the winds, they rode out of +the ravine and raced recklessly toward the cottonwoods. Once at the pool +it was impossible to restrain the ponies, and the riders were forced to +wait until the frenzied animals had satisfied their thirst. Then the +Sioux plunged their feverish faces into the roily water and drank as +eagerly as the ponies. + +"Ah," Sun Bird sighed, contentedly, as he finally rose to his feet. + +Having drunk their fill, the ponies became quiet and turned to graze +upon the scant growth of grass about the pool. The Sioux, however, +remained alert. Their noisy arrival at the pool had made them uneasy. +They had vague, disturbing premonitions of danger, and they feared to +linger in the grove. + +"If our enemies come and surround this place it will be hard to get +away," Sun Bird said, anxiously. "Come, we will go." + +At that moment one of the ponies whinnied, and the Sioux were astounded +to hear it answered from the plain. Then they heard a horse galloping +toward the west. They turned to one another in alarm. + +"Our enemies have caught us!" they cried. + +"Wait," White Otter counseled, calmly. "I believe that rider is a scout. +Perhaps he is alone. We will listen. If he is with a war party then we +will hear signals. If he keeps quiet there is nothing to fear." + +"It is good," agreed the Minneconjoux. + +They listened in tense silence. Then, as the moments passed and they +heard nothing to suggest the approach of their foes, they felt +considerably relieved. Still they were somewhat fearful about leaving +the timber. They realized that either the Crows or the Blackfeet might +have surrounded the grove and sent the scout forward as a decoy to lure +them upon the open plain. + +"Well, my brothers, that rider knows that some one is at this pool," +declared Sun Bird. "If he is a scout he will tell his people about it. I +believe if we wait here something bad will come of it. If we go away our +enemies will not know that the Dacotahs were here. If we expect to get +to the great Blackfeet camp we must not let our enemies know about us." + +The Sioux instantly saw the wisdom of his words and agreed that it +would be safer to abandon the grove and continue toward the mountains. +Dancing Rabbit told them that if they continued to ride through the +night, daylight would find them close upon the foothills. + +"It is good--we will go," said Sun Bird. + +They left the grove and moved slowly across the plain in the direction +of the ravine. The ponies were quiet and docile, and it seemed as if the +clever little beasts were attempting to make amends for the anxiety and +effort they had caused their riders a short time before. As the war +party drew near the ravine Sun Bird ordered a halt while he sent scouts +forward to reconnoiter. They soon returned and declared that the way was +clear. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +AN UNUSUAL ADVENTURE + + +Upon reaching the ravine the Sioux turned toward the west and rode until +daylight. Then they found themselves almost within the shadows of the +great massive peaks which towered against the sky. The low timbered +ridges of the foothills were still nearer at hand, and the air was +scented with fragrance from the dense stand of pines. + +"It is good," declared Sun Bird. "Pretty soon we will come to those +great mountains. Then we can hide from our enemies until we find the +Blackfeet camp." + +Having failed to find any further evidence of their foes, they began to +feel more secure. They gave little thought to the horseman who had +blundered upon them at the pool, for it appeared certain that both the +Crows and the Blackfeet had withdrawn from the vicinity. Encouraged by +the thought, the Sioux determined to continue toward the mountains. + +When they reached the first ridge of foothills, Sitting Eagle, who was +familiar with the region, led the way along a game trail. It wound +upward from the plain, and brought them to a grassy meadow with a cold +bubbling spring in one corner of it. As it offered an attractive camp +site, the Sioux determined to stop. + +After the ponies had been picketed and the camp established, several +young warriors went into the woods with their bows to look for game. It +was not long before they returned with a fat, young, white-tail deer. + +As the camp site was a considerable height above the plain and well +hidden by the heavy stand of timber, the Sioux determined to risk making +a small fire. Then they broiled the deer meat and ate with keen +enjoyment. They had suddenly relaxed. For the moment the hardships and +perils of the war trail were forgotten. They talked and laughed and told +stories, and became as carefree and happy as boys. The merry feast +continued well into the night. When it finally ended, the sentinels took +their positions about the camp while their companions wrapped themselves +in their robes and lay down to sleep. + +Shortly after daylight the Sioux descended to the plain and rode +northward along the base of the ridge. They kept within bowshot of the +timber so that they might conceal themselves if they found signs of +their foes. Dancing Rabbit declared that the Blackfeet camp was a number +of days' travel farther to the northward, and for the present at least +the Sioux had little fear of blundering into those foes. However, they +believed that the Crows might be somewhere in the vicinity and they +determined to keep a sharp watch. + +"We will keep going ahead until we get near the Blackfeet camp," said +Sun Bird. "Then we will stop. Then some of us will climb those great +mountains and look for the Blackfeet lodges." + +For two days they traveled cautiously along the edge of the foothills +without seeing anything to arouse their suspicions. Game, however, was +abundant. They saw countless numbers of buffaloes, great herds of elk, +and many deer and antelope. + +"This is a good place to live in," declared White Otter. + +"Yes, there is plenty of game here," replied Sun Bird. + +Then they again saw Huya, the war bird. The eagle was soaring high up +near the snowclad peaks. The Sioux watched it with superstitious +premonitions. They believed it was an omen--a warning that foes were +near at hand. + +"See, Huya has come back to tell us about our enemies," said Sun Bird. +"I believe we are near the Blackfeet. We must watch out." + +Disturbed by the appearance of Huya, the war bird, and determined to run +no risk of betraying themselves to their foes, the Sioux decided to seek +shelter in the foothills while scouts climbed the ridges to look for the +Blackfeet camp. While the war party moved cautiously along the edge of +the plain, Sun Bird sent scouts into the timber to look for a suitable +camp site. At the end of the day they found a sheltered grassy park high +up near the summit of the ridge, and the Sioux determined to make it +their rendezvous until they were ready to advance upon the Blackfeet. + +The following day, at dawn, Sun Bird and White Otter left the war party +and set out along the summit of the ridge to look for traces of the +Blackfeet camp. Other scouts rode cautiously along the edge of the plain +to watch for signs of the Crows or scouting parties of Blackfeet. + +Although Sun Bird and White Otter had a splendid view of the plain they +failed to discover any evidence of the Blackfeet camp. When they finally +saw a large herd of buffaloes grazing contentedly a considerable +distance to the northward, they became convinced that the hostile camp +was far beyond their view. + +"It is useless to look any more," declared White Otter. "The Blackfeet +camp is a long ways off." + +"Yes, it must be so," said Sun Bird. "We will go back and tell our +friends about it." + +"Wait," White Otter cried, eagerly. "Here is the trail of great +Matohota." + +Sun Bird hastened to his side and saw the fresh tracks of a grizzly +bear. The trail led down into the timber. The footprints were of unusual +size, and the Sioux studied them with flashing eyes. The Dacotahs +considered killing great Matohota an exploit worthy of the bravest +warrior, and only second in importance to killing an enemy. A necklace +of bear claws was accepted as positive proof of the hunting ability and +courage of the wearer. Although both Sun Bird and White Otter had killed +several of those fierce beasts, they became enthusiastic at the idea of +securing the great claws of the bear which had recently passed. + +"If we kill Matohota we will have something to show our friends," said +White Otter. + +"He cannot be far away," Sun Bird declared, hopefully. "Come, we will +follow him." + +They followed the trail down through the timber, and about half way +down the ridge it brought them within sight of another open grassy park. +Aware that those places were favorite feeding places for elk and deer, +the expert young hunters realized that the grizzly might have gone there +to feast upon the carcass of one of those animals. + +"We must be careful," White Otter warned, softly. + +They approached the spot with great caution, peering anxiously between +the trees to discover the grizzly. As the wind favored them, they hoped +to get within bow range without alarming their game. However, when they +finally came in full view of the park the bear was nowhere in sight. +They were keenly disappointed. + +"Matohota has gone on," said Sun Bird. + +"We will see," replied White Otter. + +They stole to the edge of the timber and looked anxiously across the +grassy meadow. The trail of the bear was plainly visible through the +high grass. As they followed it with their eyes they suddenly discovered +something lying in the far corner of the park. One glance told them that +it was dead, but it was some time before they could make sure what it +was. Then they looked at each other in astonishment. They had suddenly +identified the object as a dead pony. The discovery made them cautious, +and they sank noiselessly into the bushes to watch. + +"It is mysterious," whispered Sun Bird. "How did that pony come here?" + +"We will try to find out about it, but first we must watch," replied +White Otter. + +They watched a long time, searching the borders of the meadow with great +care. It was difficult to learn much about the dead pony from where they +were, but they saw that the carcass had been partly eaten, and they +believed it had been there for some time. + +"It is good," said White Otter. "Matohota comes here to eat that pony. +If we wait here we will see him." + +"Perhaps he is sleeping over there in those bushes," suggested Sun Bird. + +They knew that after gorging itself with meat, a bear often would lie +down to sleep near the carcass, so that it would find a meal close at +hand when it again became hungry. It seemed probable, therefore, that +the great creature which they sought might be concealed somewhere within +bow range of them. They looked carefully along the edge of the woods, +hoping to discover a sign which would tell them where the bear had +entered the timber. The undergrowth appeared undisturbed, and, as the +trail faded out at the spot where the grass had been trampled down about +the carcass, there seemed little chance of learning what they wished to +know unless they made their way to the dead pony. + +"We must go over there and find out about it," Sun Bird proposed, +finally. + +"Come," said White Otter. + +They moved through the timber as stealthily as wolves, and when they +drew near the carcass they again stopped to watch and listen. Then they +circled to find the trail of the bear. They came upon a wide game trail +leading down from the park, and as they stooped to study it they +discovered many tracks. Among them were the footprints of the great gray +timber wolves, and the clumsy round paw-marks of a mountain lion. The +latter track was fresh, and it was evident that the great cat had passed +over the trail since daylight. The tracks of the bear, however, were +missing. + +"Matohota did not come this way," said Sun Bird. + +"Perhaps he is close by," White Otter said, cautiously. "We will try to +find out where he is. Then we will go and look at that pony. It came +along this trail. See, here is a track." + +He showed Sun Bird a faint and indistinct impression of a hoof at one +side of the trail. It was some days old, and offered them little +information. + +"Come, we will find out what has become of Matohota, and then we will +come back here and find out about this thing," said White Otter. + +They soon came upon the trail of the bear. As White Otter had guessed, +it circled around the edge of the park, and led back toward the top of +the ridge. It was plain, therefore, that the bear had its den somewhere +up there among the ledges, and came to the park to feed during the night +or at daylight. + +"Now we know what to do," declared White Otter. "First we will go and +look at that pony. Then we will go down that trail and try to find some +more tracks. Then we will come back to this place and wait for +Matohota." + +"It is good," said Sun Bird. + +When they reached the dead pony they were surprised to see the shaft of +an arrow protruding from behind its shoulder. For a moment or so they +studied it in silence. Then White Otter knelt, and drew his knife. + +"Perhaps we will find out what we want to know," he said. + +He extracted the arrow and examined it with great care, and then he +passed it to Sun Bird. The latter studied it a long time. He noted that +the shaft was of willow and feathered along the sides for almost a +hand-width. The arrow was considerably longer than those used by the +Dacotahs, and the point was made of an unusual red flint. It was the +deeply notched model of the war arrows. + +"Well, what do you make of it?" White Otter inquired, as Sun Bird +finished examining it. + +"It is not a Dacotah arrow," replied Sun Bird. "It is not a Crow arrow. +It was not made by the Blackfeet. I do not know who made it." + +"I cannot tell you about it," said White Otter, as Sun Bird returned the +mysterious arrow. "I do not know about the people who live in this +country. I know the Crow arrows. I have seen the Blackfeet arrows. I do +not know the others." + +"I will show it to Sitting Eagle and Lean Wolf," said Sun Bird. "Perhaps +they will know about it." + +As there seemed to be no other way of learning its identity, they +dismissed the arrow from their minds and turned their attention upon the +dead pony. It was a pinto, and appeared to have been dead a number of +days. They had little doubt that, having been wounded on the plain, it +had followed the game trail to the spot where it died. + +"Perhaps the man who owned that pony rode up here to get away from his +enemies," suggested Sun Bird. + +"Perhaps," said White Otter. + +Then, as the day had almost ended, they realized that if they intended +to remain and watch for Matohota it was time to find a hiding place. As +there was not sufficient breeze to stir the leaves, White Otter held a +moistened finger above his head to learn the direction of the air +current. What there was seemed to come from the north side of the park. +As the bear was expected to approach from the west, and the bait was on +the east side of the park, the Sioux decided to hide themselves to the +southward of the dead pony. Then if the uncertain breeze should suddenly +shift to another quarter they would still be to the leeward of the bear. + +"Matohota is strong," cautioned White Otter. "We must drive our arrows +deep into his body. We must not go too far away." + +They concealed themselves in the undergrowth within easy bowshot of the +bait and determined to watch until the bear appeared. The light was +already fading from the park, and the heavy evening shadows were forming +at the edge of the woods. Then, as darkness settled down, the moon +flooded the little park with its silvery light. + +"It is good," whispered Sun Bird. "Wakantunka has sent Hanyetuwi, the +night sun, to give us light." + +"It is good," replied White Otter. + +They had little hope that Matohota would appear before daylight, and +still they realized that he might come to feed under cover of the night. +It was not long, however, before they heard other prowlers approaching +the bait. The crackling of brush, and soft, stealthy footfalls caused +them to watch expectantly. A lithe, shadowy form moved swiftly into the +moonlight. It stopped a moment and raised a long pointed snout into the +air. Then it trotted gracefully to the bait. The Sioux recognized it as +Huhasapedan, the fox. They watched with great interest as the suspicious +creature circled warily about the carcass, stopping in alarm at the +slightest sound, and peering nervously into the shadows. It had barely +begun to eat, when a second woods prowler entered the park and moved +slowly toward the bait. The fox crouched behind the pony and watched +uneasily. + +"Wolf," whispered White Otter. + +The wolf had discovered the fox and was bristling and growling, as it +walked stiffly toward the pony. Awed by the threats of its formidable +rival, the fox slunk to the edge of the timber and sat upon its +haunches to watch until the wolf left the carcass. The wolf feasted +ravenously, tearing large pieces of flesh from the bait and growling +savagely as it ate. It was one of the great gaunt timber wolves, and the +Sioux longed to pierce it with their arrows. They resisted the +temptation, however, for they knew that Matohota might become suspicious +at the scent of fresh blood. + +"It would be foolish," said White Otter. + +The wolf refused to leave until it had gorged itself with meat, and then +it moved threateningly toward the fox. The latter immediately retreated +across the park and failed to show itself until the wolf had slunk into +the shadows. + +The fox had barely returned to the bait when it was again interrupted by +another nocturnal prowler. A short, catlike snarl sounded from the +direction of the game trail, and as the fox paused to listen, a long, +crouching form appeared at the edge of the moonlight. Two glowing eyes +blazed defiance, and the fox bounded into the woods. + +"It is fierce Imutanka," breathed Sun Bird. + +They had instantly recognized the stealthy prowler as a mountain lion. +They watched with bated breath as the great cat moved cautiously toward +the carcass. In spite of its size and strength it seemed as wary and +fearful as Huhasapedan, the fox. It would slink forward a few paces and +then stop and look furtively about the park. Once it sniffed +suspiciously, and parted its lips in a silent snarl. Had it caught the +wolf scent? Was great Matohota approaching? The Sioux grew tense at the +thought. As the lion drew nearer the pony it crouched close to the +ground, growling and nervously lashing its tail. It appeared to be +preparing to spring upon the carcass. It was an unusually large +specimen, and the Sioux were eager to secure so noble a trophy. + +"Come, we will kill Imutanka," suggested Sun Bird. + +"Wait," cautioned White Otter. + +A moment afterward a great bulky form appeared at the opposite side of +the park. The Sioux recognized it at once. It was great Matohota, the +grizzly. His sudden appearance caused their hearts to beat wildly +against their ribs, while their eyes flashed with the light of battle. +He was a foe worthy of the bravest warrior, and the young Dacotahs +longed for the chance to engage him in battle. + +A slight breeze was stirring from the eastward, and Matohota had +evidently caught the scent of the mountain lion. He had raised his head +and was staring across the park. The Sioux looked toward the lion. It, +too, had discovered the bear, and was crouching behind the pony, and +grumbling threateningly. + +"Imutanka will run away," whispered Sun Bird. + +"Watch!" cautioned White Otter. + +The bear had ambled clumsily into the open, and was following its trail +across the park. The Sioux turned their eyes upon the lion. They +expected to see it slinking away. Imutanka, however, showed no such +intention. His blazing eyes and ugly snarls made it plain that he had no +idea of running away. Still, the Sioux could not believe he would dare +to oppose the mighty Matohota. + +"Imutanka looks brave, but he will run away," insisted Sun Bird. + +"We will see," said White Otter. + +As the bear came closer the Sioux saw that it was even larger than they +had guessed it to be. Matohota looked more than a match for sinewy +Imutanka, but the latter still held his ground. It was apparent that +having secured possession of the carcass he had no thought of +surrendering it without a fight. The Sioux thrilled at the possibility. + +"If Imutanka stays there we will see something to talk about," Sun Bird +whispered, eagerly. + +"Yes, yes, it will be a great fight," replied White Otter. + +The bold defiance of the lion seemed to have made Matohota realize the +need of caution. He had stopped and was shaking his great head from side +to side and growling fiercely. Imutanka replied to his challenge with +short, throaty snarls. Then for some moments each gazed into the blazing +eyes of the other and appeared to be estimating the strength and courage +of its adversary. The Sioux were fascinated by the unusual spectacle. +For the moment their desire to kill was overcome by their curiosity to +learn the outcome of the fight. + +It was some time, however, before the huge Matohota made up his mind to +attack his rival. Then, having determined to gain possession of the +bait, he rushed furiously upon the lion. The great sinewy cat had little +difficulty in avoiding him. Then, as Matohota whirled about with amazing +agility, the lion made its spring. Matohota reared upon his hind legs +and struck the lion to earth with his huge paw. Imutanka uttered a sharp +whine of pain and sprang aside. It was evident that Matohota had drawn +first blood. He dropped to all fours and turned quickly about as the +lion circled him. The Sioux saw that Imutanka was bleeding freely from a +deep gash in the neck. However, the wound only seemed to rouse the lion +to greater fury. Spitting, snarling, and growling, it glided stealthily +about its adversary, watching for an opening. Matohota, however, was +equally alert, and in spite of his great bulk he was sufficiently quick +to baffle his foe. Each time Imutanka crouched to spring, Matohota rose +upon his hind legs and held his great forepaws ready to deal another +deadly blow. Then the lion would immediately relax and attempt to glide +behind him, and Matohota would drop down and whirl about in time to +prevent the attack. + +"Matohota is a great fighter," Sun Bird told White Otter. + +"Imutanka is quick, he will fool Matohota," replied White Otter. + +A moment later his prophecy was fulfilled. The lion had crouched to +spring, and Matohota reared to protect himself. Then Imutanka sprang far +to one side, and as Matohota dropped Imutanka was directly behind him. +Before Matohota could turn the lion was upon his back. Its great claws +tore down through the thick, shaggy coat, and ripped great gashes in his +flesh and its flashing fangs sank deep into the back of his neck. Quick +to understand his peril, Matohota threw himself and attempted to roll +over upon his back. Failing in his efforts to dislodge the lion, +Matohota rose upon his hind legs and fell over backward to crush the +lion beneath his great bulk. Imutanka was too cunning to be caught. +Releasing his hold he sprang away, and as Matohota crashed to the ground +the lion jumped for his throat. Matohota caught him in a crushing +embrace, and the fight became deadly. Rolling wildly over the ground the +ferocious beasts bit and tore each other until it seemed that neither +could survive the encounter. + +The Sioux looked on with glistening eyes. The savage duel had roused +their own hot fighting blood and they were eager to enter the fray. + +"Come, we will kill both of them," cried Sun Bird, as he fitted an arrow +to his bow. + +"Wait, wait," urged White Otter. "We will see who is the greatest +warrior." + +They watched, therefore, while the fight raged with unabated fury. At +last the superior strength of the great Matohota gave him the victory. +The lion broke free and sprang from the range of his deadly paws. It +crouched and faced him for a moment, and then as he reared to defend +himself, Imutanka weakened and turned to slink away into the night. + +"Come!" cried Sun Bird, as he rose to his feet. + +Two arrows pierced the heart of fierce Imutanka and he fell dead in his +tracks. Matohota whirled about at the sharp twang of the bowstrings, and +roared defiance at the two figures on the edge of the moonlight. Then as +he rushed forward to destroy them in his wrath, he, too, collapsed from +the shock of two burning arrows in his great hairy chest. The next +moment he rose to his feet and reared unsteadily to repeat the tactics +which had proved successful against fierce Imutanka. This time, however, +it was a fatal error, for the Sioux drove their arrows through his heart +and great Matohota crashed headlong into the grass and followed Imutanka +on the Long Trail. + +"Hi, we have done a big thing," Sun Bird cried, excitedly, as he rushed +into the park to examine the trophies. + +"We will have something to tell about," laughed White Otter. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +AN ENCOUNTER WITH THE FLATHEADS + + +The elated young Sioux lost little time in removing the great claws from +Matohota and the cruel, sharp talons from fierce Imutanka. They longed +to take the pelts as well, but they realized that it would be folly to +burden themselves with them. They spent some time, however, examining +the wounds which the savage creatures had inflicted upon each other. The +lion had bitten deeply into the back of Matohota's neck and ripped +terrible gashes in his back. Matohota had taken full revenge. His great +claws had torn gaping wounds in the chest and shoulders of Imutanka and +it was evident that the lion would have expired from loss of blood if +the Sioux had not ended its agony with their arrows. They decided, +therefore, that great Matohota should be credited with victory. + +"Imutanka was very brave, but Matohota was too strong for him," declared +Sun Bird. + +"Yes, Matohota won the fight," agreed White Otter. + +As the night was far advanced they determined to wait until daylight +before setting out to rejoin their companions. They spent some time +dancing solemnly about their victims, and chanting their war songs. Then +they opened the carcasses of the bear and the lion and removed the +hearts. They cut them into two parts and ate them with superstitious +zeal. It was an ancient custom of the Dacotahs, who believed that by +consuming the heart of a particularly strong and courageous bear or lion +they would absorb the strength and courage of the animal itself. + +At dawn the Sioux determined to follow the game trail to the plain, in +the hope of encountering some of the war party. They had thoughtfully +cut the arrows from the bodies of Matohota and Imutanka so that if +either the Blackfeet or the Crows chanced to visit the spot they would +be unable to guess who had ventured upon their hunting grounds. + +"Perhaps we will find out something about that pony," suggested Sun +Bird, as they moved slowly down the game trail. + +"See, here are the tracks of Imutanka," said White Otter. + +The trail of the lion was plainly visible. The Sioux gave little +attention to it. Their interest in fierce Imutanka had ended with his +death. They were curious, however, to learn more about the unfortunate +pony. They watched closely to find its tracks. They were faint and far +apart, and although Sun Bird and White Otter were expert trailers they +could gain little information from the unsatisfactory trail. + +Then the game trail suddenly led them to an open plateau which offered +an extended view of the plain. They saw a small company of horsemen +riding toward the ridge. They studied them closely. There were eight. + +"Perhaps our friends are looking for us," said Sun Bird. + +White Otter remained silent. His whole attention was concentrated upon +the approaching horsemen. They were a considerable distance below him +and some distance from the base of the ridge. It was difficult to +identify them, but the Ogalala was straining his eyes in the attempt. He +was particularly noting the ponies, as he had become thoroughly familiar +with the color and type of every animal in the Minneconjoux war party. +He failed to recognize any of the ponies which were approaching the +timber. One was a buckskin, and there were two pintos. There were +several such animals in the Sioux war party, but they differed in type +from the ponies on the plain. White Otter was suspicious of the +approaching horsemen. Sun Bird, too, was becoming uneasy about them. + +"Who are they?" he asked, anxiously. + +"They are not our people," White Otter assured him. "I do not know who +they are. Do you know them?" + +"No," replied Sun Bird. + +They watched anxiously while the riders drew nearer the base of the +ridge. As they finally came within bow range of the timber, they stopped +and began to watch the ridge. For a moment the Sioux wondered if the +horsemen had discovered them. It seemed impossible, as they had hidden +themselves in the undergrowth the moment they discovered the riders. + +"No, they did not see us," White Otter declared, confidently. "I believe +they are scouts. Perhaps they are Blackfeet." + +"No, they are not Blackfeet," said Sun Bird. "I know those people a long +ways off." + +"Well, they do not look like Crows," White Otter told him. + +"No, they are not Crows," replied Sun Bird. + +"Who are they?" demanded White Otter. + +"I cannot tell you that until they come closer," Sun Bird told him. + +In the meantime one of the horsemen had left his companions and was +riding cautiously toward the ridge. His friends were watching him +closely and seemed ready to rush to his assistance at the first warning +of danger. As the scout drew steadily nearer, the Sioux studied him with +great care. Sun Bird was positive that he was not a Blackfoot, and both +of them were equally certain that he was not a Crow. The Crows allowed +their hair to grow to great length, and wore it in two massive braids +which often fell below their knees. The man who was approaching the +ridge, however, had a great abundance of rather short, unbraided hair, +which fell loosely about his shoulders. As Sun Bird noted it, and the +high, peculiar shape of the warrior's head he suddenly identified him. + +"Now I know about him," he told White Otter. "He is a Flathead. It is +bad. They are enemies of my people. We must watch out." + +"I have heard my grandfather tell about those people," said White Otter. + +He recalled the stories which old Wolf Robe had told about how the +Flatheads flattened the heads of their children by tightly binding the +skulls of the babies between stiff slabs of bark, and keeping them in +the vise until the skulls were pressed into the desired shape. Those +strange people considered a high, flat skull a great mark of beauty. As +they were a northern tribe, hovering about the mountains, it was the +first time White Otter had encountered them. He studied the approaching +rider with curious interest. + +"They are great hunters," Sun Bird told him. "I believe these riders are +coming to this ridge to hunt." + +"Perhaps they will follow this trail," suggested White Otter. "Perhaps +they will go up there where we killed Matohota, to watch for game." + +Sun Bird started at the suggestion. It appeared to have offered an +interesting possibility. He drew the mysterious arrow from his bowcase, +and smiled significantly at White Otter. + +"Now I know about this thing," he said. "This arrow came from the +Flatheads." + +White Otter nodded understandingly. + +In the meantime the Flathead scout had reached the base of the ridge and +disappeared from their sight. They turned their attention to the company +of horsemen who were waiting on the plain. They seemed to be watching +for the signal to advance. + +"Those people are very cautious," said White Otter. + +"Perhaps they are afraid of the Blackfeet," Sun Bird told him. + +Then they heard a shout from the base of the ridge, and the horsemen +cantered briskly toward the timber. The Sioux realized that it was time +to move from the plateau. They believed it would be easy to return to +the top of the ridge and escape from their enemies. Sun Bird, however, +showed a desire to linger. + +"Those look like good ponies," he told White Otter, as his eyes twinkled +mischievously. "The Flatheads are our enemies. They have killed some of +my people. I feel like taking away some of those ponies." + +"You are the leader, I will follow you," White Otter said, quietly. + +"It is good," Sun Bird declared, enthusiastically. + +Their first thought, however, was to conceal themselves sufficiently +near the game trail to see the Flatheads if they passed. It was a bold +resolve, and the eyes of the daring young Sioux flashed with excitement. +They had been taught from infancy that the noblest aim of a warrior was +to inflict punishment upon his enemies, and they determined to make the +most of their opportunity. They concealed themselves within easy bowshot +of the trail, and waited anxiously for the Flatheads to appear. It was +not long before the Sioux heard them approaching. + +"They are coming," whispered Sun Bird. + +They watched in breathless suspense, and in a few moments they saw the +first horseman appear at the edge of the plateau. His companions +followed closely behind him. The Sioux were greatly surprised when the +Flatheads stopped their ponies in the center of the open park and began +to dismount. Then the ponies were left with two warriors and the other +members of the company passed up the game trail on foot. The Sioux had a +splendid view of them at close range. They were tall, muscular men, +whose high, flattened skulls gave them a weird and sinister expression. +As they were not painted for war, the Sioux believed they were hunters. + +"Perhaps they will find our tracks," Sun Bird whispered, uneasily, after +they had passed. + +White Otter looked serious. The possibility had already flashed through +his mind, and he was troubled about it. He knew that even one indistinct +impression of a fresh moccasin track would arouse the suspicions of the +Flatheads, and send them hurrying to the plateau to investigate. Then it +would be impossible to capture the ponies, and difficult to get away. + +"The ground is hard," Sun Bird said, hopefully. "We did not make many +tracks." + +"The eyes of a hunter are sharp," White Otter cautioned him. + +Realizing that there was nothing to be gained by worrying over the +possibility of the Flatheads discovering their tracks, the Sioux +dismissed the thought from their minds and turned their attention upon +the warriors with the ponies. The latter had incautiously turned loose +the ponies to graze in the center of the park and had stationed +themselves on opposite sides of the plateau to watch them. The Sioux +instantly saw their opportunity. + +"Those warriors are very foolish," Sun Bird said, excitedly. "Now we can +creep up and get two of those ponies." + +"We must be quick," White Otter told him. "Those other warriors may come +back." + +"I will take that yellow pony, it looks fast," said Sun Bird. + +"I will take the spotted pony with the white tail," said White Otter. + +Having made their selection, the Sioux realized that they must attempt +their daring coup without a moment's delay. They moved through the +undergrowth with the alert, silent stealth of Huhasapedan, the fox. +When they were almost at the edge of the park they stopped to plan their +reckless dash upon the ponies. The animals which they hoped to secure +were grazing near the edge of the timber and the Flathead who guarded +them was picking berries a short distance away. The Sioux crawled a +bowlength nearer. Then as one of the ponies suddenly raised its head, +they stopped and waited with thumping hearts to learn if they had been +discovered. The unsuspecting animal resumed its feeding, however, and +the Sioux breathed more easily. Again they moved carefully toward the +border of the park. Their eyes were fixed upon the ponies, and their +ears were open to catch the first warning that the Flatheads had found +their tracks. + +When they finally reached the edge of the timber, the ponies which they +had selected were almost within reach of them. They were grazing +quietly, and the long rawhide lariats were trailing between their feet. +The Flathead had turned his back upon them and was stooped over +searching for berries in the long grass. The warrior on the opposite +side of the park was lying in the shade of a tree. The Sioux realized +that their opportunity was at hand. Each fastened his eyes upon the +animal he planned to capture and prepared to rush into the park. At +that moment, however, they heard a signal from the upper end of the game +trail. The truth instantly flashed through their minds. The Flathead +hunters had discovered their trail. + +"Come!" cried White Otter. + +They jumped to their feet and rushed recklessly into the park. Then as +the startled ponies turned in panic, the Sioux sprang forward and seized +the lariats. The next moment they had mounted and were riding furiously +down the game trail. They chuckled with boyish glee as they heard the +alarmed Flathead guards yelling frantically for their companions. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +A CLEVER STRATAGEM + + +At the time that Sun Bird and White Otter set out to climb the ridge to +search for the Blackfeet camp, Lean Wolf and Sitting Eagle rode +northward along the edge of the timber to look for signs of their +enemies. They were particularly anxious to locate the Crows, who, they +feared, were somewhere in the vicinity. They rode until the day was half +gone, and then, having seen nothing of their foes, determined to return +to their companions. As they were cantering slowly toward a deep ravine +which they had crossed earlier in the day, their ponies suddenly began +to raise their ears and whinny. The Sioux instantly stopped in alarm. + +"Watch out!" cautioned Lean Wolf. + +He had barely given the warning when a great company of horsemen rode +out of the ravine and raced toward the astounded Sioux. The latter +instantly recognized the riders as Crows. They were almost upon them and +the Sioux wheeled their ponies and rode madly across the plain. + +"This way! This way!" cried Sitting Eagle, as he turned toward the +north. + +The Crows were within bowshot and their arrows were falling all about +the crouching Sioux. The latter urged their ponies to a frantic burst of +speed to escape from the fierce attack. Stride by stride they distanced +their pursuers until they were beyond arrow range. Then the Crows +withheld their arrows and began to lash their ponies in an attempt to +again get within bow range. + +"Keep low on your pony," cautioned Lean Wolf. "Perhaps they do not know +who we are." + +"Yes, yes, we will try to fool them," replied Sitting Eagle. + +Then as the two ponies raced along side by side he told Lean Wolf about +a narrow, shut-in cañon which extended back into the foothills. He said +it was only a short distance ahead of them. + +"If we run into that place the Crows cannot get us," Sitting Eagle +declared, confidently. + +"It is good, we will go there," agreed Lean Wolf. + +The Crows were trying desperately to come within arrow range, but the +gallant Sioux ponies were holding their lead and their riders had little +fear of being overtaken. They believed that the Crow ponies had reached +the limit of their speed and that further urging would cause them to +collapse. + +The Sioux finally reached the cañon a safe distance ahead of their +pursuers. After they had ridden through the narrow entrance, they +dismounted and sought safety behind two great boulders which guarded the +pass. + +"Now we can hold off our enemies," Sitting Eagle said, with evident +relief. + +"Yes, it will be hard for them to come through here," declared Lean +Wolf. + +The Crows, however, showed no disposition to make the attempt. They +seemed to realize the strength of the Sioux position and appeared +reluctant to make an attack. They gathered in a compact group well +beyond arrow range, and held a council of war. + +"They will wait until it gets dark," declared Sitting Eagle. "Then they +will try to get into this place." + +"We will be ready," Lean Wolf said, doggedly. "But perhaps the Crows +will keep us here a long time. We have no water. It is bad." + +"There is a little pool a short ways behind us, and there is plenty of +grass for the ponies," Sitting Eagle assured him. + +"It is good," Lean Wolf declared, heartily. "We can stay here until the +Crows get tired and go away." + +When the day finally ended and twilight fell upon the plain, the Sioux +became more alert. They feared that the crafty Crows would make an +attempt to creep into the cañon under cover of the darkness, and they +determined to be prepared. Crouching behind the bowlders, they peered +anxiously into the night, listening for the sound of stealthy footfalls +at the entrance to the cañon. Then, as time passed and the stillness was +unbroken, they began to wonder. Had the Crows suddenly departed? The +Sioux had grave doubts. + +"No, they have not gone away," Lean Wolf told Sitting Eagle. "I believe +they took us for Blackfeet. They are very mad at those people. I believe +they will try hard to kill us." + +"Listen!" cautioned Sitting Eagle. + +They heard something moving cautiously near the entrance to the pass. +Fearing that the Crows were about to make an attack, the Sioux fitted +arrows to their bows and prepared to offer desperate resistance. Then +they again heard some one creeping stealthily toward them through the +night. + +"It is a scout," whispered Lean Wolf. + +Sitting Eagle rose to his knees, and shot his arrow toward the sounds. +There was a noisy scramble from the pass, and they knew that the +invaders had been driven off. Then for a long time they heard nothing +further from their foes. Shortly before daylight, however, a small +company of reckless young warriors rushed boldly into the narrow defile +and made a valiant attempt to overcome the Sioux. The latter fought +furiously, and the Crows were forced to withdraw. Their foolhardy +display of bravery had cost the lives of several of them. + +The Sioux were greatly encouraged by their success in holding the pass. +They believed that the Crows would be slow to renew the attack. They had +withdrawn beyond arrow range, and as dawn lighted the plain the Sioux +saw them gathered in earnest discussion some distance from the cañon. + +"Perhaps they will go away," Sitting Eagle said, hopefully. + +"No, I do not believe it," replied Lean Wolf. "Listen, they are singing +their war songs. We must be ready." + +A few moments afterward the entire Crow war party galloped toward the +cañon. As they came within arrow range, however, they dropped behind +their ponies and raced past yelling fiercely. + +"Save your arrows!" shouted Lean Wolf. + +"Yes, yes, I see what they are trying to do," Sitting Eagle told him. + +They realized at once that their wily foes were attempting to make them +waste their arrows. When the Crows saw that the trick had failed, they +immediately withdrew beyond arrow range. This time, however, they +disappeared from sight over a rise of the plain. The Sioux looked at one +another in surprise. The unexpected maneuver made them suspicious. + +"They are trying to fool us," said Sitting Eagle. + +"Yes, they are trying to make us come out so that they can catch us," +declared Lean Wolf. + +Then their suspicions were confirmed as they saw several warriors +peeping over the crest of the rise. The Sioux laughed and jeered at +them, and the Crows instantly withdrew from sight. They remained hidden +for the rest of the day, but the Sioux had little doubt that sharp-eyed +scouts were constantly watching the pass. + +"If they do not come when it gets dark, we will know that they have gone +away," said Sitting Eagle. + +They watched in weary suspense as the long day finally drew to a close. +The Crows, however, failed to appear. It seemed as if they really had +abandoned the siege, and still the Sioux feared to believe it. +Experience had taught them that the Crows were crafty and treacherous +foes, and they feared that they were planning some clever ruse to gain +admission to the cañon. + +"We must keep watching," Lean Wolf said, suspiciously. + +The night was well advanced before they heard anything to arouse their +fears. Then they again caught the sound of some one moving toward the +cañon. + +"Watch out, they have come!" whispered Sitting Eagle. + +"I hear them," Lean Wolf replied. + +The next moment a wild chorus of yells warned them that the entire Crow +force was crowding into the narrow pass. The Sioux knew that the +critical moment was at hand. The Crows had left their ponies out on the +plain and had crept toward the cañon on foot. It was evident that they +were determined to kill their foes at any cost, and the Sioux realized +that unless they could stop the first fierce rush there was no hope for +them. + +"Come, we are Dacotahs, we will show these people how to fight!" Lean +Wolf cried, savagely. + +They rose behind the bowlders and delivered a deadly volley of arrows +that threw the Crows into confusion. For a moment they hesitated, and +the Sioux took hope. Then the Crows rallied and rushed recklessly upon +their foes. The Sioux took shelter behind the bowlders and fought with +the fury of despair. They realized that it was only a matter of moments +before they would be overcome, and they determined to make the Crows pay +dearly for the victory. + +At that instant, however, the great war cry of the Dacotahs echoed +through the night, and a moment afterward the thunderous hoof beats of +running ponies reverberated across the plain. The Sioux could scarcely +believe their ears. The Crows turned in panic. + +"The Blackfeet! The Blackfeet!" they cried hysterically. "They have run +off our ponies!" + +They believed that they had been led into a trap by the treacherous +Blackfeet, and the thought demoralized them. Their one thought was to +escape from the cañon before their foes barred the way. They scrambled +wildly through the narrow pass and fled into the darkness. + +"Come!" cried Lean Wolf, as he sprang upon his pony. + +The Sioux galloped from the pass, and raced across the plain to join the +Minneconjoux war party. They heard the Sioux war cry directly ahead of +them, and they raised their voices in reply. Several riderless ponies +crossed their path, but they made no attempt to capture them. Their one +thought was to join their comrades in an attack upon the bewildered +Crows. Then they heard some one galloping toward them and shouting their +names. A moment later White Otter raced the fiery piebald beside them. + +"You are alive--it is good," he said. "Come, we will run away before the +Crows find out about it." + +"Where are our brothers?" Lean Wolf inquired, anxiously. + +"Little Raven and Running Dog are waiting over there," White Otter told +him. + +"Yes, yes, but where are the others?" inquired Lean Wolf. + +"They did not come," laughed White Otter. "We made all that noise to +frighten the Crow ponies and bring the Crows out on the plain. I did it +a long time ago. Now I have done it again. The Crows are very foolish." + +"White Otter, you are a great chief!" Lean Wolf said, warmly. "You have +given us our lives. We will tell our people about it." + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +THE BLACKFEET CAMP + + +They soon found Little Raven and Running Dog, and then they set out to +join the war party. As they rode swiftly through the night Lean Wolf +asked White Otter to tell about his daring stratagem against the Crows. + +"How did you come to find us?" Lean Wolf asked him. + +"When we came back from the ridge, Sun Bird asked our friends about +you," said White Otter. "They told us that you went away and did not +come back. We felt bad about it. Sun Bird sent us to look for you. +Pretty soon we found the tracks of your ponies. We followed them to that +gully. Then we saw what had happened. We thought the Blackfeet had +caught you. It was easy to follow all those pony tracks. Then we came in +sight of the place where you were hiding. We lay down behind a ridge to +watch. We saw a war party of Crows. Then I told Running Dog and Little +Raven how I fooled those people. I said, 'I will fool them again.' Then +we frightened away the ponies and made the Crows run out. That is all I +have to say about it." + +Soon afterward they encountered the Minneconjoux war party advancing +carefully along the edge of the timber. However, when Sun Bird learned +that the Crows were only a short distance ahead of him, he immediately +ordered a halt. + +"If we keep going ahead we will run into those people," he told his +companions. "That would be foolish. We have set out to fight the +Blackfeet. We must keep ourselves strong until we meet them." + +"Yes, it would be foolish to risk our lives until we have done what we +set out to do," the Minneconjoux told one another. + +They made a wide detour, therefore, and circled far out on the plain to +avoid meeting their enemies. Daylight was close at hand when they +finally returned to the foothills. Having passed safely by the cañon +without hearing anything of the Crows, the Sioux believed that there was +little further danger of again encountering those hated foes. + +"We are getting close to the Blackfeet camp, the Crows will not come +this way," said Sun Bird. + +"They have gone to tell their people how the Blackfeet fooled them," +Lean Wolf said, jokingly. + +"White Otter can tell them about it," laughed the Minneconjoux. + +As the last lingering night shadows lifted from the plain, the Sioux +entered the timber to avoid being seen by prowling companies of +Blackfeet. Although the danger of meeting the Crows appeared to have +passed, they knew that they would be in constant peril from the +Blackfeet. Dancing Rabbit said that they were within a day's journey of +the great camp, and the announcement roused them to their danger. They +moved carefully along the base of the ridge until they found a sheltered +hiding place. + +"Now, my friends, I will tell you what I propose to do," said Sun Bird. +"You have heard the words of Dancing Rabbit. He says that we are getting +near the great Blackfeet camp. It is good. That is what we set out to +do. But we must be cautious. We must not let the Blackfeet see us until +we run off those ponies. We must hide in the timber until we are ready +to fight. But first we must find the Blackfeet camp. I believe we can +see it from the top of this ridge. Pretty soon I am going to climb up +there and look around. You must wait here until I come back. Then when +it grows dark we will go ahead. I have finished." + +Soon afterward he set out with White Otter and Dancing Rabbit. They +climbed to the top of the ridge and looked anxiously toward the north. +It was some time before Dancing Rabbit spoke. Then he pointed eagerly +toward a low, sage-grown ridge. + +"Do you see that long hill?" he asked excitedly. + +"Yes, I see it," replied Sun Bird. + +"Well, there is a river on the other side of it," Dancing Rabbit told +them. "Many trees grow along that river. The Blackfeet camp is between +that river and that long hill. I hid on top of that hill when I ran away +from the camp." + +Sun Bird and White Otter heard him in silence. Now that the goal was +almost in sight they showed little emotion. Only the sudden flash of +their eyes betokened their interest. They were intently studying the +low, sage-grown sweep of the plain which Dancing Rabbit declared +concealed the Blackfeet camp. + +"See, see, there is the smoke from the village!" cried Dancing Rabbit, +as he pointed to a thin column of smoke which was rising above the +ridge. + +"I have been watching it a long time," Sun Bird told him. + +"Yes, I saw it," said White Otter, as Sun Bird looked inquiringly at +him. + +"See, there is a high place over there," said Sun Bird, as he pointed +toward a great ledge some distance to the northward. "If we climb up on +those rocks we can see the Blackfeet lodges." + +"Yes, I believe you can see the camp from that place," Dancing Rabbit +declared, eagerly. + +They made their way slowly along the ridge until they reached the base +of the great ledge. It rose many bow lengths above them and was so bare +and conspicuous that the Sioux were somewhat fearful of being seen if +they climbed it. They knew that when enemies were expected, every great +camp was protected by sentinels posted on elevations of the plain to +watch for the approach of their foes. As the Blackfeet had every reason +to expect an attack from both the Minneconjoux and the Crows, the Sioux +felt quite certain that they had taken the usual precautions to guard +their village. Still, the possibility of seeing the great Blackfeet camp +was a strong temptation, and the Sioux finally decided to climb the +ledge. + +They had barely made the decision, however, when they saw something +which instantly changed their plans. A small company of horsemen had +suddenly appeared on the summit of the ridge which hid the camp. The +Sioux knew at once that they were Blackfeet, and they watched anxiously +to see which way they would go. They were considerably relieved when the +riders reached the foot of the slope and turned toward the east. They +rode off at a smart canter and soon disappeared into a dip of the plain. + +"I believe they are hunters," said White Otter. + +"Well, they have gone away," Sun Bird told him. "Come, we will climb up +there and look around." + +"No, it would be foolish," White Otter declared. "I see some one down +there watching this place." + +Sun Bird and Dancing Rabbit started in amazement. Both had unusually +sharp vision, and they had kept their eyes steadily on the ridge, but +neither of them had seen any one except the horsemen. + +"Where is that person?" Sun Bird inquired, curiously. + +"Look sharp at that twisted tree, near the top of the ridge," said White +Otter. + +His companions looked in vain. They could find no evidence of any one +either in or about the tree which White Otter had designated. They +feared that he had been mistaken. + +"I do not see any one," declared Sun Bird. + +"Well, there is a warrior sitting up there among the branches," White +Otter told him. "If you look sharp along that crooked limb you will see +him. He is far away, but my eyes tell me that he is looking this way. We +must be cautious." + +"Yes, yes, I see him!" Sun Bird said, excitedly. + +"He must be a scout. Perhaps those riders left him there to watch for +enemies. Perhaps it is a war party." + +"We will wait and see what he is going to do," said White Otter. + +As they were high up, and well sheltered in the timber, the Sioux had +little fear of being discovered. They were curious to know what the +warrior in the tree was watching for, and they determined to wait until +they learned. Then they suddenly discovered a horseman near the spot +where the Blackfeet had disappeared. The Sioux felt sure that he was one +of the company. He was facing toward the ridge where the warrior was +watching from the tree. Apparently aware that the latter had seen him, +he dismounted and began to signal with his robe. First he held it +directly in front of him between his outstretched arms. The Sioux +recognized the signal as the sign for buffaloes. Then he waved the robe +up and down several times before his body. It was the signal for many. + +"Those men are Blackfeet hunters," declared White Otter. "They have +found some buffaloes. That man is telling about it." + +In the meantime the warrior had descended from the tree and hurried to +the top of the ridge. Then he stooped and raised his robe from the +ground. He faced toward the north, and repeated the signals which he had +just received. Then both warriors disappeared. + +"That man has told the people in the village about the buffaloes," said +White Otter. "I do not believe it is a big hunt. Perhaps some buffaloes +came near the camp and some young men went out to kill them." + +"Well, we must not show ourselves," Sun Bird said, with a tinge of +disappointment. "I would like to look at that camp, but I believe it +would be foolish to climb up there." + +"Yes, my brother, it would be foolish," White Otter warned him. "The +Blackfeet are moving around. Their eyes are sharp. We must watch out." + +"I will tell you how I feel about it," said Sun Bird. + +"I am listening," replied White Otter. + +"I am going to ask Dancing Rabbit to go back to our brothers," explained +Sun Bird. "I am going to ask him to tell them to come ahead when it +grows dark. Sitting Eagle knows this place. He must be the leader. When +it gets light they must hide in the timber and wait for us. Dancing +Rabbit, you must come back here and tell us where they are. Then we will +go to them and tell them what we saw. White Otter, I will ask you to +stay here with me. When it gets dark we will climb up on that high place +and hide. When the light comes we will see the Blackfeet camp." + +"It is the best thing to do," White Otter told him. + +Shortly after Dancing Rabbit left them, they saw a great company of +Blackfeet riding slowly over the ridge. There were both men and women, +and many of the ponies were dragging the pole _travois_ upon which +burdens were transported across the plains. + +"Those hunters have killed some buffaloes," said White Otter. "These +people are going to bring in the meat." + +They watched the interesting cavalcade move slowly across the plain and +disappear on the trail of the hunters. The Blackfeet were sending their +women to bring in the meat. It was apparent, therefore, that they had +little fear of either the Minneconjoux or the Crows retaliating for the +recent attacks which they had made upon them. The reckless boldness of +their arrogant foes caused the eyes of the Sioux to flash with anger. + +"We will fool those boastful people," Sun Bird said, fiercely. + +"They feel safe--it is good," White Otter replied, quietly. + +They saw nothing more of the Blackfeet until the end of the day and then +the hunters returned. A short way behind them came the women and a few +men, leading the pack ponies laden with meat. After the Blackfeet had +passed over the ridge, the Sioux listened anxiously for sounds from the +camp. When they failed to hear anything they began to wonder if the camp +was farther away than they supposed. + +"I do not believe it is far beyond that ridge," declared White Otter. +"The wind has carried away the noise." + +"Yes, that may be true," agreed Sun Bird. + +They waited impatiently for darkness, and when it finally came they +immediately began to climb the ledge. It was hard, perilous work, as the +night was unusually black, and the ledge was high and steep. There were +places where a false step would have meant severe injury, or even +death, and the Sioux realized the necessity for caution. + +"Well, we have had a hard time," Sun Bird panted, as they finally +reached the top. + +"Yes, it is a hard place to get to," agreed White Otter. + +They went as far as possible along the top of the ledge, hoping at +daylight to be able to see over the ridge which hid the camp. Then they +concealed themselves behind two high pinnacles of rock which rose some +distance above the ledge and waited anxiously for the night to pass. + +"See, the light is coming," Sun Bird said, eagerly, as the first faint +trace of dawn appeared in the east. "Pretty soon we will see the great +Blackfeet camp." + +"It is good," replied White Otter. + +They waited impatiently for darkness to leave the plain. Dawn seemed a +long time coming. However, the pale narrow streak across the eastern sky +gradually widened, the stars grew dim, and a bird note sounded from the +timber. Day was close at hand. The Sioux stirred restlessly. Their long +vigil was almost over. Would they see the Blackfeet camp? they wondered. +They longed to sweep aside the heavy black mantle which hid the plain. +Then, after some moments of trying suspense, they saw the night shadows +slowly retreating. The stars had disappeared. A soft gray twilight was +creeping out of the east. Like a great hand, it spread slowly over the +plain and wiped away the darkness. Dim, shadowy shapes appeared in its +wake. It passed over the ridge and drove the shadows into the north. The +Sioux followed it with eager eyes. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, it +extended across the plain and laid bare the secrets of the night. + +"Look, look, there are the lodges!" Sun Bird cried, eagerly. + +They seemed suddenly to have sprung from the plain--like pale, ghostly +phantoms on the trail of dawn. One after the other, they appeared from +the gloom in great sweeping circles that extended far out on the plain +until the entire camp was exposed before the fascinated eyes of the +Sioux. It was ideally situated beside the waters of a wide, willow-lined +stream. The Sioux marveled at its size. For a long time they studied it +in silence. Trained from infancy in the art of observation, they noted +every detail. They counted the lodges, estimated the number of persons +each would accommodate, determined the nearest and easiest approach to +the camp, noted the distance from the ridge, the distance from the +water, and many other details which skillful scouts were expected to +know. + +Then they turned their attention to the ponies. There was a great herd +of them grazing some distance to the eastward of the lodges. The Sioux +watched them with covetous eyes. They knew that many of those animals +had come from the Minneconjoux camp. They intended to take them back, +and many Blackfeet ponies besides. Near the edge of the camp was a +smaller herd of ponies confined in a strong pole corral. The Sioux knew +that those were the more valuable animals, the fleet-footed war and +hunting ponies. White Otter studied them with great interest. He was +trying to identify the famous black war pony of Many Buffaloes, the +Blackfeet chief. However, he was unable to convince himself that any of +the ponies in the corral was that animal. He had little doubt that it +was securely guarded somewhere near the lodge of the chief. + +"There are many lodges," Sun Bird said, finally. + +"Yes, it is a great camp," replied White Otter. + +The Blackfeet were beginning to stir. The Sioux saw them moving about +between the lodges. They looked like dwarfs at the distance. Then smoke +began to rise above the camp. Some people were running toward the river. +The Sioux believed they were boys. The splashes were distinctly visible +as they threw themselves into the water. The faint, far-away sound of +their voices came up from the plain. Then a shadow swept across the +ledge. The Sioux looked into the sky. Huya, the great war bird, was +soaring out over the Blackfeet camp. + +"Hi, there is our brother, Huya!" said Sun Bird. "He has come to bring +our people to the Blackfeet camp." + +"It is a good sign," declared White Otter. + +They watched until the day was well advanced, and then they crept +carefully over the top of the ledge and descended to the summit of the +ridge. They found Dancing Rabbit waiting for them. + +"Well, my brother, have you brought our friends here?" inquired Sun +Bird. + +"They are hiding down there in the timber," replied Dancing Rabbit. + +"Come, we will go to them," said Sun Bird. + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +A PERILOUS RECONNAISSANCE + + +They found the war party camped in a secluded ravine which led far back +into the foothills. Having ridden throughout the night, most of the +Minneconjoux were sleeping when Sun Bird and White Otter arrived at the +rendezvous. The spot was strongly guarded by sentinels, however, who +took turns at keeping watch. Sun Bird and White Otter immediately asked +for water, and Dancing Rabbit led them to a splendid spring on the side +of the ravine. Then they supplied themselves with generous rations of +dried meat and ate heartily. In the meantime their arrival had awakened +most of the war party, and they gathered about the famous young scouts +and waited anxiously for them to speak. + +"Well, my friends, I have something good to tell you," Sun Bird said, at +last. "We saw the Blackfeet camp. It is close by. There are many +lodges. There must be many people to live in them. We saw many ponies. +Some belong to our people. We have come to take them away. We will take +them. Then we saw the fast ponies. They are near the lodges. We will try +to take some of those. But, my friends, I must tell you that it will be +a hard thing to do. There are many warriors in that camp. They are +brave. Perhaps we will have to fight hard to get those ponies." + +"My brothers, I have listened to your words," said Sitting Eagle. "You +say that the Blackfeet are brave. It is true. I have fought many battles +against them. They are braver than the Pawnees. They are braver than the +Kiowas. They are braver than the Crows. Now you know that they are very +brave. Well, my friends, the Dacotahs are braver than the Blackfeet. +Yes, the Dacotahs are the bravest of all. We will go to that great camp, +and take away those ponies. Sun Bird is a good leader. Our brother, +White Otter, is a great chief. I see many brave warriors sitting here. +We are very strong. Yes, my brothers, we will take away those ponies." + +The boastful assurance of Sitting Eagle roused the Minneconjoux to a +great pitch of enthusiasm. For the moment their ardor overcame their +caution, and they began to talk loudly and utter wild threats against +their foes. + +"Come! come!" Lean Wolf cried, impatiently. "We are making too much +noise. Are we like old women who cackle like foolish Magasapa, the +goose?" + +The Minneconjoux instantly subsided into silence. They knew that it was +not the part of warriors to give way to their emotions, and they felt +guilty and ashamed. As Sun Bird showed no inclination to tell them +anything more about the Blackfeet camp, most of them threw themselves +upon the ground and resumed their slumbers. The three young scouts who +had just returned from the top of the ridge followed their example, and +it was not long before all except the vigilant sentinels about the edge +of the camp were sleeping soundly. + +The day had ended and twilight had fallen upon the plain when Sun Bird +and White Otter finally awakened. They felt rested and refreshed, and +were eager to begin the great adventure which lay before them. As the +entire company was awake, Sun Bird prepared to carry out his plans for +advancing upon the Blackfeet camp. He called the sentinels who had +watched through the night, and asked if they had seen or heard anything +of their foes. They assured him that the night had passed without +alarm. + +"It is good," said Sun Bird. "Now, my friends, I will tell you what I +propose to do. See! the light has almost gone. When it gets dark I am +going away to find out about that great camp. I am going to creep up +close. Then I will find out what we want to know. Then we will know how +to get those ponies. Now I am going to ask White Otter to go with me. He +is a great scout. He has been to the Pawnee camp. He has been to the +Crow camp. He has crawled up to the lodges of the Kiowas. Now I will ask +this great scout to go to the Blackfeet camp with me." + +"I will go," White Otter told him. + +There were many others who were anxious to risk their lives for a peep +into the great Blackfeet camp, but Sun Bird refused them. He knew that +numbers increased the chances of discovery, and he determined to run no +unnecessary risks. Besides, there were few, if any, warriors among the +Minneconjoux who could match the scouting abilities of the Ogalala. As +Sun Bird realized that the success of the undertaking might depend upon +the thoroughness of the reconnaissance which he planned to make, he +determined to rely solely upon White Otter and himself to carry it +through. + +It was barely dark when they left the war party and set out for the +Blackfeet camp. Their companions watched them depart, in silence, for +they knew the danger to which they were about to expose themselves, and +many alarming possibilities flashed through their minds. + +"They are very brave," said Sitting Eagle, as Sun Bird and White Otter +disappeared into the shadows. + +Believing that it would be easier to accomplish their purpose if they +traveled on foot, they left their ponies with their companions. Once at +the edge of the plain, they hurried away in the direction of the low +sage-grown ridge. When they finally saw it looming up before them, they +realized that they must advance with more caution. If the Blackfeet +expected an attack it was probable that they had posted sentinels at +that spot, and the Sioux determined to take every precaution. The +discovery of the warrior in the tree led them to believe that the ridge +was a favorite watching place of their foes. + +Once at the base of the slope, the Sioux stopped and spent some time +listening for the sound of voices. Then as they heard nothing to rouse +their fears, they moved cautiously up the side of the ridge. When they +reached the top they instantly located the camp by the glow from the +fires. For a moment or so they watched silently. Then they descended +through the sage, and moved out across the grim, black plain. + +"Now we must watch out," warned Sun Bird. + +Side by side, they sped through the night as swiftly and noiselessly as +wolves on the trail of their prey. Their eyes were fixed on the alluring +glow from the Blackfeet fires, they relied upon their ears to warn them +of danger. The plain, however, was steeped in silence. They heard +nothing but their own soft footfalls, and the gentle rustling of the +grass against their buckskin leggings. + +"It is good," whispered Sun Bird. "The Blackfeet are in the camp eating +buffalo meat. There is no one to stop us." + +"We must not be too sure about it," White Otter cautioned him. + +Then they heard something which brought them to a sudden stop. The dogs +were barking furiously in the Blackfeet camp. The Sioux listened +uneasily. Several disturbing possibilities entered their minds. Had the +dogs caught their scent? It seemed impossible. White Otter raised a +moistened finger to test the breeze. It blew from the camp. They felt +relieved. Then another thought presented itself. Perhaps the Crows had +moved against the Blackfeet camp. The Sioux listened for sounds of an +attack. They heard only the savage baying of the dogs. + +"I believe the dogs are fighting for meat," said Sun Bird. + +"It is bad," White Otter replied, seriously. "If those dogs keep moving +around, it will be hard to get near the camp." + +The thought troubled them. They knew that if one of those gaunt, +wolf-like creatures caught their scent it would instantly skulk out upon +the plain to investigate. Once it found them it would set up a racket +that would soon draw the rest of the pack upon them, and the Blackfeet +would be quick to realize the significance of the commotion. + +"There is only one thing to do," said White Otter. "We will wait here +until the dogs quiet down. Then we will wait until they lie down to +sleep. Then we will creep up to the camp. If we go ahead now, those dogs +will find out about us." + +"Yes, I see that it is the only thing to do," agreed Sun Bird. + +It seemed a very long time to the impatient Sioux before the dogs +finally became silent. However, as they had heard nothing to indicate +alarm in the Blackfeet camp, they decided that the uproar had been +caused by the dogs fighting over the scraps of buffalo meat which the +Blackfeet had thrown them from their feast. In spite of the stillness, +however, the Sioux feared to approach the camp until they had allowed +the dogs time to gorge themselves and settle down to sleep. They waited, +therefore, watching the twinkle of the camp fires, and listening for +sounds from their foes. + +"Come," Sun Bird said, suddenly. "Everything is still. I believe the +dogs have gone to sleep. We will creep up to the camp." + +"I am ready," White Otter assured him. + +Again they moved cautiously through the night until they were actually +within bowshot of the lodges. Then they suddenly heard the solemn +booming of the war drums, and the sound of singing. For a moment they +turned to one another in alarm. Were the Blackfeet preparing for war? +Then they guessed the truth. + +"It is the hunters," whispered White Otter, "They are dancing the +Buffalo Dance." + +"It is good," Sun Bird told him. "All the people will be around the +dancers. We can get close to the lodges." + +"Watch out for the dogs," cautioned White Otter. + +They advanced within half a bowshot of the camp, and then they dropped +to the plain to watch. The camp was brightly illuminated by the light +from the fires, and the Blackfeet were clearly visible as they passed +between the lodges. The booming of the war drums and the singing +continued, and the Sioux could hear even the short, sharp exclamations +of the dancers as they kept time with the music. Still they were unable +to see into the camp, and they determined to advance still closer. + +Slowly, a bow length at a time, they crept toward the nearest lodges. +They moved with great caution, and stopped many times to make sure that +the way was clear. They were in constant fear of the dogs. Although they +had seen nothing of them, they realized that at any moment they might +encounter them prowling about the borders of the camp. + +The Sioux had almost reached the lodges when they suddenly heard +something moving directly behind them. They turned in alarm. Had a dog +circled about them, and caught their scent? Their hearts beat wildly at +the thought. Each moment they expected to hear the first savage yelp +which would announce their approach to the Blackfeet. Then, as they +listened, they heard footsteps. Some one was walking directly toward +them. They were seized with panic. Discovery seemed certain. There was +not a moment to spare. Pressing themselves close against the ground, +they prepared to drive their arrows through their foe before he could +utter an outcry. At that moment he turned from his course and passed +without seeing them. His bent form, and slow, faltering gait convinced +the Sioux that he was an old man. As he emerged into the firelight at +the edge of the camp they saw that their guess was correct. A moment +afterward he disappeared behind a lodge. + +"I believe he is a Medicine Man," whispered Sun Bird. "Perhaps he was +out there making Medicine." + +"Perhaps," replied White Otter. + +Having recovered from their alarm, they crawled to the edge of the camp, +and hid in the shadow of a lodge. Then they looked upon their enemies. +The Blackfeet were gathered in the center of the camp. They were +watching the wild antics of a company of dancers who were circling about +the fire. The Sioux studied the assemblage with great care. White Otter +was particularly curious, as it was the first time he had seen those +people. + +The Blackfeet presented an interesting spectacle, as they celebrated +the success of their hunters. The latter were especially picturesque. +They had painted their faces and bodies and decorated themselves in a +most weird and grotesque manner. Many wore the entire skin of a buffalo +bull, including the head and horns. Others had fastened buffalo feet to +their ankles so that they rattled and clacked at each stride of the +dancer. Thus arrayed, they cavorted wildly about the fire, imitating the +antics of the buffaloes. They pranced, and reared, and kicked, and +roared. Some pawed the ground, and then lay down and wallowed as the +buffaloes would do to rid themselves of flies. Others imitated the +fierce encounter between two great rival bulls, pushing and jostling +each other, and butting their heads together until the spectators +shrieked with delight. It was a clever exhibition of mimicry, and more +than once the Sioux were forced to smile. + +Then they turned their attention upon the spectators. Men, women and +children had assembled in a great circle about the dancers. The Sioux +made special note of the men. They were dark and tall, and powerful, +with deep, broad chests, and wide sloping shoulders. They compared +favorably in physique and bearing with the gallant Dacotah fighting men, +and the two young scouts realized that they had come upon worthy foes. +Closer to the dancers were the musicians, six old men, who thumped the +war drums and sang the Buffalo Song in high, cracked tones. The Sioux +gave little attention to them. Their eyes were focused on a small group +of men who stood together some distance to the right of the singers. +Their dress and manner proclaimed them men of importance, and the Sioux +knew that they were the chiefs and counselors of the tribe. + +"That warrior who wears the bear robe is Many Buffaloes," Sun Bird +whispered, excitedly. + +White Otter nodded understandingly, as he concentrated his attention +upon the man whom Sun Bird had designated. The great Blackfeet war chief +was a man slightly past the prime of life, whose massive frame, and +bold, fearless features well confirmed the stories of his marvelous +exploits on the war trail. He wore a great trailing war bonnet of eagle +plumes, and carried a long coupstick decorated with the trophies which +he had taken from his enemies. He carried himself with the dignity and +hauteur of a great leader, and the Ogalala looked upon him with respect. + +"He looks like a warrior," White Otter told Sun Bird. + +"He is a great chief," declared Sun Bird. + +Many Buffaloes took no part in the ceremony. He stood apart with several +of his associates and showed little interest in the wild capers of the +dancers. His keen eyes, however, noted every action, and it was evident +that his apparent indifference was largely assumed. He appeared to +consider it beneath the dignity of a great war chief to show emotion +upon so trivial an occasion. + +"Where is his black pony?" White Otter asked, eagerly. + +"I cannot tell you," said Sun Bird. + +"Come, we will try to find it," White Otter told him. + +Sun Bird looked uneasily into the eyes of his friend. White Otter's bold +resolve filled him with alarm. A disturbing possibility swept through us +mind. Did the daring Ogalala plan to enter the Blackfeet camp in search +of the famous war pony? Sun Bird feared that it would be a fatal blunder +to make the attempt at that time. Even if White Otter should succeed in +leading away the pony without being seen, the loss would rouse the +entire Blackfeet nation. They would immediately send strong war parties +to search the plain, and the long, perilous journey of the Minneconjoux +would have been in vain. Sun Bird appeared reluctant to agree to the +proposal. White Otter instantly guessed the reason. + +"I see that you do not feel good about it," White Otter said, quietly. +"I am a war leader. I am not going to do anything foolish. I am not +going to try to take away that pony. I am going to find out where it is. +Then I will wait until our brothers have run off the other ponies. Then +perhaps I will try to take away that black pony." + +"It is good," Sun Bird said, with evident relief. + +They began to circle cautiously about the camp. It was perilous work. +Bow in hand, they crept stealthily along in the shadows from the lodges, +stopping every bow length to watch and listen. Where were the dogs? They +would have given much to know. They knew that at any moment they might +stumble upon them. They had gone about an arrow flight when they +suddenly discovered one of the dogs lying beside a lodge. Was it asleep? +they wondered. It was lying with its back toward them, and was only five +or six bow lengths away. The Sioux watched it with bated breath. They +realized that the slightest sound might rouse it. They feared to move. +Still, it seemed equally perilous to loiter. + +"Come," breathed White Otter. + +For an instant Sun Bird hesitated. It was caution, not fear which held +him back. It seemed folly to risk discovery when they had already +learned so much about their foes. White Otter, however, was already +creeping noiselessly into the shadows, and Sun Bird determined to follow +him. Inch by inch they dragged themselves forward until they were +opposite the dog. Then for a moment they hesitated. It had every +appearance of being asleep, and the Sioux passed on. + +Then they discovered what they were risking their lives to see. Beside a +great decorated lodge was a strongly made log corral, and above it +appeared the long slender head and graceful neck of the famous black war +pony. It was watching the glow in the center of the camp, and nervously +twitching its ears at the noise. White Otter gazed upon it with eager, +fascinated eyes. It was a noble trophy, and he longed to possess it. The +opportunity seemed before him. Impulse urged him to act. He paused to +consider. Loyalty held him back. He realized that his own ambition must +be sacrificed to insure the success of the Minneconjoux. They had +suffered a great loss at the hands of the Blackfeet. They had made a +long and perilous journey to recover the stolen ponies. Their success +depended upon keeping the Blackfeet in ignorance of their approach +until they were at the camp. White Otter made a quick, and final +decision. + +"Come," he whispered. "I have found out what I wanted to know. We will +go." + +"It is good," said Sun Bird. + +They crept slowly from the edge of the camp. Then when they were a safe +distance from the lodges they rose to their feet and sped away into the +night. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +OFF WITH THE PONIES + + +The following night the Minneconjoux set out to make their attack upon +the Blackfeet. Long before it was dark Sitting Eagle and Lean Wolf and +Running Dog left the ravine and rode away to watch from the ridge to the +southward of the camp. Then as the twilight faded from the plain the war +party followed swiftly on the trail of the scouts. Riding in pairs, the +Sioux passed on their way in grim silence. When they finally saw the low +ridge directly before them, they stopped and listened anxiously for word +from the scouts. + +"Ho, my brothers, the way is clear, but the fires are still burning in +the Blackfeet camp," said Lean Wolf, as he suddenly rode out of the +night. + +"We must wait," Sun Bird told him. + +In a few moments they heard the sharp bark of the little gray fox, a +short distance to the eastward. Sun Bird waited until he heard it three +times, and then he replied. Soon afterward Running Dog appeared. + +"I have been a long ways over there," he said, indicating the east. "I +saw nothing of our enemies. Their fires are burning. We must wait." + +"Yes, my brother, we will wait," Sun Bird assured him. + +It was some time before Sitting Eagle finally arrived. Then he too +suddenly rode out of the darkness. + +"I have been close to the Blackfeet camp," said the famous scout. "I saw +the light of many fires. It is bad. We must wait." + +"We will wait," said Sun Bird. + +Then, as the stern Minneconjoux fighting men gathered about the youthful +war leader, Sun Bird announced his plans for running off the ponies. + +"My brothers, we are in sight of the great Blackfeet camp," he said, +softly. "It is not far beyond this ridge. We have come a long ways. We +have come to do a big thing. We must go through with it. We will wait +here until the fires die down. Then we will know that the Blackfeet have +gone to the lodges. Then we will ride over there and run off the ponies. +Now I will tell you how to do it. There are many ponies out there on the +plain. There are other ponies near the lodges. When we cross over this +ridge I will show you where to find the ponies. When we get near the +camp we must separate. Some must go out on the plain to get those +ponies, and some must go to get the ponies that are near the camp. White +Otter is a great war chief. I will ask him to be the leader of those who +go to get the ponies that are near the camp. Sitting Eagle is a great +war leader. I will ask him to be the leader of those who go to run off +the ponies on the plain. Many of us must wait near the camp to fight +back the Blackfeet. I will be the leader. Now I have told you the way to +do this thing." + +"It is good," agreed the Minneconjoux. + +While they waited impatiently for the Blackfeet fires to die down, many +of the war party left their ponies with their friends and crawled to the +top of the ridge to watch the camp. Others dismounted and threw +themselves upon the plain to rest. There was little talking. The Sioux +realized that they were about to match themselves against a strong and +wily foe who greatly outnumbered them, and the thought made them +serious. They knew that the time for boasting had passed, and the time +for action was at hand. There was not one of the company, however, who +had the slightest fear. They believed that Dacotah courage would more +than offset the superior strength of the Blackfeet, and they felt +confident of success. + +The night was more than half gone when the watchers returned from the +ridge and reported that the last flickering glow had faded from the +Blackfeet camp. The announcement roused the Sioux to action. Springing +upon their ponies, they waited eagerly for the word to advance. + +"My brothers, the Blackfeet have gone to their lodges," said Sun Bird. +"Pretty soon they will be asleep. It is good. They will not know about +us until they hear us running off the ponies. Come, Dacotahs, we will +go." + +The summons stirred their fighting blood. They longed to send the +Dacotah war cry ringing across the plain as a challenge to their foes. +They stifled the temptation, however, and crossed the ridge in silence. +All evidence of the Blackfeet camp had vanished into the night, and Sun +Bird chose the north star to guide him on his way. + +The preliminary reconnaissance which Sun Bird and White Otter had made +the previous night proved of great value. At that time they had +carefully noted the contour of the plain between the ridge and the camp, +and had estimated distances between certain prominent landmarks which +they had retained in their memory. Now, as they found them, they were +able to guess how closely they were approaching the Blackfeet camp. When +he believed that they had gone half way, Sun Bird ordered a halt, and +proceeded to divide the war party. The younger, less experienced +warriors were assigned to the companies who were to run off the ponies, +while the renowned fighters and famous scouts were chosen as a rear +guard to fight back the Blackfeet. Then Sun Bird carefully explained the +location of the ponies. + +"Now we are ready to go ahead with this thing," he said. "But before we +begin I will tell you something. When you are ready to ride off the +ponies that are on the plain you must make many quick barks of the +little gray fox. Then you must wait. When White Otter and his brothers +hear it they will know that you are ready. Then when they are ready they +must make that signal. When it stops you must go ahead to run off the +ponies. Then if the Blackfeet hear you we will be ready to hold them +back. Keep these words. Do not go ahead until you hear the signal. I +have finished." + +A short distance farther on the Sioux separated to make their raid +against the Blackfeet. Sitting Eagle and his companions turned aside to +approach the spot where the loose ponies were pastured. White Otter and +his company continued toward the camp, and Sun Bird and the fighting men +followed close behind him. + +When they were within several bowshots of the camp they stopped, and +White Otter and three companions went forward. He had asked Little Raven +to accompany him, and the young Minneconjoux rode at his side. + +"If the ponies begin to call we must make the signal, and be ready to +rush ahead," said the Ogalala. + +When they finally saw the black, indistinct outlines of the corral, they +stopped to listen. They knew that the lodges at the end of the camp were +less than half a bowshot away. The slightest sound, therefore, might +arouse the Blackfeet. White Otter turned to Little Raven. + +"Get down from your pony," he whispered. + +They dismounted and left their ponies with the two warriors who +accompanied them. Then they moved swiftly toward the corral. They were +within bow length of it when they heard the quick barks of the little +gray fox some distance toward the east. Their hearts bounded at the +sound. Sitting Eagle and his companions were ready to run off the +ponies. White Otter rushed to the corral. He turned in dismay. The +corral was empty. + +At that instant a horse whinnied in the Blackfeet camp. The Sioux ponies +replied. A dog barked. Voices sounded close at hand. The Blackfeet were +alarmed. Realizing that further caution was useless, White Otter sounded +the signal. + +"Run to the ponies!" he cried to Little Raven. + +They heard their comrades riding forward to meet them. They also heard +the thunder of many hoofs, and the wild yells of the Blackfeet. +Springing upon his pony, White Otter raced recklessly toward the camp. +Little Raven followed him. They found the village in wild disorder. The +Blackfeet had been completely surprised. + +Out on the plain Sitting Eagle and his companions were driving away the +captured ponies. The raid had been entirely successful, and the elated +Sioux were already many arrow flights beyond the camp. Behind them Sun +Bird and his force of fighting men were loitering within bowshot of the +village, watching for White Otter with the other bunch of ponies. When +he failed to appear, Sun Bird rode toward the corral to find him. He +encountered the two warriors who had accompanied the Ogalala on his +perilous mission. + +"Where are the ponies? Where is White Otter? Where is Little Raven?" Sun +Bird asked, excitedly. + +"That place was empty," they told him. "White Otter and Little Raven +rode away toward the Blackfeet camp." + +Sun Bird stared wildly into the face of the speaker. He could scarcely +believe him. Then the truth suddenly flashed across his mind. He +understood why White Otter had risked himself. + +"Yes, yes, I know about it," he said. + +He called the two riders to follow him and galloped away to lead his +valiant company against the Blackfeet. The latter had rallied from their +confusion and were riding from the camp. + +In the meantime White Otter and Little Raven had ridden boldly along the +edge of the camp until they reached the spot where the famous black war +pony was kept. Then White Otter dismounted, and left his pony with +Little Raven. Taking advantage of the darkness and the confusion in the +Blackfeet camp, the daring Ogalala moved swiftly between the lodges. It +was only a moment or so before he encountered his foes. A frightened old +woman took him for one of her people and ran to him for protection. He +grumbled fiercely at her and sprang away before she recognized him. The +next instant two excited warriors dashed past within bow length, and +called him to follow them. Then the way seemed clear, and he hurried +toward the corral. His heart beat wildly as he suddenly saw the log +inclosure before him. When he reached it, however, he saw that it, too, +was empty. The famous black pony had been taken away. + +For some moments the disappointed young Sioux lingered beside the +corral. He was blaming himself for having refused the opportunity which +had presented itself the night before. At that time the great trophy had +been almost within his grasp. Now he believed it was forever beyond his +reach. He told himself that he had been foolish to surrender his chance. +Then he suddenly thrilled with the pride of sacrifice. He was a Dacotah, +and the Dacotahs had relied upon him to help them against their foes. He +had nobly performed his duty to the tribesmen who had given him their +confidence. His act had brought success to the Minneconjoux. The thought +roused him. His own loss was forgotten as he rejoiced in the victory of +his people. + +"I have done a good thing," he said, joyfully. + +Then as he saw fires beginning to gleam in various parts of the camp, he +realized that it was time to go. As he ran toward the edge of the camp a +dog suddenly appeared before him. It faced him with bared fangs and +flashing eyes, and its deep, ugly growls gave warning of an intention to +fight. + +"Hi, you foolish Blackfeet dog," cried White Otter, as he drove his +arrow through it. "Now your people will know that I have been in their +village." + +He bounded past the struggling dog, and ran from the camp. Little Raven +was waiting with the ponies. + +"Come," cried White Otter, as he sprang upon the piebald. "The Blackfeet +have ridden away on the war ponies. Some one took away that black pony. +Now we must go to help our brothers. Listen! I hear them making a big +fight." + +Sounds of battle came from directly ahead of them, and White Otter knew +that Sun Bird and his companions were fighting back the Blackfeet. +Calling Little Raven to follow him, the daring young war chief raised +his voice in the war cry, and raced away to engage in the fight. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +HOTLY PURSUED + + +Once aware of what had happened, the enraged Blackfeet rushed from the +camp like a swarm of angry bees. Led by their great war chief, Many +Buffaloes, they rode recklessly out upon the plain to overtake the +daring foes who had run off their ponies. They had not gone an arrow +flight, however, before they collided with the Sioux. + +"Come, my brothers, it is time to fight!" cried Sun Bird. + +The resolute band of Sioux fighting men charged furiously upon their +foes. They were outnumbered three to one, but the fierceness of their +attack deceived the Blackfeet and threw them into confusion. Having +recognized the Dacotahs, the Blackfeet knew from experience what sort of +resistance to expect from those powerful and courageous foes. + +"The Sioux! The Sioux!" they cried, fiercely. + +Then, as Sitting Eagle and his companions raced the captured ponies +through the night, Sun Bird and his company of warriors fought +desperately to hold back the Blackfeet. The latter, however, soon became +aware of their superiority in numbers, and the discovery gave them +confidence. Recovering from their momentary disorder, they made a +desperate attempt to break through their enemies. + +The Sioux, however, held their ground, and the fighting was at close +quarters. There were many thrilling encounters. Lean Wolf fought three +Blackfeet warriors and overcame all of them. Sun Bird had his pony +killed beneath him, and then killed his foe and took his horse. Feather +Dog became separated from his companions and was compelled to fight off +an entire company of Blackfeet until some of his friends discovered his +plight and rushed to his assistance. + +In spite of their bravery, however, the Sioux were unable to overcome +the odds against them. It was not long before they realized that it +would be folly to sacrifice themselves in attempting to match strength +with their foes. The Blackfeet were too strong to be held back. The +Sioux saw that their only chance of success was in making a running +fight. + +"We must follow after the ponies," said Sun Bird. + +The moment they gave way the Blackfeet interpreted it as a sign of +defeat. Feeling sure of victory, they charged recklessly forward, and +attempted to throw the Sioux into a rout. Instantly alert to his peril, +Sun Bird brought his company to a stand, and fought with a grim ferocity +that soon convinced the Blackfeet of their mistake. They realized that +victory was far from being won, and they became somewhat more cautious. +After several costly and futile attempts to make the Sioux give ground, +they suddenly divided their forces, and a strong company swept around +the Sioux flank. + +"They are passing! They are passing!" the Minneconjoux cried in alarm. + +At that moment White Otter and Little Raven joined the war party. They +had fought their way through the very midst of their foes, and reached +their companions in safety. The presence of the famous young war chief +greatly encouraged the Minneconjoux. + +"There is only one thing to do," White Otter said, hurriedly, as Sun +Bird turned to consult him. "We must keep ahead of those Blackfeet." + +Acting upon his advice, the Sioux suddenly gave way and raced across +the plain in pursuit of Sitting Eagle and the band of ponies. Behind +them thundered the main force of Blackfeet, and at their right rode the +company that had succeeded in getting past them. + +"When we come to the ponies we must make a big fight," White Otter +declared, grimly, as he rode beside Sun Bird. + +"Yes, yes," agreed Sun Bird. + +The Blackfeet kept close behind them, and the Sioux were in constant +peril from their arrows. Whenever the Blackfeet came too near, however, +the Sioux turned upon them and fought them off. Thus they made their way +across the plain until they overtook Sitting Eagle and his companions. +The latter had heard them approaching, and had rounded up the ponies and +prepared to fight. + +"Keep going! Keep going!" shouted Sun Bird. "We will hold back the +Blackfeet." + +"Yes, keep going!" cried White Otter. "Run the ponies until you come to +that big gully. Then wait for us." + +Sitting Eagle and his company barely got the ponies under way before the +Blackfeet were upon them. Sun Bird and the war party fought savagely to +hold them off, but the company of Blackfeet who had ridden along the +Sioux flank circled under cover of the darkness and reached the herd. + +"Hold the ponies! Hold the ponies!" shouted Sitting Eagle, as the wily +Blackfeet attempted to stampede them. + +Yelling fiercely, they charged close up to the alarmed ponies, and threw +them into wild disorder. Frightened into a panic by the noisy tumult, +the bewildered animals tried to break from their captors and flee across +the plain. Sitting Eagle and his companions made valiant efforts to hold +them under control, but the Blackfeet were riding furiously about the +herd, and making desperate efforts to kill the men who guarded it. + +In the meantime Sun Bird and the Minneconjoux war party were fighting a +thrilling battle with the main force of their foes. The latter had again +rushed to close quarters, and the Sioux were in desperate straits. +Greatly outnumbered, they fought with a reckless courage that astounded +their enemies. Try as they might, the Blackfeet were unable to break +through the heroic company that confronted them. Led by Many Buffaloes +himself, the bravest warriors in the Blackfeet nation hurled themselves +against the Sioux with a daring abandon that would have speedily routed +less valiant foes. The Sioux, however, repulsed each savage attack with +a dogged ferocity that gradually shattered the confidence of their +foes. + +Sitting Eagle and his gallant band were less successful. They found it +impossible to keep the ponies under control, and at the same time defend +themselves against the Blackfeet. They were threatened with disaster and +began to lose heart. + +"Come, Dacotahs, show these people how to fight!" cried Sitting Eagle. + +At that moment White Otter led a company of Minneconjoux against the +Blackfeet who had attacked the herd. Roused by the courage of the young +Ogalala war chief, the Minneconjoux warriors charged furiously upon the +surprised Blackfeet and completely overwhelmed them with the fierceness +of their attack. For a moment only the Blackfeet opposed them, and then +as White Otter drove his arrow through the leader of the company the +others lost courage and retreated into the night. + +"Come," shouted the Ogalala. "Drive away the ponies!" + +Sitting Eagle and his comrades instantly got the ponies in motion. Then +the determined Blackfeet again charged forward to gain possession of the +herd. This time, however, they were met by White Otter and his gallant +band of fighters. They fought with a fiery zeal that soon threw fear +into the hearts of their foes. Riding boldly at the head of his +companions, White Otter dashed recklessly among the Blackfeet, and threw +them into confusion. Then as they wavered he raised the piercing Dacotah +war cry, and led his tribesmen in a furious assault that caused the +astounded Blackfeet to flee wildly before him. He followed them a long +distance across the plain, and exacted heavy toll from the laggards. +Then he suddenly heard Sun Bird and the rest of the war party riding +toward the south. + +"Come," he cried. "Our brothers are running ahead of the Blackfeet. We +must find out about it." + +Having subdued his foes, he turned and led his comrades to join the +Minneconjoux. When he finally overtook them he found Sun Bird in high +spirits. The skillful young war leader had completely defeated his foes. + +"The Blackfeet are getting cautious," said Sun Bird. "See, they are +keeping far behind. I believe they are afraid of us." + +The Blackfeet appeared to have lost much of their confidence. Having +lost heavily in the desperate fighting with the Sioux, they seemed +unwilling to risk coming again to close quarters with those indomitable +foes. Although they still continued to follow them, they were content to +remain safely beyond arrow range. The Sioux hoped that they would soon +abandon the pursuit. + +"Pretty soon they will turn back," declared Sun Bird. "Then they will go +to the village, and tell their people what a great fight they made." + +"Well, they will not bring back those ponies," laughed Little Raven. + +Daylight was breaking when the Sioux again overtook their comrades with +the captured ponies. Sitting Eagle had stopped in the bottom of a deep +ravine through which trickled a tiny stream. The Sioux saw at once that +it offered them splendid protection against their foes. + +"It is good," Sun Bird said, heartily. "Now we will see what the +Blackfeet will do." + +The latter had already stopped, and were apparently discussing the +advisability of attempting to drive the Sioux from their shelter. For a +long time they seemed unwilling to make the effort. The Sioux had left +the ponies in the bottom of the ravine, and were lying along the top of +the bank watching their foes with great interest. They had no intention +of leaving the ravine until the Blackfeet had either made an attack or +withdrawn from the vicinity. + +"Perhaps they will wait until it gets dark," suggested Little Raven. + +"No, I do not believe it," Sun Bird told him. "I believe they will do +something pretty soon." + +"Yes, my brother, that is how I feel about it," said White Otter. + +The three young warriors were lying beside one another at the top of the +ravine. On each side of them were the other members of the war party, +except a few young warriors who had been left in charge of the ponies. +White Otter noted, however, that some of the Minneconjoux were missing. +Among them were Proud Hawk and Painted Bird, the two young warriors who +had served as scouts for the war party. The eyes of the Ogalala flashed +threateningly as he realized that they and their absent companions had +been killed by the Blackfeet. + +"It is bad," Sun Bird said, solemnly. "Those brave warriors were my +friends. I saw Proud Hawk fall from his pony. I was close beside him. I +tried to carry him off, but the Blackfeet killed him. I saw Painted Bird +making a great fight. The Blackfeet were all around him. They must have +killed him. I tried to get near him, but some Blackfeet rushed upon me +and killed my horse. I had a hard time to get away." + +"Well, we must not think about it," said White Otter. "A warrior must +always be ready to die. Those men were very brave. It is enough. We will +tell our people about them." + +"Yes, we will call out their names when we ride through the camp," +replied Sun Bird. "We will tell our people that we sent many Blackfeet +to walk behind our brothers on the Long Trail." + +Then their thoughts were diverted by the sudden activity of the +Blackfeet. They were advancing slowly across the plain, singing their +war songs, and shouting boastful threats against the Sioux. The latter +watched them with little fear. They realized that the possession of the +ravine had turned the odds in their favor. Besides, they strongly +doubted that the Blackfeet would actually venture within bowshot. + +"They will keep away," Sun Bird said, confidently. + +It was not many moments before his words were verified. The Blackfeet +had suddenly stopped beyond arrow range. They were still chanting the +war songs, and shouting threateningly, but they showed no inclination to +approach nearer the ravine. The Sioux, however, watched them closely. +They knew that at any moment their wily foes might throw aside their +caution and sweep forward in a furious attack. + +"See, that great chief, Many Buffaloes, is giving them strong words," +Sun Bird said, eagerly, as he seized White Otter by the arm. + +The Ogalala made no reply. His eyes were following every move of the +famous Blackfeet war chief. The latter had ridden out in front of his +tribesmen and was making a fiery address. Several times he wheeled his +pony and swept his arm toward the Sioux. They felt certain that he was +rousing his warriors for a final attempt to recapture the ponies. It was +evident that his words were accomplishing the desired effect. The +Blackfeet were becoming greatly excited. The Sioux grew serious. They +had great respect for the courage and ability of the renowned Blackfeet +leader, and they feared that he was preparing to carry through some bold +stroke which might still bring victory to the Blackfeet. + +"Many Buffaloes is going to do something big," Sun Bird told White +Otter. "He is very brave. We must watch out." + +White Otter took little notice of the warning. His entire attention was +concentrated upon the spirited black pony, and its famous rider. +Everything else had passed from his mind. Even the great company of +jeering Blackfeet had suddenly faded from his vision. He saw nothing but +the Blackfeet war chief, and his prancing black pony. He watched them +with flashing, fascinated eyes. Then Many Buffaloes dramatically passed +his bow, quiver and arrows to one of his tribesmen, and turned toward +the Sioux with his war club raised. White Otter uttered a short, fierce +exclamation of satisfaction. He had instantly interpreted the maneuver, +and his heart bounded with hope. + +As the Blackfeet chief rode slowly toward the ravine, singing his war +song and flourishing his war club, White Otter passed his bow and +arrow-case to Sun Bird and scrambled wildly down the steep side of the +ravine. + +"That man is very brave," he cried, excitedly. "Tell your people that +they must not try to kill him when he comes close. I am going to ride +out there to meet him." + +"No, no, that would be foolish!" Sun Bird shouted in alarm. "He is +riding that great Medicine Horse. You cannot catch him. He will lead you +over there to the Blackfeet, and they will kill you." + +"We will see," White Otter replied, lightly, as he ran to the piebald. + +In the meantime the Blackfeet chief was fearlessly approaching the +ravine. He was already well within bow range, but the Sioux withheld +their arrows. There were two reasons. In the first place Sun Bird had +called out and warned them against killing Many Buffaloes, and in the +second place his bold defiance insured his safety. The Sioux understood +his reckless maneuver as a challenge to their manhood, an invitation for +one of their leaders to come out and meet him in personal combat. To +have killed him from shelter, under those circumstances, would have made +them weaklings and cowards in the eyes of their foes. The Sioux felt +compelled to respect the code of honor which prevailed even between the +most bitter enemies. They realized, therefore, that one of their number +must accept the defiant challenge of the Blackfeet chief, or else the +latter must be permitted to return to his tribesmen in safety. +Nevertheless, the Minneconjoux knew that if any one went forth to meet +him the wily war leader would rely upon the phenomenal speed of his pony +to carry him to safety, and decoy his enemy within bow shot of his +warriors. For that reason they made great efforts to dissuade White +Otter from his purpose. + +"Many Buffaloes has done this thing many times, but we have no ponies +that can come up with him," the Minneconjoux told White Otter. "If you +follow him the Blackfeet will surely kill you." + +"I am going," White Otter replied, firmly. + +A moment afterward he rode out upon the plain. The Blackfeet greeted his +appearance with savage yells of derision. The Sioux raised the great +Dacotah war cry to give him courage. Many Buffaloes stopped and waited +for him to approach. + +"White Otter is a great warrior; he is very brave; that pony is very +fast, but I believe he will be killed," Sun Bird said, fearfully. + +The solemn faces of the Minneconjoux gave endorsement to his fears. +They, too, believed that the reckless Ogalala was going to his death. +Having witnessed the speed of the famous black war pony, they felt +certain that White Otter would never get within striking distance of the +Blackfeet chief. Their only hope was that the Ogalala would discover his +peril in time to turn back and save himself from the treacherous +Blackfeet. + +"Then we must be ready to rush out and help him," said Sun Bird. + +At that instant White Otter raised the war cry, and raced toward the +Blackfeet chief. The latter waited until the Ogalala was almost upon +him, and then he turned his pony and rode furiously toward his yelling +tribesmen. A moment afterward he twisted about and laughed shrilly, as +he shook his war club at the Sioux. Enraged by the taunt, White Otter +struck his pony with the heavy rawhide quirt. The piebald bounded +forward at a speed which caused the Minneconjoux and the Blackfeet to +stare in silent amazement. With each stroke of the lash the wonderful +little beast ran faster. The famous Blackfeet pony was a full length in +the lead, but the piebald was actually gaining. The Minneconjoux could +not believe it possible. + +"Many Buffaloes is holding back," they told one another. "He is trying +to draw White Otter near his people." + +"No, no, it is not so!" Sun Bird shouted, excitedly. "See, the Dacotah +pony is running faster!" + +It was true. Sioux and Blackfeet both realized it. Many Buffaloes looked +over his shoulder and was equally astounded. The piebald had cut his +lead in half and was still gaining. Alarmed at the discovery, Many +Buffaloes lashed the black pony to its best speed. It ran as no other +horse in the great Blackfeet nation had ever run before, but the piebald +ran even faster. White Otter was within less than half a pony-length of +the Blackfeet chief. The latter, however, was almost within bow shot of +his tribesmen. The Minneconjoux realized that unless White Otter +overtook the black pony within the next few strides he would be at the +mercy of his foes. The thought drove them into a frenzy of excitement. + +"See, see, he has caught Many Buffaloes!" Sun Bird shouted, wildly. + +The piebald had closed the gap, and was drawing abreast of the Blackfeet +pony. Enraged by the glorious achievement of the Sioux pony, the +Blackfeet raced forward to save their chief from defeat. At that moment, +however, White Otter drew even with his foe. Yelling defiantly, Many +Buffaloes swung his war club at the head of the Ogalala. White Otter +crouched and barely escaped the deadly blow. Then before the Blackfeet +chief could regain his balance the agile young Sioux swung his own +weapon and knocked Many Buffaloes from his horse. The next moment he +secured control of the famous black war pony. Turning the ponies in +their tracks, he raced toward the ravine with the entire company of +Blackfeet close behind him. + +Leaving a few warriors in the ravine to guard the ponies, the Sioux +galloped madly across the plain to rescue White Otter. Once he got the +ponies under way, however, there was slight chance of the Blackfeet +overtaking him. Stride by stride he drew away from his pursuers, who +were too busily engaged lashing their ponies to think of shooting their +arrows. When they finally did make use of their bows they found +themselves already within range of the Minneconjoux. The latter shot +their arrows with deadly effect, and the disheartened Blackfeet wavered +before the attack. Then, as White Otter dashed among them, the Sioux +flashed about and raced back to the ravine without losing a man. + +"Well, my brothers, I have showed you that the Dacotah ponies can run," +White Otter said, quietly as he dismounted in the midst of his +enthusiastic tribesmen. + +"White Otter, I believe the pony that Curly Horse gave you is a Medicine +Pony," Sun Bird declared, seriously. "Perhaps that is why it was so +fierce when you began to ride it. I believe my father had something to +do with it. He is a great Medicine Person." + +"It may be true," White Otter told him, as he stroked the neck of the +little piebald. + +"Yes, yes, Rain Crow must have had something to do with it," declared +the superstitious Minneconjoux. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +THE STAMPEDE + + +The Blackfeet made no attempt to follow the Sioux to the ravine. +Instead, they turned about, and rode far from arrow range. They carried +off their chief and several warriors who had fallen in the skirmish, and +the Sioux were in doubt whether the famous war leader had been killed, +or only wounded, by the blow from White Otter. It was plain, however, +that the Blackfeet had finished the fight. They stopped for a few +moments to shout idle threats against the Sioux and then rode slowly +toward the north. + +"Well, my brothers, the Blackfeet have gone," said Sun Bird. "It is +good. We have done what we came here to do. We have taken away these +ponies. We have made a big fight. We have sent the boastful Blackfeet +back to their lodges. My friends, those are big things to talk about. +Well, I will tell you that White Otter has done the biggest thing of +all. You all know about it. Look at that black pony. You all know how +it came here. It is something to tell about. Now, my brothers, I must +tell you something different. We must not feel too big about these +things. We are a long ways from our people. We have many ponies. We +cannot travel fast. The Crows and the Flatheads are still ahead of us. +Perhaps we shall meet them. We must keep thinking about it. Yes, my +brothers, we must be cautious." + +"My friends, those are good words," declared Lean Wolf. "What Sun Bird +says is true. We have fought back the Blackfeet, but other enemies may +be waiting for us. We have many good ponies. We must take them to our +village. Perhaps it will be a hard thing to do. The Crows would like to +get those ponies. Yes, I believe the Flatheads would like to get them. +We would feel foolish if we lost them. We must be cautious." + +The Minneconjoux found it difficult to restrain their enthusiasm. The +younger warriors, especially, were eager to celebrate their victory over +the Blackfeet. They rushed to the bottom of the ravine, and crowded +forward to count coup upon the Blackfeet pony by striking it with their +hands. The act was a substitute for striking an enemy, and gave them the +privilege of reciting the details of some daring exploit which they had +performed in the fight with their foes. Besides, the Minneconjoux still +looked upon the black war pony as something mysterious, a strange +Medicine Creature possessing superior powers of speed and endurance. +They hoped that in laying their hands upon it they might in some way +absorb some of its mystical powers. + +In the meantime Sun Bird had sent scouts to follow the Blackfeet, to +make sure that they were actually going to their village. Other riders +had crossed the plain to the southward to learn if it would be safe to +travel in that direction with the ponies. The day was well advanced when +the scouts returned to the war party. The Minneconjoux gathered eagerly +about them to learn what they had seen. + +"The Blackfeet are still going ahead," said Running Dog, who had +followed them. "I believe they are going to their village." + +"Did you see anything of Many Buffaloes?" Sun Bird asked, anxiously. + +"Yes, I saw him sitting on a pony," declared Running Dog. "He was +between two riders. I believe they were holding him up. I saw some other +warriors lying across the backs of ponies. I believe they were tied +there. Perhaps they were dead. The Blackfeet are traveling slow." + +"Well, we know that Many Buffaloes is alive," said Sun Bird. "No one can +harm him. He must be very strong. Perhaps he is a Medicine Person." + +"My brother, I will tell you something different," said Sitting Eagle. +"Perhaps the Blackfeet expected us to follow them. Perhaps they were +holding Many Buffaloes on that horse to fool us. Perhaps he was dead." + +"Yes, that may be true," declared the Minneconjoux. + +Still, as they could not be sure, they were unable to reach a definite +conclusion regarding the fate of the Blackfeet chief. While they were +discussing it the scouts from the southward returned. They declared that +the plain was free from foes. + +"It is good," said Sun Bird. "Now we will go ahead." + +The cautious young war leader planned his advance with the care and +skill of a veteran. He realized that one blunder might undo all that had +been accomplished, and turn the splendid victory into a staggering +defeat. The Minneconjoux were fatigued, and their ponies were jaded, and +Sun Bird knew that it might be difficult to overcome a strong force of +foes if they were fresh and eager for battle. He determined, therefore, +to use every safeguard against encountering his enemies. + +When the Sioux were ready to leave the ravine, scouts moved across the +plain in advance and on both sides of them, and a small detail of +warriors were left behind to make certain that the Blackfeet did not +return. Then the war party was divided. White Otter and half of the +force rode ahead. Behind them followed Sitting Eagle and the warriors in +charge of the ponies. Sun Bird and the balance of the company brought up +the rear. + +The day was far spent, and the Sioux hoped to reach water by the time +night came upon them. Sun Bird planned to stop when it grew dark, and +allow the ponies to rest until daylight. Then he decided to travel in +the early morning and after nightfall, and to stop in some suitable +shelter during the heated hours of the day. + +"We must keep the ponies fresh," he told his companions. + +Shortly before dark they came upon a large shallow pool on the open +plain. As there was a heavy stand of grass for the ponies, Sun Bird +determined to stop there for the night. The ponies were immediately +turned loose to feed, and guards were appointed to watch them until +daylight. + +It was not long, however, before the Sioux heard something which caused +them considerable uneasiness. Low, rumbling peals of thunder sounded +from the west. The Sioux looked anxiously into the heavens. The stars +shone brightly overhead, but the distant sky appeared black and +threatening. As they watched, a quick, darting flash of light zigzagged +across the western sky. A dull, thudding crash of thunder boomed in the +distance. + +"The Thunder Birds are talking--it is bad," Sun Bird said soberly, as he +seated himself beside White Otter. + +"Yes, my brother, it is bad," agreed White Otter. + +Then for some time they sat in gloomy silence, watching the sky. A great +mass of ominous black clouds rose steadily out of the west and blotted +out the stars. Sharp, jagged streaks of lightning cut through the night. +A fresh breeze stirred across the plain. The thunder sounded louder. It +was evident that the storm was approaching. + +The possibility filled the Sioux with alarm. They looked anxiously +toward the herd of ponies. They knew that it would be difficult to hold +them under control when the storm broke upon them. Once thoroughly +alarmed they might stampede, and race wildly across the plain. Then it +would be necessary for the Sioux to ride recklessly through the night +in an attempt to keep possession of the herd. It was a perilous task, in +which many brave riders might lose their lives. + +"My brothers, the Thunder Birds are coming--it is bad," cried Sitting +Eagle, as he came to find Sun Bird. "The ponies are sniffing the wind. +They are uneasy. Some of them are running around." + +"We must hold them," said Sun Bird. "Every one must go out there and +keep riding around them." + +"It is good," replied Sitting Eagle, as he galloped away. + +The war ponies had been either picketed or hobbled and left to feed, +while the riders threw themselves upon the plain to rest from their +exertions. Now, as the storm approached, there was great confusion as +each warrior rushed to find his pony. Those who had picketed their +ponies had little difficulty, but the hobbled animals had wandered some +distance away, and their owners spent many anxious moments searching for +them. White Otter and Sun Bird had picketed their ponies and they found +them at once. + +"White Otter, you have done some big things--it is enough," said Sun +Bird. "You must stay out of this. You have taken away the great black +war pony. You must not lose it. When the Thunder Birds fly over us you +must hold fast to that pony. Do not try to do anything else. I am your +brother. Listen to my words." + +"I will do as you tell me to do," agreed White Otter. + +"It is good," cried Sun Bird, as he galloped toward the ponies. + +The riders had already stationed themselves about the herd and Sitting +Eagle was racing about shouting instructions. The Sioux were in a high +tension of excitement. The great storms which swept across the plains +always filled them with superstitious awe. They believed that they were +caused by the Thunder Birds, which they imagined to be two giant +birdlike monsters that lived high up in the most inaccessible peaks of +the loftiest mountains. The Sioux believed that these weird creatures +possessed all sorts of mysterious powers and that at certain intervals +they flew across the country to destroy those unfortunate people who had +incurred their displeasure. + +"Some one has made the Thunder Birds mad--they are coming to drive away +the ponies," the Minneconjoux told one another, in alarmed whispers. + +Their hearts filled with gloomy premonitions of impending disaster, as +the storm rushed upon them. The breeze had freshened to a gale, the +stars above them had vanished, the plain was smothered in darkness. +Vivid flashes of light flickered across the sky. Loud, crashing peals of +thunder rolled through the night. The ponies showed signs of terror. +They crowded nervously together, with heads raised, snorting and +whinnying. The Sioux rode anxiously around them, fearful that each +startling flash would cause them to run. + +Then the storm suddenly broke upon them. A dazzling flare of light was +followed by a terrifying crash of thunder and the ponies leaped forward +in blind panic. The Sioux made desperate efforts to hold them in the +herd, but the panic had spread to the riding ponies, and they were +rearing and plunging in a manner that demanded the entire attention of +the riders. Some of the more fiery animals bolted from control and raced +wildly through the night. A moment afterward the herd broke through the +gap in the circle and thundered across the plain. The fears of the Sioux +were realized--the stampede had begun. + +Having witnessed the first break of the startled ponies, Sun Bird rode +recklessly after the leaders in the hope of guiding them across the +plain. Beside him rode Little Raven. Allowing their ponies to run at +will, the Minneconjoux soon found themselves at the front of the herd. +Then they suddenly realized their peril. Their lives depended upon the +agility of their ponies. A fall meant instant destruction beneath the +hoofs of the panic-stricken beasts behind them. However, there was +little time to think of the danger. The foremost ponies had swerved +toward the west and Sun Bird and Little Raven tried to turn them back. + +"We must not let them go that way!" Sun Bird shouted, anxiously. "The +Crows and the Flatheads are over there." + +Lashing vigorously with their heavy riding quirts, they forced the +ponies from their course and kept them running toward the south. Thus +they rode through the height of the storm, risking their lives to redeem +their pledge to return the ponies which the Blackfeet had driven away. + +Then, as the storm finally spent its fury, and passed across the plain, +the wild stampede suddenly came to an end. Having run themselves into +exhaustion, the ponies were glad to stop. A third of the herd, however, +were missing. Sun Bird was dismayed by the discovery. + +"Come, my brothers, tell me how those ponies got away from you," he +said, sharply. + +"We could not hold them all together," said Sitting Eagle. "I saw some +ponies breaking away and when I rode after them some more ponies got +away." + +"Yes, that is how it happened," declared Lean Wolf. "I saw two ponies +turning away, and I chased them. When I was driving them back, I saw a +big bunch of ponies turning around. Then I rode after them and brought +some of them back. Then I stayed close by the herd. I saw it was the +best thing to do." + +"Well, my friends, it is bad, but I see that you did the best you +could," Sun Bird told them. "We had a hard time getting those ponies. We +must not leave them for our enemies. There is only one thing to do. +Sitting Eagle, you must keep going ahead with these ponies. When you get +near our village you must stop and wait for us. Do not let our people +see you until we come. My brothers, most of you must go with Sitting +Eagle to help him fight our enemies. Some of us must stay here until it +gets light. Then we will go out and look for the ponies that got away. I +believe we will find them close by. Now I will call out the names of the +men who must go with me to find the ponies. Listen, my brothers, I am +going to call those names: Lean Wolf, Little Raven, Feather Dog, +Running Dog, Falling Eagle, Brave Bear, Two Elks. These men will go with +me. The rest of you must go with Sitting Eagle." + +As he finished speaking they heard two ponies galloping toward them. A +few moments afterward White Otter appeared. The piebald and the +Blackfeet pony were lathered with sweat. Neither, however, showed the +slightest trace of exhaustion. + +"I have been a long ways," said the Ogalala. "These foolish ponies ran +the wrong way. It was a long time before I could turn them around. Then +I came very fast." + +"Now White Otter is here," said Sun Bird. "It is good. I am going to ask +him to be the leader of the men who go with Sitting Eagle." + +Then the Sioux separated. Sitting Eagle and his escort of warriors rode +away toward the south with the ponies while Sun Bird and his company of +scouts remained behind to search for the missing horses. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX + +TRAILING THE RUNAWAYS + + +Sun Bird and his companions were greatly encouraged when they looked +across the plain at daylight and saw several of the stray ponies feeding +a short distance to the northward. They hoped that others might be +concealed behind some of the low hummocks which broke the level of the +plain. + +"See, there are some of the ponies!" said Sun Bird. "We will go and get +them. Then we will ride up on those little hills and look around. I +believe we will see some more ponies." + +They cantered slowly toward the grazing ponies. There were five and they +were feeding close together. They raised their heads and watched +curiously as the horsemen approached, but they showed little fear. The +Sioux, however, determined to take no chance of frightening them into +another exhausting dash across the plain. As they rode within bow range +they separated and circled carefully about the ponies. Then they +gradually closed the net, and the ponies made little effort to escape. + +"Now I will tell you what to do," said Sun Bird, when they had secured +the horses. "Some of you must keep these ponies. The rest of us will +ride up on those high places and look around. I will ask Falling Eagle +and Brave Bear and Two Elks to keep these ponies. Leave them where they +are until we come back. Then we will drive them away." + +The three warriors who had been selected stationed themselves about the +ponies and their comrades turned toward a low grassy slope to the +westward. They had gone less than an arrow flight when their ponies +suddenly raised their heads and looked toward the north. A moment +afterward one of the ponies behind them whinnied. "There is something +over there behind that hill," said Sun Bird as he turned about. + +At that instant a horseman appeared. They recognized him as Many +Feathers, one of the warriors who had been left in the ravine to watch +for the return of the Blackfeet. Having recognized his friends, Many +Feathers returned their signal, and then disappeared behind the ridge. + +"Where has he gone?" Little Raven asked, anxiously. + +"We must watch," Sun Bird told him. + +Then Many Feathers and two comrades rode over the rise of the plain, +driving four of the stray ponies before them. They came directly toward +Sun Bird and his companions. + +"It is good," said Lean Wolf. "Our brothers are bringing some more +ponies. Pretty soon we will find all that got away." + +"Well, my brothers, I see that you found some ponies," said Sun Bird, as +Many Feathers and his comrades rode up. + +"Yes, we found them back there on the plain," said Many Feathers. + +The young warrior appeared to know about the stampede. He said that he +and his companions had read the story from the tracks which they had +followed from the pool. + +"Did you see anything of the Blackfeet?" inquired Sun Bird. + +"No," replied Many Feathers. "We waited a long time but they did not +come back." + +"Did you see any more ponies?" Lean Wolf asked him. + +"No, we did not see any more," said Many Feathers. + +"My brothers, it is good you came here," Sun Bird told them. "Now I am +going to ask you to take these ponies over there where you see Falling +Eagle and Brave Bear and Two Elks. You must stay with them and help them +watch the ponies until we come back." + +"We will go," said Many Feathers. + +Then Sun Bird and his companions rode to the top of the low ridge to the +westward. They saw the rest of the ponies gathered in a small herd some +distance out on the open plain. The sight filled them with joy. As they +were about to go after them, however, they suddenly discovered two +riders watching from a ridge beyond the ponies. + +"Hi, hi," Sun Bird cried, excitedly. "Someone has found the ponies. Now +they are watching us." + +"It is bad," said Lean Wolf. + +Feeling certain that they had already been seen, the Sioux made no +attempt to hide. They remained in open sight and tried to identify the +distant horsemen. The latter were too far away to be recognized. The +Sioux took hope at the thought. They knew that if they could not +identify their foes, the latter would find it impossible to recognize +them. + +"They must be Crows or Flatheads," said Sun Bird. "Anyway, I believe +they are scouts." + +"It is bad," said Running Dog. "They will bring their people here to get +those ponies." + +The Sioux were greatly disturbed by the possibility. As their little +company numbered only eleven, they knew that they would be powerless +before a strong force of their enemies. Aware that the unexpected +emergency demanded quick action, they held a hurried council to decide +what should be done. They saw many difficulties. In the first place they +realized that if they rode directly toward the ponies they might drive +them toward their foes. Still, to circle around behind the herd it would +be necessary to approach close to their enemies. Then, too, the Sioux +knew that if they succeeded in running off the ponies they would +probably be followed by a strong force of their foes. As the ponies were +already fatigued from their strenuous exertions, another long race might +cause them to collapse. + +"It will be hard to get them away if our enemies try to stop us," +Running Dog said, gloomily. + +As he spoke the horsemen suddenly disappeared from the ridge. The Sioux +looked at one another in alarm. They felt certain that one of the scouts +had gone to warn his people, while the other concealed himself to watch. +Sun Bird realized that it was time to act. Delay might prove fatal. + +"Come, my brothers, we must do something," cried the bold young war +leader. "I am going to circle around behind those ponies. I will ask +Lean Wolf to go with me. The rest of you must hide behind this hill +until we drive the ponies to you. If our enemies come after us do not +wait to help us. Go to our brothers and help them drive away those +ponies. Send some one ahead of you to bring back the war party. Come, +Lean Wolf, we will go." + +They were gone before their friends found time to reply. Moving boldly +down the ridge, the daring scouts turned sharply toward the north and +rode away at top speed. Their companions concealed themselves below the +crest of the slope and watched them with anxious eyes. They believed +that they were rushing into great peril and they had grave fears for +their safety. + +"I do not feel good about this thing," Little Raven said, uneasily. +"Perhaps those people over there are trying to fool us. Perhaps they are +waiting until our brothers come close. Then they will come over the top +of that hill and kill them." + +"Sun Bird is a good war leader. Lean Wolf is a great scout. They are +sharp. Their ponies are fast. I do not believe they will let those +people catch them," Feather Dog replied, reassuringly. + +Sun Bird and Lean Wolf rode many arrow flights toward the north before +they finally swerved to the west. Some of the ponies were watching them, +but as yet showed no inclination to run. The Sioux felt much relieved. +They had feared that the nervous beasts might take fright at sight of +them and flee toward the distant ridge. + +"If they keep still we will soon get behind them," Sun Bird said, +hopefully. + +"Watch that hill," Lean Wolf cautioned him. + +"Do you see any one up there?" Sun Bird asked him. + +"No, I do not see any one, but we must be cautious," replied Lean Wolf. + +When they had passed the ponies they began to circle to come up on the +other side of them. They were almost within arrow range of the ridge and +they kept a sharp watch for foes. Then, as they turned to approach the +ponies they heard a shout behind them. Glancing back they saw four Crow +warriors racing down the slope at breakneck speed. + +"Come, get the ponies running!" shouted Sun Bird as he lashed his pony +into a furious sprint. + +They rode madly toward the startled ponies, shouting and waving their +arms to get the animals in motion. Once started, the ponies needed +little urging. They had not entirely recovered from their wild panic of +the previous night and the fierce shouts behind them sent them racing +across the plain at their best speed. + +"Keep after the ponies, I will fight the Crows," Sun Bird cried, +impulsively. + +"No, no, you must keep going ahead!" Lean Wolf shouted, fiercely. "If +the Crows come close we will fight them back. Pretty soon we will reach +our brothers. Then these warriors will turn back." + +He had barely ceased speaking before Little Raven and Feather Dog and +Many Feathers and Running Dog swept over the ridge some distance to the +northward of the ponies. Yelling savagely, they raced to the assistance +of their tribesmen and at sight of them the Crows stopped in confusion. +The odds had suddenly turned against them and they lost courage. They +turned and raced away before the Sioux got within bowshot of them. The +Sioux made no attempt to overtake them. Their one thought was to get +away with the ponies before a stronger force of their foes came upon +them. + +"We have driven away our enemies, now we must run off the ponies," cried +Sun Bird. + +"Yes, we must keep going," said Lean Wolf. + +They drove the ponies over the ridges and ran them toward Falling Eagle +and the warriors who were waiting with the other horses. Then Little +Raven and Many Feathers hid below the top of the ridge to watch for the +Crows. + +The Sioux knew that the Crow village was somewhere in the vicinity and +they had little doubt that a strong force of those foes would soon set +out in pursuit of them. However, they hoped to gain a sufficient lead to +make it impossible for the Crows to overtake them before nightfall. Then +they believed the Crows would abandon the chase. + +When they reached Falling Eagle and his companions the Sioux turned +directly toward the south and drove the ponies across the plain at top +speed. They hoped to reach the deep ravine in which they had hidden from +the Crows and the Blackfeet. + +"Perhaps the Crows took us for Blackfeet," suggested Running Dog. +"Perhaps they will go the other way to find us." + +"No, I do not believe it," said Lean Wolf. "Those warriors came close. I +believe they know we are Dacotahs." + +For some time they kept the ponies running at their best speed and then +as they saw nothing of their foes they gradually slackened the pace. For +the balance of the day they rode over the plain at an easy canter and +shortly before dark they came in sight of the abandoned stream bed. +Their spirits revived at sight of it. They believed that even if the +Crows should overtake them it would be possible to hold them off until +scouts found White Otter and the war party and brought them to the +ravine. + +"I do not believe the Crows can catch us now," said Sun Bird, as they +drove the tired ponies into the ravine. + +"We can make a big fight in this place," Lean Wolf told him. + +As night fell Feather Dog followed the ravine toward the west to listen +for the approach of the Crows. Soon after he had gone Little Raven and +Many Feathers arrived. Their ponies showed the effects of fast riding. + +"Tell us what you have seen," said Sun Bird. + +"The Crows are coming," declared Little Raven. "It is a big war party. +Those scouts tried to follow you, but we drove them back. We did that +many times. Then the war party came and we ran away. The Crows are +coming straight ahead. We rode fast to keep ahead of them. Pretty soon +they will be here." + +"Well, there will be many against us, but we must get ready to fight," +Lean Wolf said, fearlessly. + +"No, my brother, I believe that would be foolish," Sun Bird told him. +"The Crows are too strong for us. I am going to fool them. I will tell +you how to do it. I am going to ask Running Dog and Falling Eagle and +Brave Bear and Two Elks and Many Feathers and Broken Hand and Mad Bull +to ride away with the ponies. I will make Running Dog the leader. At +first you must turn toward the-place-where-day-begins. Then you must +circle back and go toward our village. Pretty soon you will find our +brothers. Then you must stop. When you go away the rest of us will stay +here to fool the Crows. When they come close we will ride out and make a +great noise. Then we will ride toward the mountains. We will keep +shouting as if we are driving ponies. The Crows will follow us. Then we +will circle around and fool them. I will ask Lean Wolf and Little Raven +and Feather Dog to help me do this thing. Come, my brothers, drive away +the ponies." + +"Hi, that is a great thing to do," Lean Wolf said enthusiastically. +"Yes, I believe we will fool the Crows." + +As there was little time to spare, Running Dog and his companions +immediately drove the ponies from the ravine and disappeared into the +night. Sun Bird listened anxiously until the sounds of the hoofbeats +had died away and then he turned to his comrades. + +"Well, my brothers, pretty soon the Crows will come, we must be ready," +he said. + +A moment later Feather Dog appeared. He said that he had heard the sound +of galloping ponies and had come to investigate. + +"It was our brothers taking away the ponies," explained Sun Bird. + +Then he acquainted Feather Dog with the details of the wily trick to +fool the Crows. The famous Minneconjoux scout immediately endorsed the +plan. + +"It is good," he said, as his eyes twinkled merrily. + +"Listen," cried Little Raven. + +The Sioux immediately became silent. The hoofbeats of many ponies echoed +across the plain. The Crows were galloping boldly toward the ravine. The +thought filled Sun Bird with anxiety. He realized that if the bold +stratagem failed, the warriors with the ponies were doomed. Once +overtaken on the open plain, he felt sure they would be speedily +surrounded and annihilated by the great Crow war party. He grew weak at +the possibility. Then his pony called and his thoughts were diverted. +The hoofbeats suddenly ceased. Having located their enemies the Crows +had become cautious. The Sioux pony called again and Sun Bird made no +attempt to stop it. + +"It is good," he said. "The Crows will think the ponies are here. Come, +ride around and make a noise." + +They rode rapidly to and fro to make it appear that there were a number +of ponies in the ravine. Then they suddenly swept up the side of the +gully and raced across the plain. As they rode they snapped their riding +quirts and yelled excitedly at imaginary ponies. Then they listened +anxiously for sounds from the Crows. When they failed to hear them they +gave way to despair. Sun Bird grew sick at heart. He feared that he had +sent his comrades to their death. + +"Perhaps the Crows are keeping quiet until they get across that gully," +suggested Lean Wolf. "Perhaps they believe that some of us are waiting +there to fight them back." + +At that instant a shrill yell of triumph rang through the night, and a +moment afterward the Sioux heard the quick, sharp hoofbeats of galloping +ponies directly behind them. The Crows had been deceived. They were +following blindly on the false trail. The Sioux were wild with joy. +Unmindful of their own peril, they were satisfied to know that their +comrades and the ponies were safe. + +"It is good! It is good!" Sun Bird cried, joyfully. "We have fooled the +Crows. Now our brothers will get away with the ponies." + +They continued to make a great noise, lest the Crows should suddenly +discover their blunder. They rode furiously toward the west, and +rejoiced in the thought that each stride of the ponies was luring their +foes farther from those whom they wished to overtake. It was not long, +however, before the Sioux realized that the Crows were gaining upon +them. The discovery aroused them to their peril. They knew that if the +Crows came up with them there would be little chance of escape. + +"Come, we must ride faster," Sun Bird cried, anxiously. + +They lashed the ponies into a terrific burst of speed and slowly drew +away from their enemies. They knew, however, that it would be impossible +to maintain the pace. They also realized that each moment was taking +them farther from their course. + +"Now we must try to circle around," Sun Bird told them. "Do not make any +more noise." + +They suddenly subsided into silence and turned sharply toward the south. +Then their hearts bounded with joy as they heard the Crows blunder from +the trail and continue toward the west. Having once lost them in the +night, it seemed doubtful if the Crows would be able to find them before +daylight. + +"We have got away," Sun Bird said, confidently. "The Crows cannot find +us. Pretty soon they will go back." + +"Yes, I believe we are safe," replied Lean Wolf. + +"Sun Bird, you have done a big thing," declared Feather Dog. "You are a +great war leader. I will tell our people about it." + +The Sioux laughed gleefully as they heard the Crows signaling far away +toward the west. Then they turned toward the east to find their +tribesmen. They rode steadily through the night and at daylight came +upon the entire Minneconjoux war party at the waterhole which marked the +boundary of the Minneconjoux hunting grounds. They were within a short +day's travel of the great Sioux camp. The long war journey was almost at +an end. Success seemed assured. The Sioux were elated. + +"My brothers, we have come together again," said Sun Bird. "I see you +have kept the ponies. Now we are close to our village. Pretty soon we +will be with our people. It is good." + + + + +CHAPTER XX + +SAFE AT LAST + + +The Sioux waited until the ponies had recovered somewhat from their +fatigue and then they set out for the Minneconjoux camp. They rode gayly +across the plain, talking and laughing and singing their war songs. +Their task had been accomplished. Their fears had vanished. The wearying +suspense was at an end. They were eager to reach their people, for they +knew that a royal welcome awaited them. The day had almost ended, +however, when they finally came in sight of the Minneconjoux village. + +"See, there are the lodges of our people," said Sun Bird. "Pretty soon +some one will see us. We must get ready to ride into the camp." + +"You are the leader, you must go ahead," said Feather Dog. + +"Yes, Sun Bird must go ahead," cried the others. + +"Well, I will ask Dancing Rabbit to ride with me; it will make old +Spotted Face feel good to see him," Sun Bird told them. "Then White +Otter must follow close behind me. He has done the biggest thing of +all." + +"It is good," cried the Minneconjoux. + +They advanced slowly toward the camp. Sun Bird and Dancing Rabbit rode +in front. White Otter followed, leading the famous black war pony, and +Little Raven rode beside him. Then came Lean Wolf and Feather Dog and +Sitting Eagle and Running Dog and all the famous scouts. Behind them +followed the great herd of ponies, surrounded by the balance of the war +party. + +The Minneconjoux soon discovered the approaching horsemen and rushed +from the camp in great excitement. As they recognized the riders and saw +the great herd of ponies they were thrown into an ecstasy of joy. They +gathered at the edge of the camp, singing and dancing and calling out +the names of the warriors who had gone to fight the Blackfeet. + +"See, see, the great war party is coming!" they cried. "They are +bringing many ponies." + +The war party raised their voices in the piercing Dacotah war cry. It +echoed triumphantly across the plain and threw the camp into a tumult. +Then the Minneconjoux suddenly recognized Dancing Rabbit. Men, women +and children began to call his name. + +"Our brothers have brought back Dancing Rabbit!" they shouted. "See, +Dancing Rabbit has come back to us! Look, Spotted Face, your grandson is +alive! He is coming to your lodge." + +The aged warrior shaded his eyes with his hand and looked eagerly across +the plain. He was trembling with anxiety. The Minneconjoux waited for +him to speak. + +"Yes, my friends, it is Dancing Rabbit," he said, finally. "Wakantunka, +the Great Mystery, has sent him back to me. It is good." + +A moment afterward the Minneconjoux discovered the black war pony. The +sight of it astonished them into silence. They looked upon it with wild, +inquiring eyes. Had they been mistaken? Could it really be the famous +war pony of the great chief Many Buffaloes? + +"Yes, yes, it is the great black war pony!" Rain Crow cried, excitedly. +"White Otter, my son, has brought it to our camp." + +When the war party came within bow range they stopped and waited while a +delegation of noted warriors rode out to escort them to the camp. At the +same time a company of youths raced eagerly across the plain to take +charge of the ponies. + +Then the war party rode triumphantly into the village, singing their war +songs and calling the names of the warriors who had been killed by the +Blackfeet. As each missing warrior was mentioned his people began to +mourn and cry out dismally in their grief. However, as his companions +extolled his bravery the mourners stifled their sobs and thrilled with +pride at his noble sacrifice. + +"A warrior must be ready to die," said Pretty Star, the mother of Proud +Hawk. "My son was very brave. They are calling his name. He did a great +thing for his people. It is enough." + +As the victorious warriors paraded through the village the people +gathered eagerly about White Otter and the famous black war pony. Many +of the old men and boys ran forward and struck the Blackfeet pony with +their hands to count a coup against their foes. When he reached the +center of the camp White Otter stopped and tied the Blackfeet pony +before the lodge of Curly Horse, the Minneconjoux war chief. + +"See, White Otter has given the black war pony to Curly Horse," said the +Minneconjoux. "It is a great thing to do." + +Curly Horse and the great men of the tribe had assembled before the +medicine lodge to greet the war party. When the warriors lined up before +him the famous chief stepped forward to address them. + +"I will call Sun Bird and White Otter to come and stand before me," said +Curly Horse. "My brothers, both of you are young men, but you have done +big things. Sun Bird, you are the leader of this war party. You have +done what you set out to do. You have brought back the ponies that the +Blackfeet took away. It was a hard thing to do. White Otter, you are a +great chief. You have done many big things. Now you have done the +biggest thing of all. I see that you have tied that great pony in front +of my lodge. It makes me feel good. But I will not take it. You must +take it to your people. Now I will speak to those brave warriors who +went with you. My brothers, you have done a big thing. You were very +brave. Now I will ask Rain Crow to give you some words." + +"My friends, you have done a great thing for your people," said Rain +Crow, the Medicine Man. "Now we have many ponies. Some of them were +Blackfeet ponies. It is good. Sun Bird, you are my son. Little Raven, +you are my son. White Otter, I have called you my son. All three of you +were very brave. It makes me feel big. White Otter, you have done the +biggest thing of all. Our people will talk about it a long time. I have +finished." + +When Rain Crow ceased speaking the Minneconjoux cried out for Sun Bird +to talk to them. + +"Well, my people, you have asked me to give you some words," said Sun +Bird. "First I will tell you about White Otter. He was very brave. He +went into the Blackfeet camp. He fought back many Blackfeet. He rode +after the great chief Many Buffaloes and caught up with him. Then he +knocked him on the head and ran off with his pony. He has brought it +here. Now I will tell you about Little Raven. He was very brave. He went +with White Otter to the Blackfeet camp. He fought many Blackfeet. Now I +will tell you about all these great warriors that you see standing here. +They were very brave. Lean Wolf fought four Blackfeet warriors and +killed all of them. Sitting Eagle ran off the ponies. Feather Dog did +some great things. Running Dog found our enemies. All of these brave +warriors fought hard to bring the ponies here. Now I have told you about +it." + +"White Otter! White Otter!" shouted the Minneconjoux. "Come, White +Otter, give us some words." + +The Ogalala received a stirring ovation. It was some time before he was +able to speak. + +"My brothers, I have not many words to give you," he said, modestly. "I +will tell you that Sun Bird is a great war leader. He told us what to +do. I will tell you that the Minneconjoux are very brave. I will tell my +people about them. I will tell you that the Dacotah ponies can run. +Curly Horse gave me that great pony that I rode to the Blackfeet camp. +It is very fast. That is how I caught Many Buffaloes. I believe Rain +Crow must have had something to do with it. He is a great Medicine +Person. I believe he helped me to do this thing. Now I will speak to +your great chief Curly Horse. Curly Horse, I have tied that black pony +in front of your lodge. It must stay there. You gave me a great pony to +ride to the Blackfeet camp. I will keep it. Now I will give you that +great Blackfeet pony. You must keep it. Rain Crow, you have called me +your son. Well, my father, I have brought you a fast spotted pony. I +took it from the Flatheads. Now I will not talk anymore." + +"White Otter, I see that you have a good heart," said Curly Horse. "I +will listen to your words, I will keep that great war pony. I feel big +to own that pony." + +When it grew dark the Minneconjoux lighted a great fire and assembled +about it to celebrate the success of the war party. They spent the +entire night dancing and singing and telling of the great exploits +performed by the men who had gone to the Blackfeet camp. + + THE END + + + + +-----------------------------------------------+ + | Transcriber's Note: | + | | + | Inconsistent hyphenation and spelling in the | + | original document have been preserved. | + | | + | Typographical errors corrected in the text: | + | | + | TOC Runways changed to Runaways + | Page 27 murmered changed to murmured | + | Page 33 murmered changed to murmured | + | Page 59 susspense changed to suspense | + | Page 96 unkown changed to unknown | + | Page 164 Siting changed to Sitting | + | Page 211 desperated changed to desperate | + | Page 253 Wakantanka changed to Wakantunka | + +-----------------------------------------------+ + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The War Trail, by Elmer Russell Gregor + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WAR TRAIL *** + +***** This file should be named 36888-8.txt or 36888-8.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/6/8/8/36888/ + +Produced by Chris Curnow, Barbara Kosker, Michael and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The War Trail + +Author: Elmer Russell Gregor + +Release Date: July 29, 2011 [EBook #36888] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WAR TRAIL *** + + + + +Produced by Chris Curnow, Barbara Kosker, Michael and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> + +<div class="img"> +<img border="0" src="images/cover.jpg" width="45%" alt="Book Cover" /> +</div> + +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> + +<div style="margin-left: 35%; margin-right: 20%;"> +<p class="noin" style="text-decoration: underline;"><i>By ELMER R. GREGOR</i></p> +<br /> + +<p class="noin">JIM MASON, BACKWOODSMAN<br /> +JIM MASON, SCOUT</p> +<br /> +<p class="noin"><i>Western Indian Series</i></p> + +<p class="noin">WHITE OTTER<br /> +THE WAR TRAIL<br /> +THREE SIOUX SCOUTS</p> +<br /> +<p class="noin"><i>Eastern Indian Series</i></p> + +<p class="noin">SPOTTED DEER<br /> +RUNNING FOX<br /> +THE WHITE WOLF +</p></div> + +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> + +<div class="img"> +<a href="images/frontis.jpg"> +<img border="0" src="images/frontis.jpg" width="48%" alt="NOW WE MUST WATCH OUT!" /></a><br /> +<p class="cen" style="margin-top: .2em;">NOW WE MUST WATCH OUT!</p> +<p class="right" style="margin-top: .2em; margin-right: 20%;">[Page 186]</p> +</div> + +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> + +<h1>THE WAR TRAIL</h1> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> + +<h4>BY</h4> +<h2>ELMER RUSSELL GREGOR</h2> + +<h4>AUTHOR OF "THE WHITE WOLF,"<br /> +"RUNNING FOX," "WHITE OTTER," ETC.</h4> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> + +<div class="img"> +<img border="0" src="images/deco.jpg" width="10%" alt="Publisher's Mark" /> +</div> + +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> + +<h4>D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br /> +NEW YORK :: 1924 :: LONDON<br /></h4> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> + +<h4>COPYRIGHT, 1921, BY<br /> +D. APPLETON AND COMPANY<br /> +<br /> +PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA<br /> +</h4> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CONTENTS</h2> + +<div class="centered"> +<table border="0" width="70%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="0" summary="Table of Contents"> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp" width="10%" style="font-size: 80%;">CHAPTER</td> + <td class="tdl" width="80%"> </td> + <td class="tdr" width="10%" style="font-size: 80%;">PAGE</td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">I.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">A Courier from the West</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_1">1</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">II.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">Off on the War Trail</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">III.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">The Council Fire</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_30">30</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">IV.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">Away into the North</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_44">44</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">V.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">Sioux Scouts</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_56">56</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">VI.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">The Lone Rider</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_68">68</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">VII.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">Smoke Signals</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_75">75</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">VIII.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">A Close Call</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_87">87</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">IX.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">Anxious Moments</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_101">101</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">X.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">Rebellious Ponies</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_115">115</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">XI.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">An Unusual Adventure</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_128">128</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">XII.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">An Encounter with the Flatheads</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_147">147</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">XIII.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">A Clever Stratagem</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_158">158</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">XIV.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">The Blackfeet Camp</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_167">167</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">XV.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">A Perilous Reconnaissance</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_181">181</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">XVI.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">Off with the Ponies</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_197">197</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">XVII.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">Hotly Pursued</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_207">207</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">XVIII.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">The Stampede</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_224">224</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">XIX.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">Trailing the Runaways</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_236">236</a></td> + </tr> + <tr> + <td class="tdrp">XX.</td> + <td class="tdl smcap">Safe at Last</td> + <td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_251">251</a></td> + </tr> +</table> +</div> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<h2>THE WAR TRAIL</h2> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER I</h2> + +<h3>A COURIER FROM THE WEST</h3> +<br /> + +<p>The sun was setting behind the western rim of +the plain, as White Otter, a famous young +war-chief of the Ogalala Sioux, drew near the low +ridge of foothills which he had been approaching +since daylight. He was bound on a hunting expedition +for deer, having promised to kill a fat young +buck for his grandfather, old Wolf Robe, the aged +Sioux chief.</p> + +<p>White Otter approached the timber with his +usual caution. He knew that the forest often concealed +foes as well as game, and he determined to +take no risks. He rode slowly toward the cover, +therefore, watching for the slightest warning of +danger. He was within easy arrow range of the +woods when his pony suddenly stopped and snorted +nervously. White Otter instantly became alert. +Drawing his bow, he slid to the ground, and sheltered +himself behind his pony. Then for some +time pony and rider watched the forest.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span>A loud crackling of undergrowth, and a number +of soft, bounding footfalls told him the cause of +his alarm. He had startled a deer from its feeding +ground at the edge of the plain. Convinced +that the place was free of foes, he mounted his +pony, and rode to the edge of the timber.</p> + +<p>This range of heavily timbered foothills was a +favorite hunting ground of the Ogalalas, and White +Otter had visited the locality many times. He was +entirely familiar with the usual haunts of game, +and knew the location of every spring and salt +lick. Once in the timber, therefore, the young +Sioux rode slowly along a well-worn game trail +which brought him to a small grassy park in the +dip of the hills. A little stream trickled through +one end of it, and made it an ideal feeding ground +for deer and elk. As it was also an attractive and +sheltered camp site, and offered an abundance of +feed for his pony, White Otter decided to remain +there for the night.</p> + +<p>The twilight shadows were already gathering as +the Sioux tied his pony in the woods and seated +himself at the edge of the little park to watch and +listen. Although the day was about gone he hoped +that he might secure his game before darkness finally +settled down. It was not long before he was +roused by a rustling of wings above his head. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span>Looking up, he saw a pair of plump spruce grouse +on a limb directly over him. As the birds stretched +their necks and cocked their heads to look at him, +he drove an arrow through the body of the cock +grouse. The bird fluttered helplessly to the +ground, and White Otter immediately broke its +neck. The remaining grouse still sat peering down +at him. He made no attempt to kill it. It was a +law of his people to kill only what they required +that there might always be sufficient game to replenish +the supply.</p> + +<p>"Wakantunka, the Great Mystery, has sent me +something to eat," White Otter said, reverently. +"It is good."</p> + +<p>As it was getting quite dark, and as there seemed +little probability of seeing game, the Sioux decided +to abandon his vigil until daylight. He +brought his pony from the timber and tied it in +the center of the park to graze. Then he selected +his camp site and made a tiny fire of dry sticks. +As a precaution against being seen by some prowling +foe, he inclosed it with a barricade of rocks to +hide its feeble glow. He plucked the grouse and +spitted it on a forked stick before the fire. Then +he drew his elk skin robe about his shoulders and +seated himself to enjoy his evening meal.</p> + +<p>After he had eaten the grouse White Otter <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span>allowed +the fire to die out. Then for a long time he +sat in the darkness, listening to the night sounds. +The wind whispered softly in the tree tops. The +shrill yelping of the coyotes came from the open +plain. Then the plaintive cry of the little red owl +sounded within bowshot. White Otter listened +anxiously. He knew that the call often was used +as a signal, and he determined to be on his guard. +However, he soon convinced himself that it was +genuine, and dismissed it from his mind. Shortly +afterward he brought his pony from the park and +tied it near him. Then he wrapped himself in +his robe and lay down to sleep.</p> + +<p>White Otter awakened at daylight and crept +stealthily to the edge of the park. As he saw no +game, he sat down to watch. He felt quite sure +that either deer or elk would soon come there for +food and water. In fact he had waited only a +short time when he heard something approaching +through the undergrowth. Fitting an arrow to +his bow, White Otter looked anxiously in the direction +of the sound. In a few minutes he saw an old +bull elk standing in the shadows at the edge of the +woods. It was thin and emaciated, and White +Otter knew that its flesh would be tough and unpalatable. +It was well within bowshot, but he had +no thought of killing it. He had promised his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span>aged grandfather a fat young buck, and he had no +intention of disappointing him. As the old bull +walked slowly into the open, White Otter grunted, +and the elk instantly stopped and looked toward +him. Then as the Sioux rose to his feet and showed +himself the aged bull turned awkwardly and trotted +stiffly into the cover.</p> + +<p>"Go, old man," laughed White Otter. "You +have lived a long time. I will let you live on. I +am——"</p> + +<p>He stopped abruptly, for at that moment he +heard a loud snort, and a great crackling of brush, +as the buck for which he had been waiting raced +safely away through the woods. The young hunter +flushed with anger.</p> + +<p>"I am like a noisy old woman," he grumbled, +savagely.</p> + +<p>After he had gone to examine the trail of the +buck, he again seated himself at the edge of the +woods to watch for game. A long time passed before +he heard anything. Then he was surprised +to hear something coming directly toward him +through the woods. It made a great noise, and +sounded like a deer or an elk in wild flight. White +Otter sprang to his feet and held his arrow in +readiness.</p> + +<p>In a few moments a splendid blacktail buck +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>leaped into the open. White Otter was astonished +to see a huge gray lynx clinging to the buck. As +it reached the park, the deer was dragged to its +haunches. Then, apparently unmindful of the interested +young hunter, the lynx relaxed its hold +and sprang at the throat of its victim. The cruel +fangs sank deep into the flesh, and although the +buck struggled desperately it was soon overcome.</p> + +<p>Then White Otter drove his arrow through the +lynx. It fell dead with the arrow through its heart. +A second arrow ended the agony of the blacktail +buck. Elated at his luck the Sioux ran forward +to examine his game. He lifted the head of the +lynx and gazed intently into the cruel face. Then +he addressed the dead animal and made excuses +for having killed it, so that its spirit would not depart +in anger and seek to avenge itself upon him +at some future time.</p> + +<p>"Ho, old man, you were very fierce," White Otter +said, softly. "You were a good hunter. If +I had not come here you would have had something +good to eat. Well, I saw you. I came here +to get meat for my grandfather, the great chief +Wolf Robe. When I saw that buck I decided to +take it. That is why I killed you. But you must +not feel bad about it. You have done many bad +things to my people. Yes, that is why I felt like +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>killing you. You have killed many young ponies. +You have driven away many deer. You have made +it hard for our hunters to find meat. Now you +know why I killed you. But you must not feel bad +about it. Now I am going to do something good +for you. I am going to give you some meat to +take with you on the Long Trail. Then I am going +to tell my people about you. I will speak good +words about you. Now you must feel good about +this thing."</p> + +<p>Having complied with the ancient custom of his +people, White Otter opened the carcass of the deer +and placed the entrails beside the lynx. Then he +packed the buck upon his pony with a long lariat +of twisted rawhide and rode from the park.</p> + +<p>When he reached the edge of the timber, White +Otter stopped to search the plain. A prairie wolf +trotted slowly from sight over a rise of ground. +It was the only sign of life on the vast sage-grown +waste. Assured that there was nothing to fear, +White Otter set out upon his journey.</p> + +<p>White Otter had covered two thirds of the distance +to the Sioux camp when his pony suddenly +turned its nose toward the wind and whinnied +shrilly. White Otter looked about him with considerable +alarm. He felt certain that other horses +were somewhere in the vicinity. The possibility +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>roused his suspicions. He dismounted and grasped +his pony by the nose to keep it silent. It was +snorting and nervously watching a low grassy knoll +several arrow flights away.</p> + +<p>"There are horses behind that hill," White Otter +told himself.</p> + +<p>Two possibilities suggested themselves. Perhaps +there was a small bunch of stray ponies grazing +on the opposite side of the hill. Perhaps his +foes had discovered him and were lying in ambush +behind the knoll. The thought made him uneasy, +as the day was far spent, and he was still a considerable +distance from his people. He had great +confidence in the ability of his pony, however, +which was one of the best in the entire Sioux tribe. +He believed that in an open chase he would have +little difficulty in keeping well beyond range of +any pursuers who might set out upon his trail.</p> + +<p>"I will find out about this thing," he declared.</p> + +<p>He planned to ride about the knoll at a safe distance +in the hope of discovering what lay hidden +on the other side. As he was about to mount his +pony, however, he saw a warrior rise to his feet, +and stand boldly outlined on the top of the hill. +It was an entirely unexpected maneuver, and White +Otter instantly became suspicious. He feared +that it was a trick to lead him into a trap. He +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>looked anxiously about the plain to make sure that +other crafty foes were not circling around behind +him to cut off his retreat. He saw no one except +the mysterious stranger on the top of the hill. He +seemed to be watching White Otter as intently as +the latter was watching him. For some time +neither moved.</p> + +<p>White Otter finally decided that, as the unknown +scout was too far away to be identified, it would be +foolish to waste more time watching him. He determined +to continue on his way toward the Sioux +camp. If he learned that he was being followed he +planned to turn aside on a false trail until it grew +dark. Then he would circle back toward the Ogalala +village.</p> + +<p>As White Otter mounted his pony and started +away, however, the warrior on the knoll suddenly +showed signs of life. The Sioux had ridden less +than an arrow flight when the sentinel disappeared +over the brow of the hill. White Otter felt quite +certain that his pursuit had begun. He watched +anxiously over his shoulder for the first glimpse +of his foes. The Crows had lately been seen in +that vicinity, and he wondered if a company of +those hated enemies were about to come racing +along his trail. He did not force his pony, however, +as he was eager to learn the identity of his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>pursuers before he raced away for the Sioux camp.</p> + +<p>White Otter did not have long to wait. In a few +moments a solitary horseman swept over a rise of +the plain and galloped toward him. The Sioux +felt sure that it was the warrior who had been +watching him. As the stranger appeared to be +alone, and eager to fight, White Otter prepared +for battle. Before venturing within arrow range, +however, the rider suddenly wheeled his pony, and +raced around White Otter at great speed. The +Sioux immediately stopped and prepared to defend +himself. Then he suddenly discovered that +the horseman was a friend.</p> + +<p>"Ho, Dacotah! Ho, my brother!" shouted the +rider.</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes, now I see who you are," cried White +Otter, as he lowered his bow.</p> + +<p>A moment later they dismounted beside each +other. White Otter recognized the rider as a +Minneconjoux warrior named Lean Wolf, an old +friend with whom he had shared several perilous +adventures.</p> + +<p>"I have brought you some words from your +brother, Sun Bird," said Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>"It is good," White Otter replied, eagerly, as +his eyes lighted with pleasure.</p> + +<p>"It is bad," Lean Wolf said, soberly.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>"Has something bad happened to my brother +Sun Bird?" the young Ogalala inquired anxiously.</p> + +<p>"No, I have not come to tell you that," Lean +Wolf assured him. "I have come to tell you that +our enemies, the Blackfeet, came to our camp. They +crawled around the village in the dark like dogs. +We did not hear them. They ran off many ponies. +Sun Bird is going to bring back those ponies. He +is the leader of a war party. He is going to fight +the boastful Blackfeet. He wants his brother +White Otter to go with him."</p> + +<p>Lean Wolf finished speaking, and looked inquiringly +at the young Ogalala war chief. For +some moments the latter remained silent. He knew +that a warrior must not speak hastily, or pledge +himself too eagerly. Although his heart beat +wildly at the thought of joining his friend in a +war expedition against the Blackfeet, he carefully +concealed his emotion lest he might lose respect in +the eyes of the stern Minneconjoux scout. Then, +after the proper interval, White Otter replied:</p> + +<p>"Lean Wolf, tell my brother Sun Bird that I +will go with him to fight the Blackfeet," he said, +quietly.</p> + +<p>"It is good," replied Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>"See, pretty soon it will be dark," said White +Otter. "You must go with me to my people."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>"No, I will go back," Lean Wolf told him. "I +was going to your village to find you. Then I saw +you here. It is good. I have brought you the +words of your brother Sun Bird. It is what I set +out to do. I have done it. Now I will turn back. +Sun Bird is waiting."</p> + +<p>"Go, my brother," replied White Otter. "Tell +Sun Bird that I will come to meet him at the end +of three suns. If I do not come then he must wait +one sun more. Then if I do not come he will know +that something bad has happened to me. Now I +am going away."</p> + +<p>They parted without further ceremony, riding +away into the twilight in opposite directions. Once +they had separated neither looked back. After he +had ridden a short distance, however, White Otter +raised his head and uttered the wild, piercing +war cry of the Dacotahs. It echoed defiantly across +the plain, and the young war chief thrilled at the +sound. Then, after a short silence, it was answered +from the west. White Otter laughed gleefully +as he raced his pony toward the Sioux camp.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER II</h2> + +<h3>OFF ON THE WAR TRAIL</h3> +<br /> + +<p>When White Otter reached the Sioux camp +he rode directly to the lodge of old Wolf +Robe, the famous Ogalala war chief.</p> + +<p>"Ho, grandfather, see, I have brought you some +meat," he cried gayly.</p> + +<p>"Ho, I see that you have killed a fat young +buck," said Wolf Robe, as his eyes lighted with +pleasure. "Come, woman, cut some meat."</p> + +<p>At his command, old Singing Wind, the grandmother +of White Otter, came from the lodge. +White Otter dragged the buck from his pony. +Then, as Singing Wind called some of the younger +women to help her, White Otter asked if he might +talk with Wolf Robe.</p> + +<p>"Yes, my son, come into the lodge and sit down +with me," said Wolf Robe.</p> + +<p>The old chief listened attentively while White +Otter described his unusual adventure with the +lynx. Then he told of his meeting with Lean Wolf, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>the Minneconjoux scout, and the message which +the latter had brought from Sun Bird. Wolf Robe +looked sharply at his grandson.</p> + +<p>"I am going with Sun Bird to fight the Blackfeet," +declared White Otter.</p> + +<p>Wolf Robe nodded understandingly, but made +no reply. For a long time he gazed thoughtfully +at his battle-scarred war shield which hung on a +tripod of poles at the rear of the lodge. It appeared +as if the aged war leader was recalling his +own glorious achievements on the war trail in the +days of his youth. White Otter waited patiently +for him to speak.</p> + +<p>"It is good," Wolf Robe said, finally. "The +voice of a friend travels far. The ears of a Dacotah +are open for the words of a friend. Sun +Bird has called you. He is your friend. You must +go."</p> + +<p>Having given this advice, Wolf Robe again subsided +into silent meditation. As White Otter rose +to leave, however, his grandfather motioned for +him to be seated.</p> + +<p>"Wait, my son, I have some words for you," he +said.</p> + +<p>"It is good," replied White Otter.</p> + +<p>"You say that you are going to fight the Blackfeet," +said Wolf Robe. "Those people are strong. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>They are braver than the boastful Pawnees. I +have fought with them many times. When I was +a young man I was taken to their village. They +kept me there many moons. Those were bad days. +Then I got away. After that I fought many battles +against those people. Once I went to their camp, +and took away some ponies. It was a hard thing +to do. Yes, my son, the Blackfeet are great warriors. +Well, I have told you about them. Now +you can tell our brothers, the Minneconjoux, about +it. I believe you will have a big fight to get back +those ponies. My son, you are a Dacotah. It is +enough. I have spoken. Go!"</p> + +<p>The following day, at sunrise, White Otter set +out to join the Minneconjoux war party. He was +dressed and decorated for the war trail. Naked +above the waist, he had daubed and streaked his +face, chest and arms with yellow clay. A great +war bonnet of eagle plumes proclaimed his rank +as a famous Ogalala war chief. His dress consisted +of buckskin leggings, buffalo-hide moccasins, +a buckskin breechcloth, and a silky cow buffalo +robe for protection against wind and storm. +He carried a wolfskin case containing his bow and +arrows, a flint knife in a buckskin sheath, his buffalo-hide +war shield, and a weasel-skin pouch +containing his fire sticks and some dried meat. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>Mounted upon his best war pony, the dashing +young warrior made a striking appearance as he +rode proudly from the great Sioux camp.</p> + +<p>Many friends shouted good wishes from the +edge of the village. White Otter turned his +pony, and answered them with the thrilling war-cry +of the Dacotahs. Then he raced away toward +the west.</p> + +<p>Once beyond range of the camp, however, +White Otter drew his pony to a walk, and carefully +scanned the plain. He had little fear of encountering +foes so near the Ogalala village, but +he determined to take every precaution. A small +band of antelope were feeding far away toward +the south, and as they seemed to be the only living +creatures on the vast expanse of plain White Otter +urged his pony into a canter and proceeded on +his way.</p> + +<p>It was a glorious day in early summer. The +sky was blue and cloudless. The prairie was dotted +with flowers. Birds sang gayly from the +thickets. The air was perfumed with the fragrance +of blossoms, the sweet aroma of growing +grass, and the faint, spicy scent of distant sage.</p> + +<p>White Otter rode on his way in high spirits. He +was carefree, and happy, and eager for adventure. +The fact that he was about to expose <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>himself +to the perils of the war trail caused him +slight concern. He had implicit confidence in the +ability and courage of his tribesmen, the fearless +Minneconjoux, and he had little doubt that their +expedition against the powerful Blackfeet would +be entirely successful. The thought of being injured +or killed in the adventure never entered his +mind. If it had he would have wasted little time +upon it, as he had long since learned to scoff at +danger, and to accept injury and death as inevitable +possibilities in the life of every warrior.</p> + +<p>Toward the end of the day White Otter came in +sight of a familiar little grove of aspens which +marked a former camp site. He had encountered +a company of Ute warriors at that spot the previous +year, and he was somewhat suspicious of it. +It offered a splendid hiding place to foes, and the +wily young Sioux determined to make sure that +the place was unoccupied before he ventured within +arrow range. He stopped at a safe distance out +on the plain, and watched the grove with considerable +anxiety. Then, as he saw nothing to arouse +his suspicions, he rode slowly about the camp site, +looking for fresh pony tracks. He soon discovered +them. They led away from the grove. White +Otter dismounted, and studied them with great +care. He saw that it was the trail of a single +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>pony, and the tracks were several days old. Having +learned that much, he walked slowly ahead of +his horse, watching carefully to discover where +the trail had entered the grove.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps it was Lean Wolf," he told himself.</p> + +<p>He soon learned otherwise, as the trail approached +the grove from the south. White Otter +followed the tracks a short distance out on the +plain, and found evidence which convinced him that +the pony had carried a rider. As there seemed +little to be gained by following the trail farther +in that direction, he turned and followed it to the +grove.</p> + +<p>The camp site was unoccupied, and as there was +a spring, and plenty of grass for his horse, White +Otter decided to stop there for the night. He +picketed his pony, and then began to examine the +place for signs. The ashes from a small fire, and +some charred bones scattered near by, told him +that some one had spent the night at that spot +several days before. He worked diligently to find +a clew to the identity of the traveler, but found +nothing which would tell him what he wished to +know. The little mound of ashes, the remnants of +a meal, and the pony tracks were his only clews.</p> + +<p>The fact that the unknown horseman had come +from the south aroused White Otter's interest. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>Both the Pawnees and the Utes lived to the southward. +As he had already encountered a war party +of the latter at the grove he wondered if it was a +favorite stopping place for those mysterious foes. +However, as the signs were at least two days old, +the possibility caused him little concern.</p> + +<p>Having finished his reconnaissance, White Otter +seated himself at the edge of the grove to watch +the plain. The sun had already set, and the purple +evening shadows were creeping out of the east. +The prairie appeared lifeless. The Sioux was at +a loss to account for the scarcity of game. He +feared that foes of some sort had driven it from +the locality. The thought suggested the possibility +that the lone rider was a scout, loitering behind +a hunting party to watch for enemies.</p> + +<p>At dark White Otter returned to his pony. He +feared to make a fire, lest the gleam might betray +him to his foes. He sat beside the little spring, +and ate several cakes of pemmican, composed of +dried meat and berries, which he had brought for +just such an emergency.</p> + +<p>Before he ventured to sleep, White Otter returned +to the edge of the plain, and spent a long +time listening for a warning of approaching enemies. +The howling of some distant prairie wolves, +the gentle rustling of the aspens, and an occasional +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>grunt from his pony were the only sounds. He +continued to listen, however, until the night was +half gone. Then he returned to the camp site, and +lay down to sleep.</p> + +<p>Dawn was just breaking when White Otter was +suddenly awakened by the snorting of his pony. +Seizing his bow, he moved cautiously to the edge +of the grove. A buck antelope was standing +within easy bowshot. It had scented the pony, +and stopped to investigate. Unable to resist the +temptation, White Otter drove his arrow through +its heart. It was a yearling in prime condition, +and he cut a choice steak from the carcass. Then, +as the light strengthened, and he saw no evidence +of foes, he made a tiny fire and broiled the antelope +meat. He ate heartily, and gave thanks to +Wakantunka, the Great Mystery, for sending him +food.</p> + +<p>Shortly after sunrise White Otter resumed his +journey toward the Minneconjoux camp. As the +pony tracks led in that direction he followed them +with keen interest. If the lone horseman really +were a hostile scout, White Otter knew that to follow +him would be the surest and safest way of locating +any enemies who might be in the vicinity. +He kept a sharp watch, therefore, and approached +the knolls and ridges with great caution.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>It was midday before he saw anything to make +him suspicious. Then he discovered a dense cloud +of dust rising behind a slight elevation of the plain. +He immediately stopped to watch it. It suggested +two possibilities—a herd of frightened buffaloes +or a company of horsemen. White Otter longed +to peep over the top of the ridge, but he realized +that it would be folly to take the risk until he knew +what was before him. He knew that hostile scouts +might be watching from that spot, and the possibility +made him cautious.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps some one is hunting buffaloes," he +said.</p> + +<p>Realizing that he might have been seen, White +Otter looked for a place of concealment. The +plain was open and bare of shelter, however, and +there was no chance to hide. He determined to +remain where he was, hoping that something might +appear along the crest of the ridge.</p> + +<p>It was soon evident that whatever was raising +the dust was moving rapidly toward the north. +White Otter felt quite certain that it was a herd +of buffaloes in wild flight. Perhaps they were +pursued by wolves, which were always loitering +about the herds at that season to prey upon the +young calves. It was just as probable, however, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>that a hunting party of foes had invaded the great +Sioux hunting grounds.</p> + +<p>"Well, I will wait here and see what comes of +it," declared White Otter.</p> + +<p>The dust cloud finally faded out some distance +farther toward the north. White Otter was perplexed. +He was undecided as to what he should +do. The ridge extended like a barrier directly +across his path, and it would be necessary to cross +it to continue his journey. Still, he realized the +peril of venturing within bow range.</p> + +<p>White Otter waited a long time, and then finally +turned his pony toward the south, and rode along +parallel with the ridge. Having seen nothing +which would lead him to suspect enemies, he +planned to cross the ridge some distance to the +southward. When he believed that he had gone +a sufficient distance, he turned and approached the +ridge. As he finally came within arrow range he +stopped and searched the top of the slope for signs +of foes. Although he failed to discover them, he +realized that they might be lying just below the +top of the ridge, in which event it would be impossible +to see them. He rode forward with great +caution, therefore, and was prepared to flee at the +first hint of danger.</p> + +<p>White Otter had actually begun to climb the slope +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>when he was startled by a chorus of whoops and +yells, and turning toward the left he saw a company +of horsemen racing toward him. He lashed +his pony up the slope and crossed the ridge. Then +he rode furiously toward the west.</p> + +<p>The maneuver completely fooled the Pawnees +who had expected him to turn down the ridge and +flee in the opposite direction. Their confusion +gave White Otter a chance to get beyond arrow +range before they dashed over the ridge in pursuit +of him. He looked over his shoulder and counted +eight riders whom he instantly recognized as Pawnees. +His eyes flashed dangerously as he thought +of those hated foes.</p> + +<p>White Otter was holding his lead over his pursuers +when he suddenly saw a solitary rider gallop +from a little grove of trees, and race diagonally +across the plain in an effort to intercept him. +The Pawnee was mounted on a particularly fast +little buckskin, and White Otter realized that unless +he swerved from his course he would soon +come within easy bow range of him. The Sioux +however, refused to give way.</p> + +<p>"I will kill that man," White Otter declared, +grimly.</p> + +<p>The other Pawnees had failed to come within +bowshot, and although they were yelling fiercely, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>and forcing their ponies to the limit, White Otter +gave little attention to them. His eyes were +fixed on the daring rider who was racing recklessly +across the plain in an attempt to get in front of +him. The Pawnee seemed equally intent upon +watching White Otter. The ponies appeared well +matched, and the race was a thrilling one.</p> + +<p>When they finally came within bow range, White +Otter was sufficiently in the lead to foil the plan +of the Pawnee. The latter, however, immediately +began to shoot his arrows, and one of them penetrated +deep behind the shoulder of the Sioux pony. +Mortally wounded, the unfortunate animal made +one great bound and then crashed to its knees, and +White Otter was thrown heavily over its head.</p> + +<p>Jarred and stunned, the Sioux staggered to his +feet to find the Pawnee almost upon him. Quick +to realize his peril, White Otter dropped behind +his dying pony as the Pawnee shot his arrow. The +next moment he drove his own arrow through the +body of his foe, as the latter rode at him with his +war club raised for the fatal stroke. As the Pawnee +toppled to the plain, White Otter sprang forward +and seized the bewildered pony. An instant +later he was racing away through a volley of Pawnee +arrows.</p> + +<p>Enraged at the fate of their comrade, the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>Pawnees +were risking their necks to overtake the Sioux. +White Otter feared that at any moment either he +or the captured pony would be pierced by their +arrows. In their frenzy, however, they shot +wildly, and their arrows flew wide of the mark. +White Otter lashed the Pawnee pony without mercy +in an effort to place himself beyond arrow range. +He was astonished at the speed and stamina of the +buckskin, and he soon realized that it was the equal +of the horse he had lost. The discovery gave him +confidence. A glance backward told him that two +of his pursuers were steadily losing ground, and +he was holding his lead against the others. He +was still within arrow range, however, and he +crouched low upon the buckskin, and urged it to +still greater efforts. It responded nobly, and the +fierce yells from his enemies convinced him that +they were falling farther behind. The Pawnee pony +was speeding over the plain with great bounds, +and White Otter was forced to admit that his +favorite war pony would have been sorely tried to +maintain the pace.</p> + +<p>Having begun to increase his lead, White Otter +took hope. The little buckskin had won his confidence, +and he had little fear of being overtaken. +The day was far spent, and he believed that he +would have little difficulty in keeping well ahead +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>of his pursuers until darkness came to his aid. +Then he knew that it would be a simple task to +shake them from his trail. Feeling sure of escape, +therefore, he sat erect and shook his bow defiantly +at the helpless Pawnees. They replied with wild +yells of rage, and White Otter laughed mockingly.</p> + +<p>The Pawnees continued the chase until darkness +finally blotted them from sight. Then White Otter +turned sharply from his course, and rode directly +toward the north. Feeling confident that +the maneuver would baffle his foes, he slackened +the pace of his pony to an easy canter. Thus he +rode until the night was half gone, and then he +stopped and dismounted from the tired little buckskin.</p> + +<p>Fearing that the Pawnees might continue to +search for him, White Otter made no attempt to +sleep. He sat close beside his pony, watching and +listening for a warning of his foes. He hoped +that if they failed to find him before daylight they +would abandon the pursuit rather than venture +farther into the Minneconjoux hunting grounds.</p> + +<p>Shortly before daylight White Otter mounted +his pony and rode away toward the west. Having +heard nothing from the Pawnees he felt quite certain +that he had thrown them from his trail. His +confidence was rudely shaken, however, when he +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>suddenly heard the sharp, husky bark of the little +gray fox a short distance at his left. A few moments +afterward a horse whinnied, and before he +could interfere the little buckskin replied.</p> + +<p>"That is bad," White Otter murmured, uneasily.</p> + +<p>He was fearful and perplexed. The signal was +a favorite one among the Sioux, and still under +the circumstances he mistrusted it. He waited, +therefore, listening anxiously to locate whoever +confronted him. In a few moments the call was +repeated at his right. He knew that either friends +or foes were on both sides of him. At length he +answered the challenge. A voice sounded from the +darkness.</p> + +<p>"Ho, Dacotah."</p> + +<p>"Ho, my brother Sun Bird," White Otter replied, +joyfully, as he recognized the voice of his +friend.</p> + +<p>Then Sun Bird and his brother Little Raven rode +forward to meet him. The three young warriors +had shared many perilous adventures, and they +greeted one another with boyish enthusiasm. Then +Sun Bird repeated the call of the little gray fox +three times in quick succession, and fifteen grim +Minneconjoux warriors came to join them.</p> + +<p>"Lean Wolf told us about this thing," Sun Bird +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>explained. "Come, Lean Wolf, here is White Otter, +tell him about it."</p> + +<p>"Ho, my brother," said Lean Wolf, as he rode +up beside White Otter.</p> + +<p>"Ho, my brother Lean Wolf," White Otter replied, +heartily.</p> + +<p>"When I was riding back to my people I saw +some Pawnee hunters," explained Lean Wolf. +"They saw me, but I was a long ways off. They +did not come after me. I told my people about it. +Sun Bird said, 'It is bad. Those Pawnees may kill +White Otter. Perhaps we can help him. Come, +my friends, who will go with me to find White +Otter?' That is how we came here."</p> + +<p>"It is good," said White Otter. "The brave +Minneconjoux are my brothers. I believe when +the Pawnees heard your ponies they ran away. +But see, my friends, I am riding one of their +ponies. It is very fast. I will tell you how I +come to have it."</p> + +<p>The Minneconjoux listened with great interest +while White Otter told of his adventure with the +Pawnees. When he finished speaking there were +many exclamations of approval from the stern +warriors who had gathered about him.</p> + +<p>"White Otter, you have done a good thing," declared +Sun Bird. "See, it is getting light. Come, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>we will go and tell our people how you fooled the +boastful Pawnees."</p> + +<p>They turned their ponies toward the west, and +rode away singing boastfully of White Otter's triumph +over the Pawnees.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER III</h2> + +<h3>THE COUNCIL FIRE</h3> +<br /> + +<p>Late the second day the Sioux came in sight of +the great Minneconjoux camp. It was situated +beside a wide stream that flowed down from +great snowy peaks farther to the westward. The +little company of riders stopped on the summit of +a grassy knoll and looked with pride on the great +circle of lodges which dotted the plain. Their +pride was somewhat humbled, however, by the absence +of the vast herd of ponies which usually were +to be seen grazing near the village. The few +horses that had escaped the Blackfeet raid were +carefully guarded within the camp.</p> + +<p>The riders had already been discovered and recognized +by watchers at the edge of the village, +and a company of horsemen was soon racing across +the plain to meet them.</p> + +<p>"See! my people are coming to take you to +their village," Sun Bird told White Otter.</p> + +<p>As the Minneconjoux dashed up to them White +Otter recognized several old friends in the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>company +who had come out to welcome him. There +was Feather Dog, a famous scout, with whom he +had shared a number of thrilling adventures; and +Sitting Eagle, another great scout, was in the +party. Then there was Kicking Bull, a renowned +hunter, whom White Otter had saved from death +in a buffalo stampede. All those men greeted the +famous young Ogalala chief with great respect, +and his heart filled with pride as he realized the +esteem in which he was held by those renowned +warriors.</p> + +<p>"You have come to help us fight the Blackfeet," +said Feather Dog. "It is good. We will do some +big things."</p> + +<p>"I was going with my brother Sun Bird to find +you, but the great chief Curly Horse asked me to +stay behind," explained Kicking Bull. "Some of +our young men saw smoke over near the mountains, +and we were afraid that the Blackfeet were +coming back. That is why I held back."</p> + +<p>"It is good," declared White Otter.</p> + +<p>As the horsemen approached the camp the Minneconjoux +began to shout the name of White Otter +and to sing songs of welcome. The daring exploits +of the young Ogalala war chief had made +him famous throughout the great Dacotah nation, +and the Minneconjoux were prepared to honor him +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>with the courtesies due a great chief. When he +reached the edge of the village he was met by a +delegation of noted warriors who led him through +the camp, so that all the people might have a +chance to welcome him.</p> + +<p>"See, here is White Otter!" cried the Minneconjoux. +"It is White Otter, the great chief of the +Ogalalas. It is White Otter, the great war leader. +See, White Otter, our lodges are open. We have +cooked much meat. You must come to our lodges, +and eat with us."</p> + +<p>Men, women and children followed behind his +pony, as his escort led him toward the lodge of the +famous chief, Curly Horse. The Minneconjoux +war chief was waiting to receive him. Beside him +stood Rain Crow, the noted Minneconjoux medicine +man, who was the father of Sun Bird and Little +Raven. The most renowned men of the tribe +composed the company which Curly Horse had +summoned to greet the Ogalala. They were dressed +in their choicest possessions and they made a +splendid appearance. Each of them wore the coveted +war bonnet of eagle plumes, and carried his +coupstick with a record of his achievements on the +war trail. It was a notable gathering, and White +Otter thrilled with pride as he looked upon those +splendid men of the great Dacotah nation.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>Curly Horse, the chief, was particularly imposing. +He was a middle-aged man, tall, and of powerful +physique, with stern features, and steady, +penetrating eyes. His voice was deep and commanding, +and he carried himself with the pride +and dignity appropriate to his rank. He wore a +great headdress of eagle feathers which extended +to the ground. Each feather was tipped with a +small tuft of hair taken from the scalps of his foes. +His buckskin shirt was decorated with weasel tails, +and mystic symbols traced with colored porcupine +quills. His buckskin breeches were deeply fringed, +and ornamented with porcupine quills and elk +teeth. A breastplate composed of the leg bones +of deer covered his breast. About his neck was a +necklace of bear claws. His moccasins were of +buffalo hide, beautifully decorated with porcupine +quills and colored grass. Over his arm he carried +a magnificent robe of the grizzly bear.</p> + +<p>"White Otter, you have come to my lodge—it is +good," said Curly Horse. "These great warriors +have come here to meet you. Many moons have +passed since you came here before. My people +have talked about you. They wanted you to come +back. Now I will tell you that we feel good because +you have come here."</p> + +<p>"I have listened to the words of the great chief, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>Curly Horse," replied White Otter. "They make +me feel good. I will keep them in my heart. The +Minneconjoux are my brothers. When my brothers +call, I come. My brother Sun Bird called me. I +am here. I am going with my brothers to fight the +Blackfeet. We will bring back many ponies."</p> + +<p>As White Otter ceased speaking Curly Horse +glanced at Rain Crow and the famous medicine +man stepped forward to greet the Ogalala.</p> + +<p>Rain Crow appeared older and less robust than +his chief, but he, too, was of striking appearance. +His face was seamed and scarred, and his hair +was streaked with gray. His eyes, however, flashed +with the fire of youth. He wore a large wolfskin +cap decorated with a great pair of buffalo horns. +His face was painted with white clay. His hair +was divided into two braids bound with otter skin. +His buckskin shirt and breeches were decorated +with mysterious medicine symbols. About his +neck was a necklace of sacred charms or tokens, +each believed to possess some strange power which +would aid him in overcoming the Evil Spirits, and +preserve him from the attacks of his foes. In his +right hand he carried the sacred medicine pipe. +Over his left arm was a handsome robe of wolfskins.</p> + +<p>"White Otter, Curly Horse has spoken," said +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>Rain Crow. "Now I will give you some words. +I feel good when I see you here. You are a young +man, but you are a great chief. I believe you will +do something big when you meet the boastful +Blackfeet. White Otter, you say that Sun Bird and +Little Raven are your brothers. It is good. I +will make you my son. My son, the lodge of Rain +Crow is open for you. I have spoken."</p> + +<p>"Rain Crow, you are a great Medicine Person," +replied White Otter. "You have done some big +things. I have heard my people talk about you. +It is true that Sun Bird and Little Raven are my +brothers. You have called me your son. It is a +great thing. I feel good about it. I will tell my +people about it. It will make them feel big. My +father, I will bring you some ponies from the +Blackfeet camp. I have finished."</p> + +<p>Many other noted warriors made speeches praising +the ability and courage of the young Ogalala, +and welcoming him to the Minneconjoux camp. +When the ceremony was finally concluded Sun Bird +escorted White Otter to the lodge of Rain Crow.</p> + +<p>"Now I will tell you how the Blackfeet ran off +all those ponies," Sun Bird said, when they were +alone.</p> + +<p>"Yes, tell me about it," urged White Otter.</p> + +<p>"We were dancing the Buffalo Dance," said +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>Sun Bird. "My father was singing the Medicine +Songs. The people were sitting near the fire. +The fast war ponies were tied near the lodges, but +many good hunting ponies were out on the plain. +We left them there because our scouts did not see +any signs of enemies. Only a few boys were watching +those ponies. Well, while the people were dancing +and singing we heard a great noise. There +were many shouts. Then we heard many ponies +running. Pretty soon a boy rode into the village. +He was shouting, 'The Blackfeet! The Blackfeet! +They have run off the ponies!' Then we jumped +upon the war ponies, and were going out to chase +the Blackfeet, but Curly Horse held us back. +'Wait!' shouted Curly Horse. 'Perhaps it is a +trick. Perhaps a great war party is about to rush +into the camp. We will watch, and see what comes +of it.' We knew that those were good words, and +we waited to guard the camp. Well, no one came. +Then we knew that the Blackfeet had gone away +with the ponies. When it got light one of the boys +came back. His pony fell down and died when he +came into the village. He rode a long ways to get +away from the Blackfeet. The other boy did not +come back. The Blackfeet must have carried him +away."</p> + +<p>"Who is he?" inquired White Otter.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>"He is Dancing Rabbit," Sun Bird told him.</p> + +<p>"His father was Lame Wolf. He was killed by +our enemies, the Crows. His mother fell into the +water, and was carried away by the fierce Water +Monsters. Old Spotted Face is his grandfather. +He feels very bad about this thing."</p> + +<p>"I know Spotted Face," said White Otter. +"He is a great man. We must try to help him."</p> + +<p>"Perhaps we will find Dancing Rabbit in the +Blackfeet camp," replied Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>The day had already ended, and as the evening +shadows fell upon the camp the Minneconjoux began +preparations for the great war dance. A large +fire was lighted in the center of the village, and +the entire tribe assembled to honor the men who +were going to fight the Blackfeet. The warriors +who had enlisted in the war party marched noisily +about the camp, singing their war songs, and +shouting boastful threats against their foes. As +they finally approached the council fire they were +greeted with wild yells of approval from the great +company who awaited them. Then all subsided +into respectful silence as Curly Horse and the principal +chiefs of the tribe walked solemnly into the +council circle.</p> + +<p>After the chief and his escort had taken positions, +the warriors lined up before him and waited +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>for him to address them. He looked upon them +with pride and affection. Most of them were young +men in the prime of their youth, and their bold, +flashing eyes and fearless faces proclaimed their +courage. They were led by Sun Bird who had organized +the war party. He called White Otter to +stand beside him, and the Minneconjoux murmured +approval of the honor.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, I see that you are ready for war," +said Curly Horse. "You are going to fight the +Blackfeet. It is good. They are our enemies. +They have carried off many of our ponies. You +must bring them back. You must also bring some +good Blackfeet ponies. Perhaps you will find +Dancing Rabbit in the Blackfeet camp. Then you +must carry him away. Spotted Face is waiting +for him. I will not tell you how to fight. You are +Dacotahs. It is enough. Now I will ask Rain +Crow to give you some words."</p> + +<p>Before speaking, Rain Crow drew an ember from +the fire and lighted the sacred medicine pipe. Then +he puffed the smoke toward the heavens, toward +the earth, and toward each of the four winds. He +kept up a weird, high-pitched chant, and tossed +small handfuls of dried sweet grass into the flames. +It was evident that he was asking success for the +war party, and the Minneconjoux watched him +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>with grave interest. When he had completed the +ceremony, he stood some time staring fixedly at the +stars. Then he addressed the war company.</p> + +<p>"My friends, you have seen me smoke the great +Medicine Pipe," he said. "It is good. It will +help you. I have asked Wakantunka, the Great +Mystery, to make you strong. I have asked the +Good Spirits to help you. I have asked the Bad +Spirits to do you no harm. I believe everything +will be good. I believe you will overcome the +Blackfeet. Listen, my friends, I hear the noise of +many ponies running. Yes, yes, those are Sioux +ponies. Yes, I hear some Blackfeet ponies. They +are running toward the Minneconjoux camp. I +see these brave young men riding behind them."</p> + +<p>His prophecy roused the Minneconjoux. Men, +women and children united their voices in the war +cry of the Dacotahs. It rang through the camp, +and echoed off across the plain as a challenge to +their foes. Rain Crow laughed, and shook his +clenched hand toward the north.</p> + +<p>"Hi, you Blackfeet people, do you hear that +noise?" he cried, excitedly. "Pretty soon you will +know what it means. Then you will shake, and +cry like young deer when they hear the wolf cry."</p> + +<p>His words again threw the people into a frenzy +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>of excitement. The war cry again rang out across +the plain, and before the sound had died away the +warriors had assembled for the war dance. They +formed a large circle about the fire, and stood +awaiting the word from Sun Bird, their leader. A +number of aged men had come forward with the +war drums, and taken places near the dancers. A +hush fell upon the vast assemblage, as the Minneconjoux +watched eagerly for the interesting spectacle +to begin.</p> + +<p>Then Sun Bird raised his voice in the familiar +strains of the great war song, and the dance began. +Keeping time with the solemn, rhythmical throbbing +of the war drums, the dancers moved slowly +about the fire chanting the boastful words of the +war song, and flourishing their weapons. They had +not circled many times about the fire, however, before +they cast off restraint, and flung themselves +into ecstasies of the dance with wild abandon. The +war song was forgotten, as the dancers began to +shout their boasts and threats against the powerful +foes in the north. Each moment added to their +excitement, and as the war drums throbbed in +shorter, quicker beats, the dancers quickened their +steps to hold the rhythm. Although each held his +place in the circle, they had abandoned all attempt +to dance in unison, and each man was interpreting +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>the spirit of the dance to suit himself. All, however, +kept time to the beats of the war drums, and +the droning chants of the aged musicians. As +quick and sinewy as mountain cats, the young warriors +pranced about the fire in a frenzy of enthusiasm. +Each tried to surpass his fellows in the mad +antics of the dance, and their maneuvers brought +yells of approval from the fascinated onlookers. +At one moment the dancers would stoop near the +ground, and dance forward with short, mincing +steps, shading their eyes with their hands, as if +searching for the trail of their foes. Then they +would suddenly spring upright and announce their +success with a piercing whoop. A moment afterward +they would leap forward with war club raised +to deliver the fatal stroke. Then they would begin +a wild dance about the fallen foe. Some of the +older warriors carried their coupsticks with the +trophies won on former war expeditions. As they +danced they shook these priceless possessions before +the envious eyes of their tribesmen. Sometimes +one of those dancers would drive his coupstick +in the ground while he and several companions +danced wildly about it, rushing up to touch it +and reciting some great achievement as they did so. +Then all would suddenly stand transfixed in their +places while they raised their faces toward the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>stars, and united their voices in the piercing +Dacotah war cry.</p> + +<p>The spectacle was weird and fascinating. The +grotesque contortions of the dancers in the lurid +glare of the fire, the fierce expression on their faces, +the solemn throbbing of the war drums, the picturesque +assemblage of spectators, the dim, ghostly +outlines of the lodges in the shadows, the gaunt, +wolf-like dogs skulking along the edge of the camp, +made a striking impression on the memory.</p> + +<p>White Otter, as a famous war chief of the Ogalalas, +was entitled to stand with Curly Horse and +the prominent men of the tribe. He declined the +honor, however, and took his place in the circle of +dancers. The Minneconjoux watched him with approving +eyes as he threw himself into the spirit of +the dance. When the ceremony was finally brought +to an end toward daylight, Curly Horse called the +Ogalala to his lodge.</p> + +<p>"White Otter, you are a great warrior," said +Curly Horse. "A great warrior must have a good +horse. The Pawnees have killed your war pony. +It is true that you have taken a good pony from +those boastful people. Well, you are a Dacotah, +and you must ride a Dacotah pony. I am going +to give you one of my fastest ponies to ride to the +Blackfeet camp. I have spoken."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>"Curly Horse, you have done a big thing," +White Otter replied, gratefully. "You are a great +chief, and I know that you have the fastest ponies. +Yes, I will ride your pony to the Blackfeet camp."</p> + +<p>"It is good," declared Curly Horse.</p> + +<p>When White Otter told Sun Bird of the gift +which he had received from Curly Horse, Sun Bird +beamed with pleasure. He believed that there were +few, if any, ponies in the entire Dacotah nation +which possessed the speed and endurance of those +owned by the great Minneconjoux chief.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps when you ride that horse you will +leave me far behind," Sun Bird said, banteringly.</p> + +<p>"Well, my brother, if I get to the Blackfeet camp +ahead of you I will leave some Blackfeet for you +to kill," laughed White Otter.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER IV</h2> + +<h3>AWAY INTO THE NORTH</h3> +<br /> + +<p>As White Otter and Sun Bird came from the +lodge at dawn they found a boy waiting with +a fiery little piebald pony.</p> + +<p>"Curly Horse has sent you this pony," said the +lad, as he passed the lariat to White Otter.</p> + +<p>"Tell the great chief Curly Horse that White +Otter feels good about this thing," said the Ogalala.</p> + +<p>"I know that pony," Sun Bird told him. "It is +very fast, but it is very wild. You must watch out +for it."</p> + +<p>"I will ride it," White Otter assured him.</p> + +<p>He was no sooner upon its back, however, than +the hot-tempered little beast began to rear and +plunge in a manner that would have proved disastrous +to a less expert rider. White Otter, however, +refused to be thrown, and Sun Bird whooped +with boyish glee as he capered wildly about the +rearing pony and shouted encouragement to his +friend. His shouts soon brought an appreciative +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>audience from the lodges, and White Otter realized +that his reputation as a horseman was at stake. +He set his sinewy thighs more closely behind the +shoulders of the plunging piebald, and pulled hard +on the lariat which was twisted about the animal's +lower jaw. The Minneconjoux soon saw that he +was an expert, and they offered neither criticism +nor advice. They watched with flashing eyes as +horse and rider fought for supremacy. Then the +pony suddenly whirled about and dashed among +them, and they scattered like a covey of frightened +quail to avoid the flying hoofs. The piebald bucked +its way through the center of the camp, with a +great company of men and boys racing along behind +it and yelling at the top of their voices. Some +women were broiling meat near the end of the +village, and as they heard the wild commotion, and +saw the pony racing directly toward them, they +fled to the lodges in a panic, crying out that the +Blackfeet had invaded the camp.</p> + +<p>In the meantime the piebald had collided with a +number of other high-spirited ponies which were +tied before the lodges of their owners, and several +of the animals broke loose and imitated the mad +antics of the piebald. In a few moments the entire +camp was in an uproar. The barking of the +dogs, the shouts of the men, the screams of the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>women, and the frightened cries of the children +mingled in one great din which turned the village +into bedlam.</p> + +<p>"It is bad," cried Curly Horse, as he watched +the disorder from the entrance to his lodge. "Some +Evil Spirit must have gone into that horse."</p> + +<p>The piebald, however, had finally exhausted +itself. It stood upon trembling legs at the edge +of the camp, with its head lowered in defeat. White +Otter reached over, and gently stroked the sweaty +neck. Then he raised its head and spoke sharply, +and the piebald gave obedience to its master. He +rode directly to the lodge of Curly Horse.</p> + +<p>"That is a bad horse," said Curly Horse. "I +will give you another pony."</p> + +<p>"No, no!" cried White Otter. "I will keep this +pony. It is fast, and strong. It will make a great +war pony."</p> + +<p>"Well, I see that you can ride it, so I will say +no more about it," replied Curly Horse.</p> + +<p>The wild escapade of the little piebald had +aroused the camp, and as the members of the war +party finally rounded up the loose ponies, and assembled +in the center of the village, the entire tribe +gathered to witness the departure. When the gallant +company was ready to leave, Curly Horse +came forward to address them.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>"My brothers, you are about to ride away to the +great Blackfeet camp," he said. "Before you lies +a long and dangerous trail. We have many enemies +in that country. The Blackfeet are the +strongest. They are very sly. You must be as +brave as great Matohota, the bear, and as cunning +as Tokala, the little gray fox. I see many brave +warriors among you. I see Sun Bird, your leader. +He is a great warrior. I see White Otter, the great +Ogalala chief. I see Little Raven. He is very +young, but he has done big things. I see Short +Bear. He is very brave. I see Feather Dog. He +is a great scout. I see Lean Wolf and Sitting +Eagle. They have been on many war trails. I +see many more brave warriors. It is a great war +party. I believe you will do what you are setting +out to do. I believe you will bring back many +ponies. I will ask Wakantunka, the Great Mystery, +to help you. I will ask our brother, Huya, the +great war bird, to lead you to the Blackfeet camp. +Go, my brothers, Curly Horse has spoken."</p> + +<p>"Curly Horse, you have given us big words," +replied Sun Bird. "We will keep them in our +hearts. We will remember that we are Dacotahs. +It is enough. We will go."</p> + +<p>A few moments afterward the war party rode +from the village. Many of the older warriors who +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>were remaining behind to guard the camp accompanied +the war party some distance across the +plain. The old men, the boys, and the women and +children gathered at the edge of the camp, singing +the war songs, and calling upon Wakantunka to +protect their warriors from the fierce and warlike +Blackfeet.</p> + +<p>Sun Bird asked White Otter to ride with him +at the head of the company. The youthful Minneconjoux +war leader fully realized his responsibility, +and he was glad to have the aid and counsel +of the famous young war chief whom he had asked +to accompany him.</p> + +<p>The war party was not a large one. It contained +less than a third of the fighting men of the tribe. +The Minneconjoux feared to send a larger force +from the village, for they knew that their old enemies, +the Crows, as well as several scouting parties +of Blackfeet, had recently been seen within a day's +travel of the Minneconjoux camp. They determined, +therefore, to send a small force of picked +warriors against the Blackfeet in the hope of recovering +the stolen ponies, and learning the fate +of the young Minneconjoux who had been carried +away. The company chosen for the perilous undertaking +was composed mostly of young warriors +famous for their courage and fighting ability, and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>a few older veterans, like Lean Wolf and Sitting +Eagle, whose mature judgment would check the +reckless impetuosity of their younger companions.</p> + +<p>"Well, my brother, how do you feel about this +thing?" Sun Bird suddenly asked White Otter, as +they cantered along in advance of the war party.</p> + +<p>"The Blackfeet are very strong," White Otter +replied, thoughtfully. "Wolf Robe, my grandfather, +has told me about them. I have never +fought those people. Wolf Robe says that they +are braver than the Pawnees. Do you know about +them?"</p> + +<p>"Yes, I have fought against them many times," +Sun Bird told him. "They are the enemies of my +people. They are brave. Many Buffaloes is their +chief. He is a great warrior. He rides a mysterious +war pony. It is as swift as the wind, and +as black as the night. Its eyes shine like the little +lights up there in the High Place. My people believe +it must be a Medicine Pony. Curly Horse +would give many good presents for that pony."</p> + +<p>At that moment their talk was interrupted by the +appearance of a golden eagle, the war bird of the +Dacotahs, which was circling slowly some distance +toward the north. The superstitious Minneconjoux +immediately accepted it as a good omen, as +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>they recalled the words of Curly Horse, their chief.</p> + +<p>"See, there is Huya, the great war bird," they +cried. "Curly Horse has sent him to lead us to +the Blackfeet camp. Come, Huya, our brother, +look about you, and show us where our enemies +are hiding."</p> + +<p>The eagle, however, soon disappeared into the +clouds, and the Minneconjoux cried, "Huya has +gone up there to look around. He is looking for +the Blackfeet. When he sees them he will fly over +them, and show us where they are."</p> + +<p>As they moved farther from the camp Sun Bird +began to take precautions against the possibility +of encountering foes. Two scouts were detailed +on either flank of the war party, and other riders +dropped back to guard the rear. Sun Bird, White +Otter and Little Raven rode some distance in front. +Thus the courageous band of Dacotahs made their +way across the great plain that extended for unknown +leagues into the northward, the stronghold +of the mighty Blackfeet nation.</p> + +<p>The day was two thirds gone when White Otter +suddenly discovered a horseman on the summit of +a low ridge far away toward the west. He immediately +stopped and showed him to Sun Bird and +Little Raven. Apparently aware that he had been +seen, the distant rider began to ride rapidly in a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>circle. It was the signal for danger. Sun Bird +appeared alarmed.</p> + +<p>"It is one of our scouts," he said, uneasily. +"Running Dog and Lean Wolf went that way. +That man is far away, but I believe he is Lean +Wolf. He has seen something bad. Come, Little +Raven, go and find out about it."</p> + +<p>As Little Raven raced away to meet the scout, +the main company of riders came up. They, too, +had discovered the rider on the ridge, and many +of them were eager to go over there in the hope +of finding foes.</p> + +<p>"No, that would be foolish," Sun Bird said, +firmly. "We will wait here until Little Raven +comes back and tells us about it. That scout has +not called us. He is telling us that he has seen +something. See, Little Raven is a long ways off. +Pretty soon we will know about this thing. We +must wait."</p> + +<p>"It is the only thing to do," agreed the famous +warrior, Sitting Eagle.</p> + +<p>They watched anxiously as the scout turned his +pony down the ridge, and rode to meet Little Raven. +The distance made positive identification +difficult, but most of them agreed that it was Lean +Wolf. When the two riders finally met, the members +of the war party watched them with breathless +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>interest. They also watched the plain in all directions +for the sudden appearance of foes. Then +the warriors who had been loitering in the rear +overtook them.</p> + +<p>"What has happened?" they inquired anxiously. +"Who is over there?"</p> + +<p>"Lean Wolf has made the danger signal," explained +their comrades. "Little Raven has gone +over to find out about it. Did you see anything?"</p> + +<p>"We saw some wolves," replied the scouts.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps they were Pawnees," suggested Sun +Bird.</p> + +<p>"No, we saw them running on the plain, and they +were wolves," declared High Hawk, one of the +warriors who had composed the rear guard.</p> + +<p>"See, Little Raven is coming back," White Otter +told Sun Bird. "He is riding fast. He has +something to tell us."</p> + +<p>"Lean Wolf has gone back to the ridge," said +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>They waited impatiently as Little Raven rode +toward them at top speed. In the meantime the +other rider was cantering toward the ridge. When +he reached it he rode up the low slope and disappeared +over the summit.</p> + +<p>"Lean Wolf has gone to watch something," declared +his tribesmen.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>When Little Raven finally reached them they +listened with eager attention while he told Sun +Bird what he had learned.</p> + +<p>"That man is Lean Wolf," said Little Raven. +"He found fresh pony tracks over beyond that +ridge. They were going the way we are going. +There were many ponies. They were riding +ponies. There were no marks of lodge poles. Lean +Wolf says it must be a war party. He does not +know who they are. Running Dog is following +the trail. Lean Wolf says that we must watch +sharp when night comes. He says that we must +stop pretty soon at the water place. Then he will +know where to find us. Perhaps he will come when +it gets dark. Perhaps he will go to find the camp +of those people. My brothers, I have brought you +the words of Lean Wolf."</p> + +<p>"It is good," replied Sun Bird. "My friends, +you have heard the words of our brother, Lean +Wolf. I believe that some of our enemies are +over there behind that ridge. Lean Wolf says +there are many pony tracks. There must be many +riders. Perhaps it is a big war party. We must +watch sharp. We will go ahead until we come to +the water place. Then we will stop. Perhaps +Lean Wolf will come there after it gets dark."</p> + +<p>As they were about to resume their way they +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>saw one of the scouts from the east riding toward +them. As he came nearer they recognized him as +Feather Dog.</p> + +<p>"Why have you stopped?" Feather Dog inquired, +curiously.</p> + +<p>"Lean Wolf found many pony tracks over there +behind that ridge," they told him.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps those are the ponies which the Blackfeet +took away," said Feather Dog.</p> + +<p>"No, the tracks are fresh," Sun Bird explained.</p> + +<p>"Then we must watch out," declared the famous +scout.</p> + +<p>"Did you see anything over there?" inquired +the Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>"We saw some buffaloes, but they were far +away," replied Feather Dog.</p> + +<p>After he had learned where his comrades intended +to stop for the night, he immediately left +them, and rode away to join his companion, a +young warrior named Proud Hawk. At the same +time the war party resumed their way toward the +north. They were enthusiastic over the possibility +of an early encounter with their foes, and Sun +Bird had considerable difficulty in restraining some +of the younger warriors who were eager to ride +after the unknown horsemen. His rank as war +leader, however, gave him authority to command. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>They accepted his orders, therefore, and followed +him across the plain, chanting their war songs, and +boasting of the deeds which they pledged themselves +to perform.</p> + +<p>The evening shadows were already falling when +the Sioux finally came in sight of the appointed +camp site. It was a small water hole in the midst +of a straggling growth of stunted trees. However, +as it offered good pasturage for the ponies, +it was a favorite stopping place. It marked the +northern boundary of the Minneconjoux hunting +grounds, and few of even the most venturesome +hunters cared to risk going farther into the north +unless accompanied by a strong force of their +tribesmen. It was dangerous ground, as both the +Blackfeet and the Crows were constantly roaming +about those boundless northern plains.</p> + +<p>"Well, my friends, we will stop here until the +next sun comes up," said Sun Bird, as he dismounted +from his pony.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER V</h2> + +<h3>SIOUX SCOUTS</h3> +<br /> + +<p>Alert to their peril, the Sioux took every +precaution against an attack. As the twilight +slowly faded, and the night shadows settled +upon the plain, the ponies were picketed in a circle +about the camp site, and details of warriors were +appointed to take turns in watching through the +night. There was no fire, and the evening meal +consisted of the usual war rations of dried buffalo +meat and berries.</p> + +<p>The warriors who had been scouting behind the +war party arrived at the camp site before dark, +but the scouts who had ridden along the flanks +failed to appear. The absence of Feather Dog +and Proud Hawk, who had been scouting toward +the east, caused considerable comment. The Sioux +knew that some time might pass before Lean Wolf +and Running Dog gained the desired information +about the mysterious horsemen to the westward, +but they were keenly curious to know what had +detained Feather Dog and his companion.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>"Perhaps something bad has happened to them," +suggested a young warrior named Many Feathers.</p> + +<p>"No, I do not believe it," Sun Bird declared, +confidently. "Feather Dog is a great scout. He +has been on many war trails. It is hard to catch +an old wolf. Come, White Otter, you are a great +war leader. Tell us how you feel about it."</p> + +<p>"My brothers, what Sun Bird says is true," declared +White Otter, "Feather Dog is a great scout. +Perhaps he is trying to find out about something. +I believe he will come here."</p> + +<p>While they were talking the familiar bark of the +little gray fox sounded from the eastward. It was +speedily answered, and a few moments afterward +Feather Dog and Proud Hawk rode to the camp +site.</p> + +<p>"Well, my brother, what did you find?" Sun +Bird asked Feather Dog.</p> + +<p>"We saw three scouts," replied Feather Dog. +"They were far away and they did not see us. We +hid behind a hill, and watched them a long time. +Then we followed them. When it got dark we +could not find them. They did not make a fire. I +believe they were looking for enemies."</p> + +<p>"Do you know who they are?" Sun Bird inquired, +eagerly.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>"No, we could not get close enough to find out +about it," Feather Dog told him.</p> + +<p>"Which way were they going?" asked Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"They were going the same way we are going, +but they were far away toward the place where +the sun comes up," replied the scout.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, you have heard the words of +Feather Dog," said Sun Bird. "Our enemies are +on two sides of us. We must be very cautious. +We will wait here until it gets light. Perhaps +Lean Wolf will come and tell us something."</p> + +<p>In the meantime the wily Sioux prepared themselves +against the possibility of a sudden attack. +The camp was surrounded by sharp-eared scouts +who stationed themselves some distance out on the +plain to listen for the approach of foes. The +ponies were picketed inside the circle of warriors, +who lay upon the plain with their weapons beside +them.</p> + +<p>Sun Bird and White Otter, however, remained +awake. The young Minneconjoux war leader was +anxious to consult his friend concerning the perilous +advance across the Blackfeet hunting grounds. +The young warriors moved beyond earshot of +their companions, therefore, and seated themselves +to talk.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>"White Otter, I believe we are in danger," said +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"It is true," White Otter replied, soberly. +"There are many enemies in this country. I believe +we will have some big fights before we get to +the Blackfeet camp."</p> + +<p>Sun Bird was about to reply when they were +startled by a strange rumbling noise toward the +north. They listened a moment in anxious suspense, +and then they leaped to their feet in alarm. +It sounded like the hoofbeats of many ponies +bearing down upon the camp site.</p> + +<p>"Call our people! Call our people!" cried Sun +Bird, as he rushed to arouse the sleeping Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>At that moment they heard the guards, who had +been stationed on the plain, racing toward the +camp. The picketed ponies were plunging and +snorting, and the alarmed Minneconjoux were +frantically untying the picket ropes.</p> + +<p>"The Blackfeet! The Blackfeet!" they shouted, +excitedly.</p> + +<p>"Tatanka! Tatanka! The buffaloes! The buffaloes!" +cried the sentinels who had been watching +on the north side of the camp.</p> + +<p>Then the Sioux suddenly realized the truth. A +vast herd of stampeded buffaloes were thundering +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>down upon them. There was not a moment to +spare. Springing upon the frightened ponies, the +Sioux rode madly into the night to escape from the +great mass of panic-stricken beasts behind them. +The buffaloes were sweeping across the plain with +the irresistible force of an avalanche, and the +horsemen knew that only the speed of their ponies +could save them. They kept close together, and +rode at a breakneck pace. A false step meant +destruction for horse and rider, and the Sioux +made little attempt to guide the agile little beasts +beneath them.</p> + +<p>Sun Bird and White Otter soon found themselves +beside one another at the head of the company. +The two ponies were running evenly, and +it was apparent that neither of them had reached +the limit of its speed. Nevertheless, they were +well in advance of all the other ponies, and appeared +to be increasing their lead with each stride.</p> + +<p>"That wild horse can run," laughed Sun Bird +as his blood tingled with the excitement of the +race. "Come, we will see what that pony can do."</p> + +<p>"Hi!" shouted White Otter, as Sun Bird suddenly +took the lead.</p> + +<p>He had carefully estimated the ability of the +little roan which Sun Bird rode, and felt sure that +it was a worthy competitor for the piebald. Now, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>as Sun Bird applied his rawhide quirt, the roan +began to show its speed. The piebald, however, +quickly accepted the challenge, and although White +Otter made no effort to force it the fiery little beast +was soon at the shoulder of the roan. Then they +raced madly through the darkness at a speed which +few if any of the ponies in the great Dacotah nation +could equal. Sun Bird was leaning forward +and vigorously applying his whip. White Otter, +however, was still allowing the piebald to make its +own pace. Inch by inch it crept steadily forward +until the roan's lead was cut to a nose length. +Then, as he perceived that the roan had reached the +limit of its powers, White Otter pulled heavily +against the lower jaw of the piebald. He knew that +a few more strides would take it into the lead, and +regard for the pride of his friend made him unwilling +to claim the victory.</p> + +<p>"Listen," he cried, suddenly. "Our people have +turned around. Come, we must follow them."</p> + +<p>"No! No! I see what you are trying to do," +Sun Bird cried, impatiently. "Come, let me see +that pony run."</p> + +<p>Then the Minneconjoux struck the piebald a +sharp blow with his quirt, and the marvelous beast +bounded past him and raced away at a speed which +astounded its rider. White Otter could scarcely +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>believe that he was mounted upon a creature of +real flesh and blood, for the piebald was rushing +through the night at a pace which seemed beyond +the powers of anything mortal. Carried away with +enthusiasm, the Ogalala applied his quirt for the +first time, and the piebald reached the limit of its +speed. White Otter was forced to crouch close +over the pony's neck to keep his breath. He was +dazed by the pace at which he was being carried +across the plain. It seemed as if he were flying +through space on the wings of a tempest.</p> + +<p>"It must be a Medicine Horse," he whispered, +superstitiously.</p> + +<p>When he finally succeeded in pulling the piebald +to a canter, he found that he had completely lost +Sun Bird, and the valiant little roan. He had +also raced beyond sound of the buffalo herd. The +piebald was breathing hard, but it showed no signs +of exhaustion, and White Otter believed that its +stamina was equal to its speed. Then, as he +stopped to listen, he heard a signal some distance +toward the east. He had heard the Minneconjoux +turn in that direction as Sun Bird forced him into +the last desperate sprint. It was evident, therefore, +that having gained a sufficient lead upon the +buffaloes, the Minneconjoux were circling back +toward the camp site. He believed that the signal +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>was from Sun Bird. To reassure him, White Otter +replied with the bark of the little gray fox.</p> + +<p>"Hi! the buffaloes are coming," he said, as he +heard the distant rumble of their hoof beats.</p> + +<p>Realizing that he was directly in their path, +White Otter turned his pony toward the east, and +rode off at a brisk canter. The buffalo herd was +a long ways behind him, and he had little fear of +being overtaken. There were other perils, however, +which caused him more concern. He had +heard Feather Dog tell of three mysterious riders +to the eastward, and it was possible that they were +scouts from a larger company. Therefore, White +Otter determined to advance with caution. He believed +that Sun Bird was close at hand, and his +first thought was to find him. It was not long before +he overtook him.</p> + +<p>"Ho, my brother, that pony did not come back +as fast as he went away," laughed Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"It is foolish to run when the race is finished," +replied White Otter.</p> + +<p>"That is the fastest horse I ever saw," Sun Bird +declared, enthusiastically.</p> + +<p>"Do you believe that this pony could catch that +great horse of Many Buffaloes, the Blackfeet +chief?" White Otter asked, eagerly.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>"No," Sun Bird told him. "There is no Dacotah +pony that can catch that horse."</p> + +<p>White Otter was not so sure about it. He could +not believe that any horse had greater speed than +the piebald. He kept his opinion to himself, however, +as he did not wish to appear boastful before +his friend.</p> + +<p>"Well, we got away from those buffaloes," said +Sun Bird. "Now we must go back to the water +place. We will find our friends there."</p> + +<p>Feeling sure that they had passed beyond the +edge of the great buffalo herd, they began to circle +toward the camp site. They were riding at an easy +canter, when they were suddenly halted by the +howling of a prairie wolf directly ahead of them. +Determined to take no chances, they listened to +convince themselves that the call was genuine.</p> + +<p>"Yes, it is Mayash," declared Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>As White Otter agreed that it really was a wolf +which had raised the cry, they advanced on their +way. However, they neither saw nor heard anything +of the skulking gray prowler. It was evident +that the wolf had slunk away at their approach.</p> + +<p>Then as they drew near the camp site the little +piebald raised its head, and whinnied softly. The +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>cautious young Sioux again stopped to investigate. +They knew that the piebald had caught the scent +of other ponies. While they waited, listening for +a clew, the familiar Dacotah signal sounded within +bow range of them.</p> + +<p>"It is good," said Sun Bird. "We have found +our people."</p> + +<p>A few moments later they met the scout who +had challenged them. He was Hollow Bear, a famous +Minneconjoux hunter.</p> + +<p>"We have been watching for you," Hollow +Bear told them. "There is much buffalo meat at +the water place. Some of the buffaloes ran against +the trees. Some fell into the water hole. Some +were dead. Some we killed. There must have +been many buffaloes in that herd. The ground is +all broken up."</p> + +<p>"Has Lean Wolf come here?" Sun Bird inquired, +eagerly.</p> + +<p>"No," replied Hollow Bear.</p> + +<p>They left the scout, and rode on toward the +camp site. They found the members of the war +party lying some distance out on the plain, as the +camp site was littered with the bodies of dead +buffaloes. The Sioux said that they had dragged +several of the great beasts from the pool.</p> + +<p>"It is good that we got away," said Sun Bird. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>"Those buffaloes would have pounded us into the +ground."</p> + +<p>"Well, there is good meat over there but we cannot +use it," complained Sitting Eagle. "There +are many robes, but there is little hair upon them."</p> + +<p>The Minneconjoux said that they had ridden far +enough to get a safe distance in front of the herd, +and then they had turned eastward and circled +back to the camp site. They seemed rather curious +to know why Sun Bird and White Otter had +been so long returning. Those crafty young warriors, +however, made no explanation. White Otter +had no desire to proclaim the superiority of +his pony, and Sun Bird was quite content to keep +silent concerning the defeat of his famous little +roan.</p> + +<p>Dawn was breaking when Running Dog, the companion +of Lean Wolf rode in from the west. The +war party crowded eagerly about him, asking for +news of the horsemen whom he and Lean Wolf had +followed.</p> + +<p>"We followed those people a long ways," Running +Dog told them. "When it got dark we saw +their fire. We went pretty close. Then we got +down from our ponies. We turned their heads out +of the wind so they would not call. I held the +ponies. Lean Wolf crawled up near the fire. He +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>was away a long time. Then he came back, and +told me about those people. They are Crows. +They are carrying meat. It is a great hunting +party. They are going straight ahead. Lean +Wolf says that you must watch sharp. Perhaps +the Crows will send out scouts. Perhaps they will +see you. Then there will be a fight. Lean Wolf +says to go straight ahead. We will keep following +the Crows until we find out where they are going. +Then we will come and tell you about it. I cannot +tell you any more."</p> + +<p>"It is good," replied Sun Bird. "Tell Lean +Wolf that we will do as he tells us to do. We will +keep a sharp watch for our enemies."</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER VI</h2> + +<h3>THE LONE RIDER</h3> +<br /> + +<p>After Running Dog had left them, Sun Bird +made preparations to resume their advance +toward the distant Blackfeet camp. Profiting by +the warning which the scouts had brought, the cautious +young war leader determined to make every +provision for the safety of the war party. In addition +to the two expert scouts riding along each +flank, Sun Bird appointed a strong rear guard +under command of Sitting Eagle. Then, as a further +precaution against blundering into a trap, +he asked White Otter and Little Raven to accompany +him on a reconnaissance far in advance of the +war party.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, you must wait here until we are +far ahead," he told the Minneconjoux, as he rode +away.</p> + +<p>Once beyond sight of their comrades, the +three young scouts realized that their mission was +a perilous one. They had little doubt that foes +were on both sides of them, and it was possible +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>that the Sioux war party had already been discovered. +In that event there was great probability +that crafty foes might circle around behind them, +and separate them from their companions.</p> + +<p>"We must watch sharp," cautioned Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>He hoped to lead the war party within an easy +day's travel of the Blackfeet camp. Then he +planned to go into hiding and send scouts under +cover of the darkness to locate the Blackfeet ponies +and reconnoiter about the village. In the meantime +Sun Bird realized the constant peril of colliding +with his enemies. However, he relied upon +the skill and daring of his scouts to give him timely +warning of an approaching war party. As they +were riding cautiously across the plain they again +saw the war eagle circling high up toward the +eastward. They stopped and watched it with great +interest.</p> + +<p>"See! our brother, Huya, has come down out +of the clouds," said Sun Bird. "I believe he is +flying around over there to show us where our +enemies are hiding."</p> + +<p>Soon afterward they saw a solitary horseman +ride over a distant rise of the plain. He quickly +discovered them, and immediately stopped his +pony. For some moments he continued to watch +them. Then he turned about and galloped from +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>view. The Sioux also had stopped at sight of the +stranger, and now that he had disappeared Sun +Bird was at a loss to determine just what to do. +The rider had been too far away to be identified, +but his actions made it plain that he was neither +Feather Dog nor Proud Hawk.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps he is one of the scouts that Feather +Dog told about," suggested Little Raven.</p> + +<p>"Yes, that may be true," said Sun Bird. "White +Otter, what do you make of it?"</p> + +<p>"I do not know what to make of it," acknowledged +White Otter. "That man saw us. If he is +a scout he will go to tell his people about us. It is +bad. We must watch sharp."</p> + +<p>"We are scouts," said Sun Bird. "We must +tell our brothers about this thing."</p> + +<p>"It is the best thing to do," agreed White Otter.</p> + +<p>"I will go back, and tell them about it," Little +Raven volunteered.</p> + +<p>As the others agreed, he immediately turned his +pony, and rode back to warn the war party. The +main company of Minneconjoux had not come in +sight, and Sun Bird and White Otter felt somewhat +anxious for the safety of the youthful scout +who had gone to meet his tribesmen. If a strong +force of foes were loitering in the vicinity, it would +be easy for them to intercept the solitary <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>Minneconjoux. +In spite of his youthfulness, however, +Little Raven was an experienced warrior, and Sun +Bird felt certain that he was competent to look +after himself in an emergency.</p> + +<p>"Sun Bird, I believe that warrior is watching +over the top of that hill," White Otter declared, +suspiciously.</p> + +<p>"How do you know that?" Sun Bird inquired, +anxiously.</p> + +<p>"I do not know it, but I believe I saw him peeping +over the top of that hill," replied White Otter.</p> + +<p>They looked anxiously toward the grassy knoll, +and strained their eyes to discover the skulking +foe. The thought that he was watching made them +uneasy, and they were eager to learn if their suspicions +were true. It was some moments before +White Otter finally became convinced.</p> + +<p>"Yes, I see him," he declared, positively. "He +is peeping over the top of that hill. I see his head +over there near that little bush. Watch sharp."</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes, I see his head," Sun Bird declared, a +moment later.</p> + +<p>Convinced that the mysterious horseman really +was watching them, they believed that he was waiting +to learn if they were followed by a larger company. +They had little doubt that he was a scout +reconnoitering in advance of a force of their foes.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>"It is bad," White Otter said, uneasily. "That +man saw Little Raven ride away. He will know +that some one is following behind us. He will +watch until our friends come. Then he will tell +his people about it."</p> + +<p>"Yes, I see that it is bad," said Sun Bird. +"Perhaps if we ride over there we can chase him +away."</p> + +<p>"Come," White Otter proposed, recklessly.</p> + +<p>As they cantered briskly toward the knoll, the +scout withdrew from sight. They felt quite sure +that he had merely slipped farther down the opposite +side of the ridge, and was still peering cautiously +over the top. As they felt convinced that +the horseman was alone, they had little fear of +running into an ambush. When they got within +arrow range, however, they approached with great +care. As a precaution against attack, they separated +and rode forward several arrow flights apart. +Once at the foot of the slope they rushed their +ponies to the top, and prepared to attack whoever +confronted them. The scout, however, was nowhere +in sight. They searched the plain in vain; +the mysterious stranger had entirely disappeared. +For a moment or so they were completely +baffled. Then White Otter suddenly smiled, and +nodded understandingly.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>"I know about it," he told Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Tell me," Sun Bird asked, eagerly.</p> + +<p>"That scout is very sharp," declared White Otter. +"He has thrown his pony, and he is hiding +over there in that high grass."</p> + +<p>"Yes, I believe that is where he is hiding," +agreed Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>The spot where they believed the scout had concealed +himself was many arrow flights away, and +they knew it would be difficult to discover him at +that distance. They felt almost certain, however, +that he was still watching them from his new hiding +place. The thought disturbed them. His persistence +made them suspicious. They wondered +if he were trying to fool them with some wily bit +of stratagem.</p> + +<p>"Well, we will ride over there and chase him +out," proposed Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>They had not gone an arrow flight, when a pony +suddenly rose to its feet in the long grass. An +instant later the rider sprang upon its back and +raced away toward the south. He was too far +in the lead to be easily overtaken, and besides, the +Sioux realized that it would be perilous to follow +him. They watched, therefore, while he sped +across the plain.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>"We have chased him away—it is good," said +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps something bad will come of it," White +Otter warned him. "If that man is a Blackfoot, he +will tell his people about us. Then it will be hard +to get near the camp."</p> + +<p>"Perhaps he is a Crow," Sun Bird suggested, +hopefully.</p> + +<p>"Lean Wolf has told us that the Crows are over +there," White Otter reminded him, as he pointed +toward the west.</p> + +<p>"That is true," agreed Sun Bird. "But perhaps +they sent scouts over here to look for the +Blackfeet."</p> + +<p>White Otter remained silent. The appearance +and the actions of the unknown scout had made +him wary. He feared that the Sioux war party +was in imminent danger of being surrounded and +attacked by a superior force of foes. The possibility +distressed him. There seemed little chance +of avoiding the peril.</p> + +<p>"Sun Bird, I believe the best thing to do is to +find our people," White Otter declared, finally. +"Perhaps Lean Wolf and Feather Dog have told +them something."</p> + +<p>"Yes, we will go to find our brothers," agreed +Sun Bird.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER VII</h2> + +<h3>SMOKE SIGNALS</h3> +<br /> + +<p>As Sun Bird and White Otter rode cautiously +over the ridge they saw the Minneconjoux +war party moving slowly across the plain. As soon +as the Minneconjoux discovered the two horsemen +they immediately stopped to watch them.</p> + +<p>"Our brothers are as cautious as Hitunkasan, +the weasel," laughed Sun Bird. "Well, we will +tell them who we are."</p> + +<p>He raised his arms and clasped his hands together +above his head. It was the sign for friends. +Then the two scouts rode rapidly toward the war +party. The Minneconjoux soon recognized them, +and came across the plain. Little Raven raced on +in advance of his friends.</p> + +<p>"Well, my brothers, I see that you have come +back," he said, as he rode up to them. "It is good. +What became of that scout?"</p> + +<p>"He has gone away," White Otter told him.</p> + +<p>"Did you kill him?" Little Raven inquired, +eagerly.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>"No," replied Sun Bird. "When we rode after +him he ran away."</p> + +<p>"Well, when he saw that you were Dacotahs he +was frightened," Little Raven said, boastfully.</p> + +<p>While they were talking the war party came up +to them. Sun Bird found Lean Wolf in command. +He said that he had followed the Crows until he +felt sure that they were going to their village. +Then he left Running Dog to scout along the western +flank of the war party, and returned to his +companions.</p> + +<p>"Do you believe those people know about us?" +Sun Bird asked, anxiously.</p> + +<p>"No," Lean Wolf assured him. "They are far +away. The scouts did not go far from their people. +Those Crows have killed plenty of game. They +are afraid the Blackfeet will catch them, and take +it away."</p> + +<p>"Have you seen Feather Dog?" inquired Sun +Bird.</p> + +<p>"No," replied Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>Then the Minneconjoux inquired anxiously about +the solitary horseman. They said that Little Raven +had told them about him, but they were eager +to know who he was and where he had gone.</p> + +<p>"I cannot tell you that," Sun Bird told them. +"He was far away, and we could not find out who +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>he was. When we went after him he ran away. +Perhaps Feather Dog will tell us about him."</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes, perhaps Feather Dog will find out +about him," the Minneconjoux told one another, +hopefully.</p> + +<p>"Well, my brothers, we will keep going ahead +until we find a good place to stop," said Sun Bird. +"Then we will wait for Feather Dog and Proud +Hawk, and Running Dog. I believe they will have +something to talk about."</p> + +<p>The day was little more than half gone, however, +when they saw three riders approaching from the +east. As the horsemen did not stop when they +discovered the war party, the Sioux believed that +two of the riders must be Feather Dog and Proud +Hawk. As they came nearer they recognized them.</p> + +<p>"They are bringing a prisoner!" the Minneconjoux +cried, excitedly. "It must be that scout. +Hi! now we will see who he is."</p> + +<p>Then they were suddenly astonished into silence. +The three horsemen had come sufficiently near so +that the Minneconjoux could plainly discern the +dress and features of the third rider. They could +scarcely believe their eyes. They looked many +moments before they were convinced. Then they +were thrown into an ecstasy of joy.</p> + +<p>"See! See! It is Dancing Rabbit!" they shouted.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>The young Minneconjoux who had disappeared +when the Blackfeet ran off the band of Sioux +ponies was riding between Feather Dog and Proud +Hawk. He was mounted on a pinto pony, and as +Sun Bird and White Otter recognized it the mystery +of the lone horseman was solved.</p> + +<p>"That is the pony we saw on the ridge," they +told their friends.</p> + +<p>As the riders joined the war party, the Minneconjoux +crowded eagerly about their young tribesman +to learn the story of his adventures. He was +a tall, sinewy youth of about fifteen winters, and he +exhibited the dignity and reserve of a seasoned +warrior.</p> + +<p>"Come, Dancing Rabbit, tell us how you come +to be here," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, you are great warriors," replied +Dancing Rabbit. "I am a young man. I cannot +talk big. I will tell you that the Blackfeet carried +me away to their village. Well, they treated me +very bad. Then I found a chance to get away. I +took this pony. It is fast. I got far ahead and +the Blackfeet did not come up with me. I was going +to our village. Then I saw three riders. I hid +behind a ridge and watched them. They were far +away, and I could not make out who they were. I +said, 'Perhaps they are Blackfeet scouts. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>Perhaps +they are Crows.' Then they rode after me +and I ran away. Then I found Feather Dog. That +is how I come to be here."</p> + +<p>"It is good," Sun Bird told him. "Your words +are the words of a warrior."</p> + +<p>Feather Dog then explained how he had chanced +to encounter the young Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>"I was watching for our enemies," said Feather +Dog. "Then I saw some one riding toward me. +He was a long ways off, but he was coming fast. +I rode my pony down into a gully to hide. Then +I crawled up the side of the gully and peeped out. +That rider was coming right where I was. I waited +for him. When he got near I was going to jump +up and shoot my arrows at him. Well, when I +jumped up I saw who he was. Then we rode away +and found Proud Hawk. Then we came here. That +is all I know about it."</p> + +<p>"Did you see any Blackfeet?" Sun Bird asked +him.</p> + +<p>"Yes, we saw four Blackfeet scouts," said +Feather Dog. "Two of them were the same riders +we saw before. This time they were close, and we +could see them. Then we saw that they were Blackfeet. +They were going straight ahead. I believe +they are going to the Blackfeet village. I do not +believe they know about us."</p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span> + +<p>"It is good," declared the Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>"Yes, it is good," Sun Bird told them. "But +we must watch out. Perhaps we will run into +those scouts. The Blackfeet are sharp. If they +see us it will be hard to get near the camp."</p> + +<p>"I will tell you something about that," Dancing +Rabbit said, suddenly. "The Blackfeet have moved +their lodges. Yes, they have gone away from the +place where they were. They have gone over there +in the shadow of the big mountains."</p> + +<p>The Minneconjoux were astounded at the announcement. +They looked anxiously toward the +northwest, where a long range of dim, shadowy +peaks showed against the sky. They had expected +to find the Blackfeet camp on the open plain, a +number of days' journey toward the north. It had +never occurred to their minds that the Blackfeet +might have decided to change the location of the +village. The words of Dancing Rabbit gave them +several reasons for concern. First, they knew +that they had already gone considerably out of +their way. Again, they realized that to reach the +new Blackfeet camp they must go far to the westward, +where they would be in peril from their old +enemies the Crows, as well as from the Blackfeet.</p> + +<p>"It is bad," declared Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"It is bad," agreed his companions.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>As there seemed to be a difference of opinion +as to just which way they should proceed, Sun +Bird immediately called a council. Some of the +Minneconjoux believed it would be safer to continue +directly toward the north until they were +about in line with the Blackfeet camp, and then +turn toward the west. Others thought that they +should move directly toward the new camp, and +reach the mountains as soon as possible. There +was considerable discussion.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, I believe the best thing to do is +to turn toward the mountains," said Sun Bird. +"Then if we see our enemies we can hide. If we +go to the mountains we can climb high up, and +look for the Blackfeet camp. It will be hard for +the Blackfeet to see us. In the day we will hide +in the timber. When it grows dark we will send +scouts to find out about the ponies. Yes, my +friends, I believe it is the best way to get near the +camp."</p> + +<p>"My brothers, Sun Bird has given us good +words," declared Lean Wolf. "I believe he has +told us the best way to go to the Blackfeet camp. +He is a good war leader. We must listen to his +words."</p> + +<p>"My friends, what Lean Wolf says is true," said +Feather Dog. "I believe it would be foolish to +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>keep going ahead. I have told you about those +four Blackfeet scouts. I believe they are going to +the Blackfeet camp. Pretty soon they will turn +this way. If we keep going straight ahead we will +meet them. We must turn toward the mountains."</p> + +<p>"White Otter, how do you feel about this +thing?" inquired Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"My brother, I believe you have told the best +way to go to the Blackfeet camp," White Otter +replied, quietly. "I believe what Feather Dog +says is true. If we keep going ahead perhaps we +will run into those Blackfeet scouts."</p> + +<p>The opinion of the famous young Ogalala seemed +to make a deep impression upon the Minneconjoux. +It was only a few moments before those warriors +who had suggested traveling toward the north +changed their views, and agreed that it would be +safer to ride toward the west.</p> + +<p>"Well, my brothers, I see that we all feel the +same about this thing," Sun Bird said, when all +had agreed. "It is good. Come, we will ride +toward those great mountains."</p> + +<p>Having made their decision, they rode boldly +toward the west, ready and eager to meet their +foes. It was late in the day, however, before they +saw any evidence of them. Then they discovered +a smoke signal some distance to the northward. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>Three columns of yellow smoke were ascending +into the sky. The Sioux watched them with considerable +uneasiness. They wondered if the Blackfeet +scouts had discovered the war party.</p> + +<p>"No, I do not believe it," Feather Dog declared. +"That smoke is a long ways off. Those scouts +could not get so far ahead of us. It must be some +one different."</p> + +<p>"Perhaps the Blackfeet are calling the scouts to +the camp," suggested Proud Hawk.</p> + +<p>"No, the camp is not in that place," Dancing +Rabbit told them.</p> + +<p>Convinced that the smoke signals did not concern +them, the Sioux continued on their way. Feather +Dog said that there was a good camp site with +plenty of grass and water a short distance ahead +of them, and as the day was drawing to a close +they determined to stop there for the night. They +had not ridden far, however, before they saw three +more columns of smoke rising a considerable distance +to the westward of the first signals.</p> + +<p>"It must be the Blackfeet," declared the Minneconjoux. +"It is the danger signal. They are telling +their people about us."</p> + +<p>"Perhaps they have found the Crows," suggested +Feather Dog.</p> + +<p>A few moments later a horseman swept into +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>view, far to the westward. He was riding at a +furious pace, and seemed to be coming directly +toward them. They had little doubt that it was +Running Dog, and they watched him in great suspense.</p> + +<p>"Running Dog is coming to tell us about something +big," they cried.</p> + +<p>As the Minneconjoux scout came nearer, he began +to point excitedly behind him. The Sioux +looked anxiously toward the west, expecting to +see a company of their foes racing along on the +trail of Running Dog.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps the Crows are coming, we must be +ready," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>Roused by the possibility, the hot-tempered Minneconjoux +immediately got ready to fight. Then, +as Running Dog finally came within shouting distance, +they began to cry out and question him.</p> + +<p>"Are the Crows coming?" they inquired eagerly.</p> + +<p>"No! no!" shouted Running Dog.</p> + +<p>Then he dashed up to them. As he threw the +panting pony upon its haunches, his companions +gathered about him to learn what had sent him +racing across the plain.</p> + +<p>"Listen, my brothers, I will tell you about it," +said Running Dog. "The Crows and the Blackfeet +are getting ready for a big fight over there +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>behind that ridge. I was watching them. Then +I saw you coming that way. Then I came over +here to tell you to hold back. Do you see that +smoke up there? Well, the Blackfeet are calling +the people to fight. You must watch sharp. I saw +many warriors over there behind that ridge."</p> + +<p>The words of Running Dog were received in +silence. The Minneconjoux looked gravely into +each other's faces. They realized the peril to +which they were exposed, and they waited for the +war leaders to speak. All eyes were turned upon +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"My friends, Running Dog has told you about +those warriors over there behind that ridge," said +Sun Bird. "We are in great danger. Something +must be done. We must try to find a place to hide +in until it grows dark. Then perhaps we can get +away from here. If we meet our enemies we must +fight them. We are Dacotahs. It is enough."</p> + +<p>"My brother, I will tell you about a place to +hide in," said Dancing Rabbit. "I found it when +I was running away from the Blackfeet. It is a +place where water used to run. Now it is dry. It +is deep. It goes a long way across the plain. We +can ride into it, and no one will see us."</p> + +<p>"Where is this place?" Sun Bird asked anxiously.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>"Over there," said Dancing Rabbit, pointing +toward the north.</p> + +<p>"Come, my brothers, we will go to this place, +and hide until it grows dark," proposed Sun Bird. +"I will ask three scouts to go over to that ridge +to watch those warriors. I will ask White Otter +to be the leader."</p> + +<p>"I will go," White Otter volunteered, eagerly.</p> + +<p>Most of the war party desired to accompany the +Ogalala on his perilous reconnaissance. Having +been appointed as leader, however, White Otter +was privileged to choose his companions.</p> + +<p>"I will ask Lean Wolf and Little Raven to go +with me," said White Otter.</p> + +<p>"I will go with you," replied Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>"I will go," Little Raven said, eagerly, as his +eyes flashed with boyish enthusiasm.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER VIII</h2> + +<h3>A CLOSE CALL</h3> +<br /> + +<p>A few moments afterward White Otter and +his companions rode away on their hazardous +mission. Running Dog had told them that the +rival war parties were a considerable distance beyond +the ridge, and the Sioux hoped to come in +sight of them without being discovered. White +Otter turned directly toward the south, as he believed +that there was less chance of encountering +hostile scouts in that direction. He rode a considerable +distance before he finally turned toward the +west, and approached the ridge.</p> + +<p>"The Crows have passed this place—the Blackfeet +came the other way—they will not pass the +Crows—the Crows will not come back here—this +is a good place—we will stay here and watch," +White Otter told his companions.</p> + +<p>"It is good," agreed Lean Wolf, the famous +Minneconjoux scout.</p> + +<p>They approached the ridge with great caution. +The sun had already set, but they knew the long +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>summer twilight would give them ample time to +discover their foes. As they finally came within +bow range of the grassy slope, they stopped and +spent many moments watching for signs of lurking +foes. Then they suddenly heard the sounds of +battle.</p> + +<p>"The Crows and the Blackfeet are fighting—it +is good," White Otter declared, grimly.</p> + +<p>Then, while Little Raven remained with the +ponies, White Otter and Lean Wolf crawled slowly +up the ridge. When they reached the top they +parted the long grass and looked anxiously across +the plain. The Crows and the Blackfeet were preparing +to fight. They were a long distance from +the ridge, however, and the Sioux felt in little danger. +They watched with keen interest while their +foes began the preliminaries of battle. The experienced +Sioux scouts read the situation at a +glance. It was evident that the Crows had been +overtaken and brought to a stand by the Blackfeet +war party. The Crows had dismounted and taken +shelter behind their ponies, and the Blackfeet were +riding about them in a great circle, but keeping +safely beyond bow range. There was much yelling +and singing of war songs, but no real attempt at +actual fighting.</p> + +<p>"The Blackfeet are cautious," White Otter said, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>scornfully. "They are making a great noise, but +I do not see them killing any Crows. If they rushed +in there and frightened those ponies the Crows +would have a hard time of it."</p> + +<p>"It is true," agreed Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>The Crows, however, appeared to be considerably +stronger in numbers, and it was apparent that +the Blackfeet were cautious about beginning the +attack. The Sioux were surprised at the small +size of the Blackfeet war party. They had expected +to see a much larger force of those savage foes engaged +against the Crows.</p> + +<p>"I do not see many Blackfeet—it is bad," said +White Otter. "They have left many warriors to +guard the camp."</p> + +<p>When Running Dog brought word of the impending +battle, the Sioux had hoped that the Blackfeet +would send a sufficient force against the Crows +to weaken the defense of the Blackfeet camp considerably. +White Otter realized, however, that +the hope was false. It was evident that the crafty +Blackfeet had left most of their fighting men at the +village.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps they are waiting for our people to +come for those ponies," said Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>"Yes, I believe it is true," agreed White Otter.</p> + +<p>He had barely ceased speaking when the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>Blackfeet +suddenly began their attack. Whooping fiercely, +they rushed upon their foes and made desperate +attempts to frighten and stampede the Crow +ponies. The Crows, however, had prepared for +just such a maneuver, and the alarmed ponies were +unable to break away. In the meantime the Crows +sent a deadly volley of arrows against the Blackfeet, +and the latter recoiled before the fierceness +of the defense. A number of warriors had already +toppled from their ponies, and it was evident that +the loss somewhat discouraged their comrades. +For a moment they wavered, and then a reckless +war leader on a pinto pony rallied them and led +them against their foes.</p> + +<p>They rode close up to the Crows, and fought with +great bravery. The Crows, however, had the +double advantage of numbers and shelter, and the +Blackfeet soon realized that they were fighting a +losing fight. The fearless war leader had already +forfeited his life to his gallantry, and a number +of his followers were either killed or wounded. In +return, the Blackfeet had done little harm to the +Crows, except for killing a few ponies, and wounding +one reckless young Crow who had rushed from +behind his horse to attack them. Thoroughly disheartened, +they became demoralized and raced +away in bad disorder.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>"See, see, the fierce Blackfeet are running like +rabbits!" laughed White Otter.</p> + +<p>"The Crows are too strong for them," declared +Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>Encouraged by their success, many of the Crows +leaped upon their ponies and set out after the fleeing +Blackfeet. The maneuver threw the Blackfeet +into a rage. They immediately wheeled about +and raced back to meet their pursuers. Their +boldness confused the Crows, and before they had +recovered from their surprise the Blackfeet were +upon them. As less than half of the Crow force +had joined in the pursuit, the advantage had suddenly +turned to the Blackfeet. Smarting with the +humiliation of their recent repulse, the Blackfeet +determined to take full vengeance upon the misguided +company of Crows who had blundered into +their power.</p> + +<p>"They have fooled the Crows," White Otter +cried, excitedly. "They will wipe out that war +party before their friends can come to help them."</p> + +<p>"The Blackfeet are sharp," laughed Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>The Sioux suddenly realized that the wild flight +of the Blackfeet had been a clever bit of stratagem +to deceive their foes. It was apparent that the +trick had been entirely successful, as the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>Blackfeet +seemed to have the Crows entirely at their +mercy.</p> + +<p>"See, those poor Crows are calling their brothers +to help them," White Otter told Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>Finding themselves completely overwhelmed by +the ferocity and strength of their crafty foes, the +Crows were thrown into a panic. They had lost +all sense of order and discipline, and each man was +fighting for himself. Their one idea appeared to +be to escape from the relentless Blackfeet, who +seemed determined to annihilate them. Aware +that they were facing destruction, the Crows were +making frantic appeals to their comrades to come +to their assistance. The latter abandoned the +pack ponies and the hard-earned supply of meat +and rode wildly across the plain to assist their +tribesmen.</p> + +<p>"Now we will see a big fight," White Otter cried, +enthusiastically.</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes," agreed Lean Wolf, as his eyes +flashed with excitement.</p> + +<p>The Crows who had come to the aid of their +tribesmen fought with great courage, but the +Blackfeet were thoroughly aroused and they +seemed invincible. The Sioux were amazed at the +bravery and skill displayed by those hardy warriors +from the north. Having duped their foes +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>and gained the advantage, they appeared determined +to follow it through to a complete victory.</p> + +<p>Although the Crows still outnumbered them, the +Blackfeet pressed the attack with a reckless ferocity +that completely demoralized their foes. Time +after time the Crows tried to rally from their confusion, +but each attempt was the signal for a still +fiercer assault by the Blackfeet.</p> + +<p>"Hi, the Blackfeet know how to fight!" White +Otter whispered, tensely.</p> + +<p>The fighting was at close range, and many riderless +ponies gave evidence of the result. The Sioux +witnessed many deeds of heroism. They saw a +wounded Crow warrior on a white pony ride recklessly +at three of his enemies, and overcome all +three of them before a company of Blackfeet finally +killed him. They saw a Blackfoot dash among +a company of astounded Crows and rescue his +comrade who had been desperately wounded. They +saw many thrilling hand-to-hand encounters which +were fought to the death. They saw dismounted +warriors running boldly into the thick of the fight +in the hope of killing an enemy and securing his +horse. Most of them were killed. A few achieved +the exploit, and galloped from the encounter in +triumph.</p> + +<p>Then as the light began to fade from the plain +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>the Crows made a final, heroic effort, and broke +through the circle of foes. They raced directly +toward the spot where the Sioux were watching, +and behind them thundered the Blackfeet.</p> + +<p>"Run to the ponies!" cried White Otter, as he +realized the peril which threatened them.</p> + +<p>They scrambled wildly down the ridge and +called to Little Raven to bring the ponies. He had +already guessed that something was wrong, and +he lost little time in joining them.</p> + +<p>"The Crows and the Blackfeet are almost here!" +White Otter told him, as he sprang upon the piebald.</p> + +<p>As the plain offered no hiding place in the vicinity +of the ridge, White Otter realized that their +only chance of escape lay in open flight. He also +knew that to turn toward the north would arouse +the suspicions of the crafty Blackfeet. He raced +away toward the east.</p> + +<p>"Keep low on your ponies, and perhaps our +enemies will not know who we are," he advised his +companions.</p> + +<p>Crouching low upon the necks of their ponies, +the Sioux rode furiously to gain a safe lead upon +their foes. Night was almost at hand, and the +dusky twilight shadows made it difficult for their +enemies to identify them. When the Crows <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>finally +dashed recklessly over the top of the ridge the +Dacotahs were many arrow flights away. At sight +of the three racing ponies, however, the Crows apparently +became suspicious, and fearful of being +led into another trap. They immediately swerved +from their course, and rode toward the north.</p> + +<p>"That is bad," cried White Otter, who had been +risking his neck to glance back at his foes. "If +they go that way they may find our people."</p> + +<p>"I believe our friends will be watching sharp," +Lean Wolf assured him.</p> + +<p>Then they heard the wild, ringing whoops of +the Blackfeet, and White Otter again turned his +head to look back. The heavy shadows had almost +wiped out the ridge, and it was difficult to +see the company of riders who were racing recklessly +down the steep grassy slope. He made them +out, however, and was relieved to see them turn +sharply and follow the Crows. The latter had entirely +faded from sight in the dusk.</p> + +<p>"The Blackfeet did not see us," White Otter +told his companions. "See, it is almost dark! We +will ride slower."</p> + +<p>They could barely see an arrow flight before +them, and they believed there was slight probability +of being seen. In fact they had high hopes that +the Blackfeet had entirely failed to notice them. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>Feeling quite safe, therefore, they reined in the +ponies and rode at a slow canter. They heard the +Blackfeet yelling savagely farther toward the +north and had little doubt that they were still pursuing +the demoralized Crows.</p> + +<p>"They are making a great noise—it is good," +declared Lean Wolf. "Our people will hear +them."</p> + +<p>"Yes, it is——" began White Otter.</p> + +<p>"Listen!" interrupted Little Raven.</p> + +<p>They heard the sound of galloping ponies directly +ahead of them, and they barely had time to +turn aside before the unknown riders passed them +in the darkness. Then the nervous little piebald +whinnied, and the strangers instantly stopped.</p> + +<p>"Come!" cried White Otter, as he turned toward +the north, and raced away at top speed.</p> + +<p>"I believe those riders are the Blackfeet scouts +that Feather Dog told us about," said Lean Wolf. +"Little Raven, your ears are as sharp as the ears +of Tokala, the fox."</p> + +<p>They rode some distance before they finally +stopped to listen for sounds from their foes. Night +had fallen, and the great plain was cloaked in +darkness. For a long time the stillness was unbroken. +It seemed as if the Blackfeet had at last +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>yelled themselves into silence. The Sioux wondered +if the Crows had escaped.</p> + +<p>"I do not believe the Blackfeet came up with +them," Lean Wolf said, softly. "When it got +dark I believe the Blackfeet turned back to round +up those ponies that the Crows left behind."</p> + +<p>"Then we must watch sharp," declared White +Otter. "Perhaps they will ride over here and find +us."</p> + +<p>Then they heard the wail of a prairie wolf a +short distance to the westward. There was something +about it that made them suspicious. As a +precaution against being betrayed to prowling +foes, White Otter dismounted and seized the nose +of the little piebald. The other ponies also +showed signs of nervousness, and their riders +quickly followed the example of the cautious Ogalala. +Then the three anxious Sioux scouts stood +beside their ponies and strained their ears to +catch a warning of danger. Three times the dreary +call of the prairie wolf sounded from the west, +and each time the suspicions of the Sioux grew +stronger. They felt almost certain that it was a +signal from their enemies.</p> + +<p>"That does not sound like Mayash, the prowler," +White Otter declared suspiciously.</p> + +<p>"It is different," agreed Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>At that moment they heard the cry repeated in +the north. They knew at once that it was an answer +to the signal from the west. It was evident +that foes were on two sides of them, and the Sioux +realized that they were in a serious predicament.</p> + +<p>"It is bad," whispered White Otter. "I believe +Blackfeet scouts are out there in the darkness. +They are close. We must watch out."</p> + +<p>"Do you believe they know us?" Little Raven +inquired, anxiously.</p> + +<p>"No," White Otter told him. "Lean Wolf, how +do you feel about it?"</p> + +<p>"I believe it is the Blackfeet," said Lean Wolf. +"We must wait here until we see what they are +going to do. If we hear them coming here then +we will ride away before they find us."</p> + +<p>"It is the best thing to do," White Otter told +him.</p> + +<p>They listened anxiously to learn if their foes +were actually approaching. They heard nothing +to give them a clew. The signals had ceased, and +the calm, brooding night hush had fallen upon the +plain. The ponies, however, were still uneasy, +and their actions made the Sioux suspicious. They +feared that other horses were close at hand, and +the possibility kept them alert.</p> + +<p>"Listen, my brothers," White Otter whispered, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>anxiously. "Something is moving over there."</p> + +<p>The sound had come from the westward, and +whatever had made it seemed to be well within +bowshot. The piebald was shaking its head, and +struggling to free its nose from the grasp of the +Ogalala. The other ponies also showed signs of +recognition, and the Sioux felt sure that a horse +was moving slowly through the darkness. They +listened with bated breath, ready to jump upon +their ponies and flee into the protection of the +night at the first hint that they had been discovered. +They waited in trying suspense while the +rider slowly passed them, and the short, quick footfalls +of his pony died away in the distance.</p> + +<p>"He has gone," whispered Little Raven.</p> + +<p>"Sh!" cautioned Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>Another pony was approaching. Again the +Sioux waited in breathless suspense, while the unseen +rider moved cautiously through the darkness +within bow range of them. This time, however, +they were not so fortunate. For some reason the +rider stopped directly opposite them. Was he +suspicious? the Sioux wondered. The piebald tried +to call, but White Otter strangled the cry in its +throat. Then the strange horse winded the Sioux +ponies, and whinnied its challenge. The next moment +a voice questioned cautiously from the night. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>The Sioux remained silent. Each stood grasping +the mane of his pony, ready to mount and race +away on the instant of discovery. Then the horse +which had already passed answered the challenge, +and the suspicions of the second rider were allayed. +A moment later the Sioux heard him riding on his +way. They remained silent, however, listening +anxiously to learn if a third rider was following +after those who had passed.</p> + +<p>"There are no more," Lean Wolf whispered, +finally.</p> + +<p>"It is good," replied White Otter.</p> + +<p>They waited until they felt sure that their enemies +had gone beyond hearing, and then they +mounted and rode carefully toward the east. As +the mysterious scouts had gone toward the north, +the Sioux determined to make a wide detour to +avoid an encounter. They walked the ponies until +they had gone a safe distance, and then they urged +them into a brisk canter, and began to circle back +toward the north to reach the Minneconjoux war +party.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER IX</h2> + +<h3>ANXIOUS MOMENTS</h3> +<br /> + +<p>After White Otter and his companions left +them, the Minneconjoux war party rode +cautiously toward the north to find the hiding place +of which Dancing Rabbit had told. They realized +the peril to which they were exposing themselves, +and Sun Bird took every precaution to guard +against blundering upon the Blackfeet. Running +Dog and a companion scouted to the westward, +Feather Dog and Proud Hawk again reconnoitered +toward the east, and Sun Bird, Sitting Eagle and +the lad, Dancing Rabbit, rode in advance.</p> + +<p>"How far away is this place?" Sun Bird asked, +anxiously.</p> + +<p>"It begins over there where you see those little +trees," replied Dancing Rabbit, as he pointed to a +few stunted cottonwoods some distance ahead of +them.</p> + +<p>"Yes, I know about that place," declared Sitting +Eagle. "I have been there. It is a good place to +hide in."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>Dancing Rabbit said that the shelter toward +which they were moving was a deep ravine which +formerly had been the bed of a good-sized stream. +It extended directly across the plain from west to +east, and went to the very foothills of the great +mountains. The young Minneconjoux declared +that, once in the bottom of that deep ravine, the +war party would be invisible to their foes, and it +would be possible to remain hidden until they +reached the timbered ridges.</p> + +<p>"It is good," declared Sun Bird. "When we +get to that place we will hide in the day, and travel +toward the mountains when it gets dark."</p> + +<p>Before they reached the ravine, however, they +saw a horseman ride cautiously over the ridge to +the westward. When he reached the bottom of the +slope he rode rapidly to and fro, and appeared +to be trying to attract the attention of Sun Bird +and his companions. It was the danger signal, +and the Minneconjoux watched him with grave attention. +When he saw that he had attracted their +notice, he stopped and raised his right hand above +his head. Then he suddenly swept it downward +and backward. It was the signal to approach. +Although he was a considerable distance away, +Sun Bird and Sitting Eagle agreed that it was +Running Dog.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>"He wants to tell us about something," said +Sun Bird. "Go, Dancing Rabbit, and bring us +his words."</p> + +<p>The lad immediately galloped away to meet the +distant Minneconjoux scout. Sun Bird and Sitting +Eagle decided to wait where they were until he returned. +In a few moments they saw the war party +riding toward them. The Minneconjoux had discovered +Running Dog, and were watching Dancing +Rabbit as he raced across the plain. When they +reached Sun Bird, however, they concealed their +curiosity and waited for the youthful war leader +to tell them what had happened.</p> + +<p>"My friends, that scout over there is Running +Dog," said Sun Bird. "He has made the danger +signal. Then he called us. Dancing Rabbit has +gone to bring us his words. We will wait here +until he comes back."</p> + +<p>It was not long before they saw the eager lad +racing toward them with the message from Running +Dog. He was urging his pony to top speed, +and the Sioux believed he brought word of great +importance. Running Dog had already disappeared +into the dusk.</p> + +<p>"I have brought you the words of Running +Dog," said Dancing Rabbit, as he stopped beside +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>"Tell me what he says," replied Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Running Dog says that the Crows and the +Blackfeet are fighting," declared Dancing Rabbit. +"He says it is a big fight. He says the Crows are +stronger than the Blackfeet. Running Dog says +that is bad. He says there must be many Blackfeet +at the village. He believes that a big war +party may be coming this way. He says we must +go to that gully and hide. He says he will come +there when it gets dark. Those are the words of +Running Dog."</p> + +<p>"Come, lead us to that place," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>The glow was fading from the western sky and +the twilight shadows were gathering upon the +plain when the Sioux finally reached the dry stream +bed. It offered an ideal hiding place, and Sun +Bird looked upon it with delight.</p> + +<p>"See, my brothers, this great gully leads far +over there toward the mountains," he said. "If +we follow it, I do not believe our enemies will be +able to find us."</p> + +<p>"It is good," declared the Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>They picketed the ponies in the bottom of the +ravine, and then most of the war party crawled up +the steep bank to watch the plain. It was almost +dark, and they wondered why Feather Dog and +Proud Hawk had failed to join them. They looked +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>anxiously toward the east in the hope of seeing the +scouts. Then they suddenly heard a chorus of +piercing yells and whoops far across the plain and +they looked toward the sounds. The noise seemed +to come from the vicinity of the ridge, and some +distance to the southward.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps our enemies have crossed the ridge; +we must watch sharp," Sun Bird cautioned them.</p> + +<p>The light was almost gone, and it was difficult to +see far across the plain. The wild commotion continued, +however, and, guided by the sounds, the +Sioux strained their eyes in an attempt to learn +the cause of the disturbance. Then some of them +discovered what appeared to be a company of +horsemen racing along parallel with the ridge.</p> + +<p>"It is the war party!" they cried. "It must be +the Blackfeet. They are riding this way!"</p> + +<p>"See, see, some one is chasing them!" said Sitting +Eagle.</p> + +<p>They made out another company of riders who +were apparently pursuing the horsemen ahead of +them. The discovery filled the Sioux with alarm. +It appeared as if both the Blackfeet and the Crows +were racing toward the ravine. In a few moments, +however, darkness closed down and blotted them +from sight. Then the wild tumult suddenly ceased, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>and the Sioux were left without a clew to the location +of their foes.</p> + +<p>"It is bad," Sun Bird declared, uneasily. +"Those riders were coming this way. Now we do +not know what has become of them. Perhaps they +are in this gully. Perhaps they will come here. +We must watch and listen."</p> + +<p>The Minneconjoux heard him in silence. They +were bewildered by the sudden turn of fortune +which shattered their fancied security and threatened +to expose them to their foes. The possibilities +were alarming. Thoroughly alive to their +own peril, they were even more concerned for the +safety of their absent comrades. They wondered +what had happened to White Otter and his companions. +Where were Feather Dog and Proud +Hawk? Why had Running Dog failed to warn +them of the approaching war parties? Had those +brave scouts been trapped and destroyed by +their foes? The Sioux weakened at the thought.</p> + +<p>Sun Bird was particularly disturbed at the possibility +of harm having come to his friend, White +Otter, and his brother, Little Raven. The hot fighting +blood surged to his brain as he pictured his +tribesmen in the hands of his foes. He soon dismissed +that possibility, however, for he knew that +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>neither White Otter nor Lean Wolf would ever +permit themselves to be taken alive. The thought +suggested the still more alarming possibility that +they had been killed. Sun Bird, however, refused +even to consider it.</p> + +<p>"No, my friends, I do not believe anything bad +has happened to those great scouts," he told his +companions. "We will wait for them. They will +come."</p> + +<p>He had barely finished speaking when one of the +Sioux ponies whinnied softly, and a moment afterward +they heard a pony scramble up the side of +the ravine a short distance to the eastward, and +gallop off across the plain.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps it is one of our friends," Sun Bird +whispered, hopefully.</p> + +<p>He crawled to the plain, and imitated the bark +of the little gray fox. The Sioux listened anxiously. +Many moments passed. There was no +response. Then Sun Bird again sounded the familiar +signal. Still there was no reply. The +Sioux became suspicious. They feared that a +hostile scout had blundered upon their hiding +place. Sun Bird, however, felt more hopeful. He +knew the wariness of the Dacotah scouts, and he +still hoped that the mysterious rider was one of his +friends. He repeated the sharp, quick bark of the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>little gray fox, and waited eagerly for a reply. +This time he got it. It came from the direction +where he had heard the hoofbeats of the retreating +pony.</p> + +<p>"It is good," said Sun Bird. "That rider is a +friend."</p> + +<p>A few moments later they heard ponies approaching +the ravine. Determined to be prepared +for an emergency, the Sioux lay along the top of +the ravine, with arrows fitted to their bows, ready +to repulse an attack. The precaution proved to +be unnecessary, however, as the riders were Feather +Dog and Proud Hawk.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, you have come—it is good," said +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>The scouts who had returned from the eastward +said that they had seen nothing of their foes, although +they felt quite sure that they had heard +several ponies pass them in the darkness. They +knew nothing of the thrilling chase which their +companions had witnessed from the ravine, and +were much interested in the recital.</p> + +<p>"Did you see anything of White Otter?" Sun +Bird inquired, eagerly.</p> + +<p>"No, we did not see any one," replied Feather +Dog.</p> + +<p>Sun Bird appeared serious. The continued <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>absence +of White Otter and his companions worried +him. He began to fear that they really had met +with some misfortune. The idea startled him.</p> + +<p>At that moment some of the Minneconjoux declared +that they heard some one approaching the +ravine. Sun Bird held his breath to listen, and +his heart filled with hope. Perhaps White Otter +and Little Raven had come. The possibility +thrilled him. He waited in trying suspense for the +signal which would verify his hopes.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps it is an enemy," suggested a warrior +who was lying beside him.</p> + +<p>Sun Bird remained silent. For the moment the +Blackfeet and the Crows had been crowded from +his mind by the hope of seeing White Otter and +Little Raven. He had entirely forgotten the peril +which threatened the Sioux war party. The warning +of his tribesman aroused him to his responsibility. +He was the war leader. It was his duty +to think first of the welfare and safety of the men +who had entrusted themselves to his leadership. +He at once dismissed White Otter and Little Raven +from his thoughts, and again became the stern, impassive +war leader.</p> + +<p>"I do not hear anything," he told the man beside +him. "What did you hear?"</p> + +<p>"It sounded like ponies," replied the warrior.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>"Were they running?" inquired Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"No, it sounded as if they were standing in one +place, and stamping their feet," declared the Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>They listened a long time, but heard nothing. +The warriors who had given the warning, however, +felt certain that they had not been mistaken.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps it was Tatanka, the buffalo, or Tatokadan, +the antelope," said Sitting Eagle.</p> + +<p>"No, no, it sounded like ponies," declared his +friends.</p> + +<p>Then as they continued to listen they heard the +cry of a prairie wolf, far to the westward. The +weird serenade lasted some moments, and then all +was still. The call had sounded entirely natural, +but the Sioux believed it was a clever imitation +by their foes. They wondered if it had any connection +with the sounds which had been heard +near the ravine. They realized that Blackfeet +scouts might have followed the stream bed in +search of their foes, and that the wolf call was a +signal for them to return to the war party. The +Sioux listened anxiously for the sound of hoof +beats going toward the west. When they failed to +hear them they were completely baffled. Had the +sharp-eared warriors who claimed to have heard +the ponies been deceived? It seemed unlikely. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>Then what had become of the mysterious riders? +The entire Minneconjoux war party was listening +breathlessly, and it seemed impossible for the +horsemen to steal away without being heard. Then +a new possibility presented itself.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps they are Crows," the Sioux told one +another.</p> + +<p>The thought threw them into a flurry of excitement. +They realized that if Crow scouts had come +that far to the eastward, the entire Crow force +might follow them along the ravine. As a precaution +against a sudden attack, two Sioux scouts +moved cautiously along the stream bed on foot to +watch for the approach of enemies. They had +barely gone beyond bowshot, when the Sioux heard +the bark of the little gray fox directly in front of +them. It filled them with joy, and they lost little +time in replying.</p> + +<p>"Ho, my brothers, we have been waiting out here +a long time," said Running Dog, as he rode into +the ravine with Big Crow, his fellow scout.</p> + +<p>"Did you see White Otter?" Sun Bird immediately +inquired.</p> + +<p>"I do not know," replied Running Dog. "We +saw three riders racing over the ridge ahead of +the Crows. They were far away. We could not +tell about them. Perhaps they were our brothers."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>"What became of them?" Sun Bird asked, eagerly.</p> + +<p>"They went that way," said Running Dog, as +he pointed toward the east. "The Crows did not +follow them. They came this way. Then the +Blackfeet came after them."</p> + +<p>"Did you hear Mayash, the wolf?" inquired Sitting +Eagle.</p> + +<p>"Yes, we heard his call, but he did not make it," +Running Dog told him. "It was the Blackfeet. I +believe the Crows got away from them. Perhaps +they have turned this way. That is why we stayed +out there in the darkness. We did not know who +was in this place."</p> + +<p>"Did you hear us?" Sun Bird asked, anxiously.</p> + +<p>"No, we did not hear you," said Running Dog. +"Our ponies stopped and tried to call, and we knew +that some one was in this place."</p> + +<p>Running Dog told his tribesmen that he and Big +Crow had seen the end of the fight, and the desperate +race between the Crows and the Blackfeet. +When the Crows turned toward the ravine the +Sioux scouts had been greatly alarmed for the +safety of the Minneconjoux war party. However, +as they realized that they could not carry a warning +to their friends, they had determined to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>follow +their enemies, and learn the result of the wild +chase across the plain. With the coming of darkness +they had lost sight of both the Crows and the +Blackfeet, but they were sure that both war parties +had entered the ravine a considerable distance +to the westward.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps the Crows came this way—perhaps +they crossed the gully and went straight ahead," +said Running Dog. "Anyway, I believe they +fooled the Blackfeet. We heard the Blackfeet +scouts riding near us. I believe they were trying +to find the Crows."</p> + +<p>"If the Crows came this way they must be near +us," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"We did not hear anything——"</p> + +<p>Running Dog was interrupted by the sound of a +familiar voice from the darkness.</p> + +<p>"Ho, Dacotahs!"</p> + +<p>"It is White Otter!" cried Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Yes, my brother, I am here," replied White +Otter, as he suddenly appeared at the top of the +ravine.</p> + +<p>The Ogalala was alone and on foot, and Sun +Bird feared that he had met with disaster. He +was about to ask for Little Raven, and Lean Wolf, +when White Otter turned toward the plain and +called softly. A moment afterward his <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>companions +came forward with the ponies. Their appearance +filled Sun Bird with joy. He found it difficult +to conceal the emotion which welled up in his +heart at the safe arrival of his beloved companions.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, you have come—I feel good +again," he said feelingly.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER X</h2> + +<h3>REBELLIOUS PONIES</h3> +<br /> + +<p>The Minneconjoux were eager to learn how +White Otter had been able to get so near them +without being heard. They were equally curious +to know how he had located them.</p> + +<p>"I will tell you about it," said White Otter. +"We were over there on that ridge watching the +fight. Then the Crows ran away. They came +right toward us. We rode away ahead of them. +When it got dark we met some riders. Then we +turned this way. We heard some one riding past +us. Then we came on. We went over there near +where the Blackfeet are, when we heard Running +Dog and Big Crow. We did not know them. +They were coming this way. We followed them. +Then they stopped. We waited. Then we heard +the call of the little gray fox. That made us feel +good. But we were not sure about it. Then we +heard those riders come into the gully. Then I +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>crawled up to find out about it. That is how we +found you."</p> + +<p>"White Otter, you are a great warrior," Sun +Bird declared, enthusiastically.</p> + +<p>Then as the war party was complete he called +a council of war to decide what should be done. +The Sioux were agreed that the wisest plan would +be to remain where they were until daylight.</p> + +<p>"It is the best thing to do," said Sun Bird. +"We know that the Crows and the Blackfeet are +somewhere along this gully. It would be foolish +to move toward them. When it gets light we will +try to find out where they are."</p> + +<p>He posted scouts in and about the ravine to +watch for the approach of foes, while the war +party lay down to sleep. There was no water, +and both the Sioux and their ponies suffered from +thirst. The ponies were particularly restless, and +spent most of the night pawing the dry earth in +the bottom of the ravine. However, Dancing Rabbit +assured his companions that there was a good +pool a half day's journey to the westward, and +Sitting Eagle confirmed his words.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps the Blackfeet are at that place," suggested +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>The night passed without incident, and at the +first hint of dawn the scouts hurried in from the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>plain. They said that they had neither seen nor +heard anything of their enemies. It seemed, +therefore, that either the Crows and the Blackfeet +had continued their mad race through the +night, or else both had hidden themselves to wait +for daylight.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps the Crows got away and the Blackfeet +have gone back to their village," suggested +one of the Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>His companions had serious doubts of it. As +soon as it was light enough to see across the plain, +they crawled up the side of the ravine and looked +anxiously for signs of their foes. As they were +nowhere in sight, the Minneconjoux began to hope +that the cheerful prophecy of their comrade was +correct. Still, they feared it would be dangerous +to rely upon it.</p> + +<p>"We must be cautious," said Lean Wolf. +"There are some good hiding places over there. +Perhaps the Blackfeet are waiting for the Crows +to show themselves."</p> + +<p>There were a number of scattered stands of cottonwoods +dotting the plain to the westward, and +the Sioux realized that one of them might shelter +their foes. They were particularly suspicious of +the little grove which Dancing Rabbit pointed out +as the spot which sheltered the pool.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>"We must watch that place," declared White +Otter.</p> + +<p>"Yes, we will stay here and watch," said Sun +Bird. "If our enemies are near us, pretty soon we +will see their scouts."</p> + +<p>As time passed, and they saw nothing to indicate +that either the Crows or the Blackfeet were +anywhere in the vicinity, the Sioux began to discuss +the advisability of moving cautiously along +the bottom of the ravine. The ponies were growing +frantic from thirst and were raising considerable +dust by their wild pawing in the stream +bed. Some were beginning to snort and whinny, +and the Sioux feared that the unmanageable little +beasts might betray them to their foes. Then, +too, their own throats were parched and aching, +and they were eager to reach the little pool as +soon as possible.</p> + +<p>"We will go," Sun Bird said, finally.</p> + +<p>They believed that it would be folly to expose +scouts upon the open plain, and they determined +to keep to the shelter of the ravine until they were +opposite the grove which sheltered the pool. The +ponies appeared to understand that they were +moving toward water, and the Sioux found it almost +impossible to hold them in control. For +some moments the fractious little beasts created +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>the wildest sort of disorder, and the Minneconjoux +looked anxiously upon the heavy dust cloud +that rose above the ravine.</p> + +<p>"It is bad," Sun Bird declared, uneasily, as he +watched White Otter struggling to subdue the hot-tempered +piebald.</p> + +<p>When the ponies had finally been brought under +subjection, several warriors who rode quieter +horses dismounted and crawled to the top of the +ravine to search the plain. A heavy pall of dust +hung over them, and they wondered if it had been +seen by their foes. The latter, however, were nowhere +in sight, and the Sioux knew that unless +they were watching from one of the groves they +must have ridden from the locality.</p> + +<p>"We saw no one," said the scouts when they +overtook their companions.</p> + +<p>"It must be that our enemies went away while +it was dark," said a young warrior named Painted +Bird.</p> + +<p>The Sioux, however, were suspicious. They +determined to take nothing for granted. As they +approached the first of the little groves they sent +scouts along the ravine ahead of the war party to +watch the plain and guard against blundering into +their foes. They were riding at a fast pace, and +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>they realized that they would arrive opposite the +pool before the day was half gone.</p> + +<p>"It is bad," said White Otter. "We cannot go +to that place until it grows dark. If we get near +it, it will be hard to hold the ponies."</p> + +<p>"It is true," agreed Sun Bird. "I am thinking +about it."</p> + +<p>He had planned to move along the ravine until +he was opposite the pool, and then wait until he +could send scouts to reconnoiter the grove under +cover of the night. He, too, realized, however, +that it might be impossible to control the ponies +once they got that near to the water. The riders +were already having considerable difficulty in restraining +them, and Sun Bird feared that at any +moment they might stampede and dash wildly +up the side of the ravine.</p> + +<p>"We are raising a great dust," Lean Wolf said, +soberly. "If our enemies are watching they must +see it."</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes, it is bad," Sun Bird replied, impatiently. +"We must stop."</p> + +<p>He galloped to the head of the company and +called upon the Minneconjoux to halt. Many of +them found difficulty in obeying the command. +The fiery, half-wild ponies had apparently scented +the water and it seemed to have driven them mad. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>In spite of their expert horsemanship the Sioux +were unable to control them. Although by sheer +strength and skill they finally brought them to a +stop, they found it impossible to quiet them. +Crazed with their desire for water, the frantic +beasts plunged and reared and kicked and squealed +and raised such a wild commotion that the Sioux +were thrown into a panic. They were certain that +if enemies were lurking at the pool they must +surely have seen the dust and heard the noise +created by the unmanageable ponies.</p> + +<p>"It is useless to wait here," said some of the +more impulsive warriors. "We may as well go +ahead and see what comes of it."</p> + +<p>"No, that would be foolish," declared Sun Bird. +"If the Blackfeet are hiding in that place they +will see the dust. Perhaps they cannot hear the +noise. Anyway, if we stay in this gully they will +not know who we are. They must send scouts +over here to find out about us. They will not do +that until it gets dark. Then it will be easy to +fool them."</p> + +<p>"Those are good words," White Otter agreed, +heartily.</p> + +<p>"Yes, that is the way I feel about it," declared +Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>"It is the only thing to do," Sitting Eagle cried, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>angrily. "Are we like the women who are afraid +of the war ponies! Are we like old men who have +no strength in their arms? Does a Dacotah run +to his enemy for water when he is thirsty? Come, +my brothers, we are Dacotahs. We are men. +Hold those horses. Throw them down. Kill them +if you cannot overcome them. It is better to go +against our enemies on foot than to let those foolish +ponies carry us to our deaths. Sun Bird is a +good war leader. You have heard his words. +They are good. We will listen. We will stay here +until it is safe to go ahead."</p> + +<p>The words of the famous Minneconjoux scout +created a deep impression upon his comrades. He +was a man whose daring achievements made him +the idol of his people, and his counsel was seldom +disputed. His daring challenge to their ability +and manhood instantly roused the fighting blood +of the Sioux, and they immediately accepted the +task of bringing the fractious ponies under subjection. +It was not easy, but the Minneconjoux +were on their mettle, and, as White Otter had already +won control over the piebald, they persevered +until the ponies were finally quieted.</p> + +<p>Order having been restored, many of the Sioux +crept up the side of the ravine to watch the distant +stand of cottonwoods which they hoped to +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>reach at dark. They were suffering keenly from +thirst, which had been greatly aggravated by their +desperate struggle with the ponies. Some of them +chewed mouthfuls of grass in an attempt to suck +moisture into their burning throats. Others +placed small pebbles beneath their tongues to increase +the flow of saliva. All of them, however, +bore their discomfort without complaint. It was +a common occurrence for a warrior to endure both +hunger and thirst, and they had been trained from +infancy to suffer in silence.</p> + +<p>"See, the day is passing," Sun Bird said, cheerfully, +as the sun sank slowly toward the west. +"Pretty soon we will be under those trees, drinking +that water."</p> + +<p>"It is good," the Minneconjoux murmured, +thickly.</p> + +<p>Although they watched closely until the grove +finally faded from sight in the evening shadows, +they saw nothing of their foes. They were quite +convinced that the Crows had eluded the Blackfeet, +and that the latter had gone to their village +to boast of their victory.</p> + +<p>"We will go," Sun Bird said, as darkness at +last fell upon the plain.</p> + +<p>They moved eagerly along the ravine, and once +more the parched ponies tried to bolt from the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>control of their riders. The latter were still +smarting from the rebuke of Sitting Eagle, and +they soon brought the unruly little beasts under +subjection. However, it was impossible to quiet +them. They snorted and squealed and whinnied, +and the Sioux realized that it was hopeless to try +to reach the grove without being heard.</p> + +<p>"Well, if our enemies are over there they know +that we are coming," Sitting Eagle declared, irritably.</p> + +<p>"It is true," agreed Sun Bird. "But they do +not know who we are. If the Blackfeet are over +there they will take us for Crows. If the Crows +are over there they will take us for Blackfeet. It +is good. When we get near that place we will +stop. Then we will send scouts over there to find +out about it. If our enemies are there we will +find out who they are. Then we will run away +before they find out about us."</p> + +<p>"It is good," said Sitting Eagle.</p> + +<p>When they finally came opposite the grove which +contained the pool they again fought the desperate +ponies into submission and made heroic efforts to +keep them quiet. Then Sun Bird selected White +Otter and Sitting Eagle to go forward on foot to +reconnoiter the cottonwoods.</p> + +<p>"Those great scouts will find out about it," he +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>boasted, as the two famous Dacotahs slipped away +as noiselessly as shadows.</p> + +<p>It seemed a long time to the anxious Sioux before +White Otter finally returned and said that the +grove was free from foes. The announcement +filled them with joy. Throwing caution to the +winds, they rode out of the ravine and raced recklessly +toward the cottonwoods. Once at the pool +it was impossible to restrain the ponies, and the +riders were forced to wait until the frenzied animals +had satisfied their thirst. Then the Sioux +plunged their feverish faces into the roily water +and drank as eagerly as the ponies.</p> + +<p>"Ah," Sun Bird sighed, contentedly, as he +finally rose to his feet.</p> + +<p>Having drunk their fill, the ponies became quiet +and turned to graze upon the scant growth of grass +about the pool. The Sioux, however, remained +alert. Their noisy arrival at the pool had made +them uneasy. They had vague, disturbing premonitions +of danger, and they feared to linger in +the grove.</p> + +<p>"If our enemies come and surround this place +it will be hard to get away," Sun Bird said, anxiously. +"Come, we will go."</p> + +<p>At that moment one of the ponies whinnied, and +the Sioux were astounded to hear it answered +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>from the plain. Then they heard a horse galloping +toward the west. They turned to one another +in alarm.</p> + +<p>"Our enemies have caught us!" they cried.</p> + +<p>"Wait," White Otter counseled, calmly. "I believe +that rider is a scout. Perhaps he is alone. +We will listen. If he is with a war party then +we will hear signals. If he keeps quiet there is +nothing to fear."</p> + +<p>"It is good," agreed the Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>They listened in tense silence. Then, as the +moments passed and they heard nothing to suggest +the approach of their foes, they felt considerably +relieved. Still they were somewhat fearful about +leaving the timber. They realized that either the +Crows or the Blackfeet might have surrounded +the grove and sent the scout forward as a decoy +to lure them upon the open plain.</p> + +<p>"Well, my brothers, that rider knows that some +one is at this pool," declared Sun Bird. "If he +is a scout he will tell his people about it. I believe +if we wait here something bad will come of +it. If we go away our enemies will not know that +the Dacotahs were here. If we expect to get to the +great Blackfeet camp we must not let our enemies +know about us."</p> + +<p>The Sioux instantly saw the wisdom of his words +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>and agreed that it would be safer to abandon the +grove and continue toward the mountains. Dancing +Rabbit told them that if they continued to ride +through the night, daylight would find them close +upon the foothills.</p> + +<p>"It is good—we will go," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>They left the grove and moved slowly across +the plain in the direction of the ravine. The ponies +were quiet and docile, and it seemed as if the +clever little beasts were attempting to make +amends for the anxiety and effort they had caused +their riders a short time before. As the war party +drew near the ravine Sun Bird ordered a halt +while he sent scouts forward to reconnoiter. They +soon returned and declared that the way was +clear.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2> + +<h3>AN UNUSUAL ADVENTURE</h3> +<br /> + +<p>Upon reaching the ravine the Sioux turned +toward the west and rode until daylight. +Then they found themselves almost within the +shadows of the great massive peaks which towered +against the sky. The low timbered ridges of the +foothills were still nearer at hand, and the air was +scented with fragrance from the dense stand of +pines.</p> + +<p>"It is good," declared Sun Bird. "Pretty soon +we will come to those great mountains. Then we +can hide from our enemies until we find the Blackfeet +camp."</p> + +<p>Having failed to find any further evidence of +their foes, they began to feel more secure. They +gave little thought to the horseman who had blundered +upon them at the pool, for it appeared certain +that both the Crows and the Blackfeet had +withdrawn from the vicinity. Encouraged by the +thought, the Sioux determined to continue toward +the mountains.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>When they reached the first ridge of foothills, +Sitting Eagle, who was familiar with the region, +led the way along a game trail. It wound upward +from the plain, and brought them to a grassy +meadow with a cold bubbling spring in one corner +of it. As it offered an attractive camp site, the +Sioux determined to stop.</p> + +<p>After the ponies had been picketed and the camp +established, several young warriors went into the +woods with their bows to look for game. It was +not long before they returned with a fat, young, +white-tail deer.</p> + +<p>As the camp site was a considerable height above +the plain and well hidden by the heavy stand of +timber, the Sioux determined to risk making a +small fire. Then they broiled the deer meat and +ate with keen enjoyment. They had suddenly relaxed. +For the moment the hardships and perils +of the war trail were forgotten. They talked and +laughed and told stories, and became as carefree +and happy as boys. The merry feast continued +well into the night. When it finally ended, the +sentinels took their positions about the camp while +their companions wrapped themselves in their +robes and lay down to sleep.</p> + +<p>Shortly after daylight the Sioux descended to +the plain and rode northward along the base of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>the ridge. They kept within bowshot of the timber +so that they might conceal themselves if they +found signs of their foes. Dancing Rabbit declared +that the Blackfeet camp was a number of +days' travel farther to the northward, and for the +present at least the Sioux had little fear of blundering +into those foes. However, they believed +that the Crows might be somewhere in the vicinity +and they determined to keep a sharp watch.</p> + +<p>"We will keep going ahead until we get near +the Blackfeet camp," said Sun Bird. "Then we +will stop. Then some of us will climb those great +mountains and look for the Blackfeet lodges."</p> + +<p>For two days they traveled cautiously along the +edge of the foothills without seeing anything to +arouse their suspicions. Game, however, was +abundant. They saw countless numbers of buffaloes, +great herds of elk, and many deer and +antelope.</p> + +<p>"This is a good place to live in," declared White +Otter.</p> + +<p>"Yes, there is plenty of game here," replied +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>Then they again saw Huya, the war bird. The +eagle was soaring high up near the snowclad peaks. +The Sioux watched it with superstitious <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>premonitions. +They believed it was an omen—a warning +that foes were near at hand.</p> + +<p>"See, Huya has come back to tell us about our +enemies," said Sun Bird. "I believe we are near +the Blackfeet. We must watch out."</p> + +<p>Disturbed by the appearance of Huya, the war +bird, and determined to run no risk of betraying +themselves to their foes, the Sioux decided to +seek shelter in the foothills while scouts climbed +the ridges to look for the Blackfeet camp. While +the war party moved cautiously along the edge +of the plain, Sun Bird sent scouts into the timber +to look for a suitable camp site. At the end of +the day they found a sheltered grassy park high +up near the summit of the ridge, and the Sioux +determined to make it their rendezvous until they +were ready to advance upon the Blackfeet.</p> + +<p>The following day, at dawn, Sun Bird and White +Otter left the war party and set out along the +summit of the ridge to look for traces of the Blackfeet +camp. Other scouts rode cautiously along the +edge of the plain to watch for signs of the Crows +or scouting parties of Blackfeet.</p> + +<p>Although Sun Bird and White Otter had a +splendid view of the plain they failed to discover +any evidence of the Blackfeet camp. When they +finally saw a large herd of buffaloes grazing <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>contentedly +a considerable distance to the northward, +they became convinced that the hostile camp was +far beyond their view.</p> + +<p>"It is useless to look any more," declared White +Otter. "The Blackfeet camp is a long ways off."</p> + +<p>"Yes, it must be so," said Sun Bird. "We will +go back and tell our friends about it."</p> + +<p>"Wait," White Otter cried, eagerly. "Here is +the trail of great Matohota."</p> + +<p>Sun Bird hastened to his side and saw the fresh +tracks of a grizzly bear. The trail led down into +the timber. The footprints were of unusual size, +and the Sioux studied them with flashing eyes. +The Dacotahs considered killing great Matohota an +exploit worthy of the bravest warrior, and only +second in importance to killing an enemy. A necklace +of bear claws was accepted as positive proof +of the hunting ability and courage of the wearer. +Although both Sun Bird and White Otter had +killed several of those fierce beasts, they became +enthusiastic at the idea of securing the great claws +of the bear which had recently passed.</p> + +<p>"If we kill Matohota we will have something +to show our friends," said White Otter.</p> + +<p>"He cannot be far away," Sun Bird declared, +hopefully. "Come, we will follow him."</p> + +<p>They followed the trail down through the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>timber, +and about half way down the ridge it brought +them within sight of another open grassy park. +Aware that those places were favorite feeding +places for elk and deer, the expert young hunters +realized that the grizzly might have gone there +to feast upon the carcass of one of those animals.</p> + +<p>"We must be careful," White Otter warned, +softly.</p> + +<p>They approached the spot with great caution, +peering anxiously between the trees to discover +the grizzly. As the wind favored them, they hoped +to get within bow range without alarming their +game. However, when they finally came in full +view of the park the bear was nowhere in sight. +They were keenly disappointed.</p> + +<p>"Matohota has gone on," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"We will see," replied White Otter.</p> + +<p>They stole to the edge of the timber and looked +anxiously across the grassy meadow. The trail +of the bear was plainly visible through the high +grass. As they followed it with their eyes they +suddenly discovered something lying in the far +corner of the park. One glance told them that it +was dead, but it was some time before they could +make sure what it was. Then they looked at each +other in astonishment. They had suddenly identified +the object as a dead pony. The discovery +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>made them cautious, and they sank noiselessly into +the bushes to watch.</p> + +<p>"It is mysterious," whispered Sun Bird. "How +did that pony come here?"</p> + +<p>"We will try to find out about it, but first we +must watch," replied White Otter.</p> + +<p>They watched a long time, searching the borders +of the meadow with great care. It was difficult +to learn much about the dead pony from +where they were, but they saw that the carcass +had been partly eaten, and they believed it had +been there for some time.</p> + +<p>"It is good," said White Otter. "Matohota +comes here to eat that pony. If we wait here we +will see him."</p> + +<p>"Perhaps he is sleeping over there in those +bushes," suggested Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>They knew that after gorging itself with meat, +a bear often would lie down to sleep near the carcass, +so that it would find a meal close at hand +when it again became hungry. It seemed probable, +therefore, that the great creature which they +sought might be concealed somewhere within bow +range of them. They looked carefully along the +edge of the woods, hoping to discover a sign which +would tell them where the bear had entered the +timber. The undergrowth appeared undisturbed, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>and, as the trail faded out at the spot where the +grass had been trampled down about the carcass, +there seemed little chance of learning what they +wished to know unless they made their way to +the dead pony.</p> + +<p>"We must go over there and find out about it," +Sun Bird proposed, finally.</p> + +<p>"Come," said White Otter.</p> + +<p>They moved through the timber as stealthily +as wolves, and when they drew near the carcass +they again stopped to watch and listen. Then they +circled to find the trail of the bear. They came +upon a wide game trail leading down from the +park, and as they stooped to study it they discovered +many tracks. Among them were the footprints +of the great gray timber wolves, and the +clumsy round paw-marks of a mountain lion. The +latter track was fresh, and it was evident that the +great cat had passed over the trail since daylight. +The tracks of the bear, however, were missing.</p> + +<p>"Matohota did not come this way," said Sun +Bird.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps he is close by," White Otter said, +cautiously. "We will try to find out where he is. +Then we will go and look at that pony. It came +along this trail. See, here is a track."</p> + +<p>He showed Sun Bird a faint and indistinct <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>impression +of a hoof at one side of the trail. It was +some days old, and offered them little information.</p> + +<p>"Come, we will find out what has become of +Matohota, and then we will come back here and +find out about this thing," said White Otter.</p> + +<p>They soon came upon the trail of the bear. As +White Otter had guessed, it circled around the +edge of the park, and led back toward the top of +the ridge. It was plain, therefore, that the bear +had its den somewhere up there among the ledges, +and came to the park to feed during the night or at +daylight.</p> + +<p>"Now we know what to do," declared White +Otter. "First we will go and look at that pony. +Then we will go down that trail and try to find +some more tracks. Then we will come back to this +place and wait for Matohota."</p> + +<p>"It is good," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>When they reached the dead pony they were +surprised to see the shaft of an arrow protruding +from behind its shoulder. For a moment or so +they studied it in silence. Then White Otter +knelt, and drew his knife.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps we will find out what we want to +know," he said.</p> + +<p>He extracted the arrow and examined it with +great care, and then he passed it to Sun Bird. The +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>latter studied it a long time. He noted that the +shaft was of willow and feathered along the sides +for almost a hand-width. The arrow was considerably +longer than those used by the Dacotahs, and +the point was made of an unusual red flint. It +was the deeply notched model of the war arrows.</p> + +<p>"Well, what do you make of it?" White Otter +inquired, as Sun Bird finished examining it.</p> + +<p>"It is not a Dacotah arrow," replied Sun Bird. +"It is not a Crow arrow. It was not made by the +Blackfeet. I do not know who made it."</p> + +<p>"I cannot tell you about it," said White Otter, +as Sun Bird returned the mysterious arrow. "I +do not know about the people who live in this +country. I know the Crow arrows. I have seen +the Blackfeet arrows. I do not know the others."</p> + +<p>"I will show it to Sitting Eagle and Lean Wolf," +said Sun Bird. "Perhaps they will know about +it."</p> + +<p>As there seemed to be no other way of learning +its identity, they dismissed the arrow from their +minds and turned their attention upon the dead +pony. It was a pinto, and appeared to have been +dead a number of days. They had little doubt +that, having been wounded on the plain, it had +followed the game trail to the spot where it died.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps the man who owned that pony rode +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>up here to get away from his enemies," suggested +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps," said White Otter.</p> + +<p>Then, as the day had almost ended, they realized +that if they intended to remain and watch for +Matohota it was time to find a hiding place. As +there was not sufficient breeze to stir the leaves, +White Otter held a moistened finger above his +head to learn the direction of the air current. +What there was seemed to come from the north +side of the park. As the bear was expected to +approach from the west, and the bait was on the +east side of the park, the Sioux decided to hide +themselves to the southward of the dead pony. +Then if the uncertain breeze should suddenly shift +to another quarter they would still be to the leeward +of the bear.</p> + +<p>"Matohota is strong," cautioned White Otter. +"We must drive our arrows deep into his body. +We must not go too far away."</p> + +<p>They concealed themselves in the undergrowth +within easy bowshot of the bait and determined to +watch until the bear appeared. The light was +already fading from the park, and the heavy evening +shadows were forming at the edge of the woods. +Then, as darkness settled down, the moon flooded +the little park with its silvery light.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>"It is good," whispered Sun Bird. "Wakantunka +has sent Hanyetuwi, the night sun, to give +us light."</p> + +<p>"It is good," replied White Otter.</p> + +<p>They had little hope that Matohota would appear +before daylight, and still they realized that +he might come to feed under cover of the night. +It was not long, however, before they heard other +prowlers approaching the bait. The crackling of +brush, and soft, stealthy footfalls caused them to +watch expectantly. A lithe, shadowy form moved +swiftly into the moonlight. It stopped a moment +and raised a long pointed snout into the air. Then +it trotted gracefully to the bait. The Sioux recognized +it as Huhasapedan, the fox. They watched +with great interest as the suspicious creature +circled warily about the carcass, stopping in alarm +at the slightest sound, and peering nervously into +the shadows. It had barely begun to eat, when +a second woods prowler entered the park and +moved slowly toward the bait. The fox crouched +behind the pony and watched uneasily.</p> + +<p>"Wolf," whispered White Otter.</p> + +<p>The wolf had discovered the fox and was bristling +and growling, as it walked stiffly toward the +pony. Awed by the threats of its formidable rival, +the fox slunk to the edge of the timber and sat +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>upon its haunches to watch until the wolf left the +carcass. The wolf feasted ravenously, tearing +large pieces of flesh from the bait and growling +savagely as it ate. It was one of the great gaunt +timber wolves, and the Sioux longed to pierce it +with their arrows. They resisted the temptation, +however, for they knew that Matohota might become +suspicious at the scent of fresh blood.</p> + +<p>"It would be foolish," said White Otter.</p> + +<p>The wolf refused to leave until it had gorged +itself with meat, and then it moved threateningly +toward the fox. The latter immediately retreated +across the park and failed to show itself until the +wolf had slunk into the shadows.</p> + +<p>The fox had barely returned to the bait when +it was again interrupted by another nocturnal +prowler. A short, catlike snarl sounded from the +direction of the game trail, and as the fox paused +to listen, a long, crouching form appeared at the +edge of the moonlight. Two glowing eyes blazed +defiance, and the fox bounded into the woods.</p> + +<p>"It is fierce Imutanka," breathed Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>They had instantly recognized the stealthy +prowler as a mountain lion. They watched with +bated breath as the great cat moved cautiously +toward the carcass. In spite of its size and strength +it seemed as wary and fearful as Huhasapedan, the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>fox. It would slink forward a few paces and then +stop and look furtively about the park. Once it +sniffed suspiciously, and parted its lips in a silent +snarl. Had it caught the wolf scent? Was great +Matohota approaching? The Sioux grew tense at +the thought. As the lion drew nearer the pony +it crouched close to the ground, growling and nervously +lashing its tail. It appeared to be preparing +to spring upon the carcass. It was an unusually +large specimen, and the Sioux were eager to +secure so noble a trophy.</p> + +<p>"Come, we will kill Imutanka," suggested Sun +Bird.</p> + +<p>"Wait," cautioned White Otter.</p> + +<p>A moment afterward a great bulky form appeared +at the opposite side of the park. The Sioux +recognized it at once. It was great Matohota, the +grizzly. His sudden appearance caused their +hearts to beat wildly against their ribs, while their +eyes flashed with the light of battle. He was a +foe worthy of the bravest warrior, and the young +Dacotahs longed for the chance to engage him in +battle.</p> + +<p>A slight breeze was stirring from the eastward, +and Matohota had evidently caught the scent of +the mountain lion. He had raised his head and +was staring across the park. The Sioux looked +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>toward the lion. It, too, had discovered the bear, +and was crouching behind the pony, and grumbling +threateningly.</p> + +<p>"Imutanka will run away," whispered Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Watch!" cautioned White Otter.</p> + +<p>The bear had ambled clumsily into the open, +and was following its trail across the park. The +Sioux turned their eyes upon the lion. They expected +to see it slinking away. Imutanka, however, +showed no such intention. His blazing eyes +and ugly snarls made it plain that he had no idea +of running away. Still, the Sioux could not believe +he would dare to oppose the mighty Matohota.</p> + +<p>"Imutanka looks brave, but he will run away," +insisted Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"We will see," said White Otter.</p> + +<p>As the bear came closer the Sioux saw that it +was even larger than they had guessed it to be. +Matohota looked more than a match for sinewy +Imutanka, but the latter still held his ground. It +was apparent that having secured possession of +the carcass he had no thought of surrendering it +without a fight. The Sioux thrilled at the possibility.</p> + +<p>"If Imutanka stays there we will see something +to talk about," Sun Bird whispered, eagerly.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>"Yes, yes, it will be a great fight," replied White +Otter.</p> + +<p>The bold defiance of the lion seemed to have +made Matohota realize the need of caution. He +had stopped and was shaking his great head from +side to side and growling fiercely. Imutanka replied +to his challenge with short, throaty snarls. +Then for some moments each gazed into the blazing +eyes of the other and appeared to be estimating +the strength and courage of its adversary. The +Sioux were fascinated by the unusual spectacle. +For the moment their desire to kill was overcome +by their curiosity to learn the outcome of the fight.</p> + +<p>It was some time, however, before the huge +Matohota made up his mind to attack his rival. +Then, having determined to gain possession of +the bait, he rushed furiously upon the lion. The +great sinewy cat had little difficulty in avoiding +him. Then, as Matohota whirled about with +amazing agility, the lion made its spring. Matohota +reared upon his hind legs and struck the lion +to earth with his huge paw. Imutanka uttered a +sharp whine of pain and sprang aside. It was +evident that Matohota had drawn first blood. He +dropped to all fours and turned quickly about as +the lion circled him. The Sioux saw that Imutanka +was bleeding freely from a deep gash in the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>neck. However, the wound only seemed to rouse +the lion to greater fury. Spitting, snarling, and +growling, it glided stealthily about its adversary, +watching for an opening. Matohota, however, was +equally alert, and in spite of his great bulk he was +sufficiently quick to baffle his foe. Each time Imutanka +crouched to spring, Matohota rose upon his +hind legs and held his great forepaws ready to +deal another deadly blow. Then the lion would +immediately relax and attempt to glide behind +him, and Matohota would drop down and whirl +about in time to prevent the attack.</p> + +<p>"Matohota is a great fighter," Sun Bird told +White Otter.</p> + +<p>"Imutanka is quick, he will fool Matohota," +replied White Otter.</p> + +<p>A moment later his prophecy was fulfilled. The +lion had crouched to spring, and Matohota reared +to protect himself. Then Imutanka sprang far to +one side, and as Matohota dropped Imutanka was +directly behind him. Before Matohota could turn +the lion was upon his back. Its great claws tore +down through the thick, shaggy coat, and ripped +great gashes in his flesh and its flashing fangs +sank deep into the back of his neck. Quick to +understand his peril, Matohota threw himself and +attempted to roll over upon his back. Failing in +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>his efforts to dislodge the lion, Matohota rose +upon his hind legs and fell over backward to crush +the lion beneath his great bulk. Imutanka was too +cunning to be caught. Releasing his hold he +sprang away, and as Matohota crashed to the +ground the lion jumped for his throat. Matohota +caught him in a crushing embrace, and the fight +became deadly. Rolling wildly over the ground +the ferocious beasts bit and tore each other until +it seemed that neither could survive the encounter.</p> + +<p>The Sioux looked on with glistening eyes. The +savage duel had roused their own hot fighting blood +and they were eager to enter the fray.</p> + +<p>"Come, we will kill both of them," cried Sun +Bird, as he fitted an arrow to his bow.</p> + +<p>"Wait, wait," urged White Otter. "We will +see who is the greatest warrior."</p> + +<p>They watched, therefore, while the fight raged +with unabated fury. At last the superior strength +of the great Matohota gave him the victory. The +lion broke free and sprang from the range of his +deadly paws. It crouched and faced him for a +moment, and then as he reared to defend himself, +Imutanka weakened and turned to slink away into +the night.</p> + +<p>"Come!" cried Sun Bird, as he rose to his feet.</p> + +<p>Two arrows pierced the heart of fierce Imutanka +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>and he fell dead in his tracks. Matohota whirled +about at the sharp twang of the bowstrings, and +roared defiance at the two figures on the edge of +the moonlight. Then as he rushed forward to +destroy them in his wrath, he, too, collapsed from +the shock of two burning arrows in his great hairy +chest. The next moment he rose to his feet and +reared unsteadily to repeat the tactics which had +proved successful against fierce Imutanka. This +time, however, it was a fatal error, for the Sioux +drove their arrows through his heart and great +Matohota crashed headlong into the grass and followed +Imutanka on the Long Trail.</p> + +<p>"Hi, we have done a big thing," Sun Bird cried, +excitedly, as he rushed into the park to examine +the trophies.</p> + +<p>"We will have something to tell about," laughed +White Otter.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER XII</h2> + +<h3>AN ENCOUNTER WITH THE FLATHEADS</h3> +<br /> + +<p>The elated young Sioux lost little time in removing +the great claws from Matohota and +the cruel, sharp talons from fierce Imutanka. They +longed to take the pelts as well, but they realized +that it would be folly to burden themselves with +them. They spent some time, however, examining +the wounds which the savage creatures had inflicted +upon each other. The lion had bitten deeply +into the back of Matohota's neck and ripped terrible +gashes in his back. Matohota had taken full +revenge. His great claws had torn gaping wounds +in the chest and shoulders of Imutanka and it was +evident that the lion would have expired from loss +of blood if the Sioux had not ended its agony with +their arrows. They decided, therefore, that great +Matohota should be credited with victory.</p> + +<p>"Imutanka was very brave, but Matohota was +too strong for him," declared Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Yes, Matohota won the fight," agreed White +Otter.</p> + +<p>As the night was far advanced they determined +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>to wait until daylight before setting out to rejoin +their companions. They spent some time dancing +solemnly about their victims, and chanting their +war songs. Then they opened the carcasses of the +bear and the lion and removed the hearts. They +cut them into two parts and ate them with superstitious +zeal. It was an ancient custom of the Dacotahs, +who believed that by consuming the heart +of a particularly strong and courageous bear or +lion they would absorb the strength and courage +of the animal itself.</p> + +<p>At dawn the Sioux determined to follow the +game trail to the plain, in the hope of encountering +some of the war party. They had thoughtfully +cut the arrows from the bodies of Matohota and +Imutanka so that if either the Blackfeet or the +Crows chanced to visit the spot they would be unable +to guess who had ventured upon their hunting +grounds.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps we will find out something about that +pony," suggested Sun Bird, as they moved slowly +down the game trail.</p> + +<p>"See, here are the tracks of Imutanka," said +White Otter.</p> + +<p>The trail of the lion was plainly visible. The +Sioux gave little attention to it. Their interest in +fierce Imutanka had ended with his death. They +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>were curious, however, to learn more about the +unfortunate pony. They watched closely to find +its tracks. They were faint and far apart, and +although Sun Bird and White Otter were expert +trailers they could gain little information from the +unsatisfactory trail.</p> + +<p>Then the game trail suddenly led them to an +open plateau which offered an extended view of +the plain. They saw a small company of horsemen +riding toward the ridge. They studied them +closely. There were eight.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps our friends are looking for us," said +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>White Otter remained silent. His whole attention +was concentrated upon the approaching horsemen. +They were a considerable distance below +him and some distance from the base of the ridge. +It was difficult to identify them, but the Ogalala +was straining his eyes in the attempt. He was +particularly noting the ponies, as he had become +thoroughly familiar with the color and type of +every animal in the Minneconjoux war party. He +failed to recognize any of the ponies which were +approaching the timber. One was a buckskin, +and there were two pintos. There were several +such animals in the Sioux war party, but they differed +in type from the ponies on the plain. White +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>Otter was suspicious of the approaching horsemen. +Sun Bird, too, was becoming uneasy about them.</p> + +<p>"Who are they?" he asked, anxiously.</p> + +<p>"They are not our people," White Otter assured +him. "I do not know who they are. Do +you know them?"</p> + +<p>"No," replied Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>They watched anxiously while the riders drew +nearer the base of the ridge. As they finally came +within bow range of the timber, they stopped and +began to watch the ridge. For a moment the +Sioux wondered if the horsemen had discovered +them. It seemed impossible, as they had hidden +themselves in the undergrowth the moment they +discovered the riders.</p> + +<p>"No, they did not see us," White Otter declared, +confidently. "I believe they are scouts. Perhaps +they are Blackfeet."</p> + +<p>"No, they are not Blackfeet," said Sun Bird. +"I know those people a long ways off."</p> + +<p>"Well, they do not look like Crows," White +Otter told him.</p> + +<p>"No, they are not Crows," replied Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Who are they?" demanded White Otter.</p> + +<p>"I cannot tell you that until they come closer," +Sun Bird told him.</p> + +<p>In the meantime one of the horsemen had left +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>his companions and was riding cautiously toward +the ridge. His friends were watching him closely +and seemed ready to rush to his assistance at the +first warning of danger. As the scout drew +steadily nearer, the Sioux studied him with great +care. Sun Bird was positive that he was not a +Blackfoot, and both of them were equally certain +that he was not a Crow. The Crows allowed their +hair to grow to great length, and wore it in two +massive braids which often fell below their knees. +The man who was approaching the ridge, however, +had a great abundance of rather short, unbraided +hair, which fell loosely about his shoulders. As +Sun Bird noted it, and the high, peculiar shape of +the warrior's head he suddenly identified him.</p> + +<p>"Now I know about him," he told White Otter. +"He is a Flathead. It is bad. They are enemies +of my people. We must watch out."</p> + +<p>"I have heard my grandfather tell about those +people," said White Otter.</p> + +<p>He recalled the stories which old Wolf Robe +had told about how the Flatheads flattened the +heads of their children by tightly binding the +skulls of the babies between stiff slabs of bark, and +keeping them in the vise until the skulls were +pressed into the desired shape. Those strange +people considered a high, flat skull a great mark +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>of beauty. As they were a northern tribe, hovering +about the mountains, it was the first time White +Otter had encountered them. He studied the approaching +rider with curious interest.</p> + +<p>"They are great hunters," Sun Bird told him. +"I believe these riders are coming to this ridge +to hunt."</p> + +<p>"Perhaps they will follow this trail," suggested +White Otter. "Perhaps they will go up there +where we killed Matohota, to watch for game."</p> + +<p>Sun Bird started at the suggestion. It appeared +to have offered an interesting possibility. He +drew the mysterious arrow from his bowcase, and +smiled significantly at White Otter.</p> + +<p>"Now I know about this thing," he said. "This +arrow came from the Flatheads."</p> + +<p>White Otter nodded understandingly.</p> + +<p>In the meantime the Flathead scout had reached +the base of the ridge and disappeared from their +sight. They turned their attention to the company +of horsemen who were waiting on the plain. +They seemed to be watching for the signal to advance.</p> + +<p>"Those people are very cautious," said White +Otter.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps they are afraid of the Blackfeet," Sun +Bird told him.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>Then they heard a shout from the base of the +ridge, and the horsemen cantered briskly toward +the timber. The Sioux realized that it was time to +move from the plateau. They believed it would +be easy to return to the top of the ridge and escape +from their enemies. Sun Bird, however, showed +a desire to linger.</p> + +<p>"Those look like good ponies," he told White +Otter, as his eyes twinkled mischievously. "The +Flatheads are our enemies. They have killed some +of my people. I feel like taking away some of +those ponies."</p> + +<p>"You are the leader, I will follow you," White +Otter said, quietly.</p> + +<p>"It is good," Sun Bird declared, enthusiastically.</p> + +<p>Their first thought, however, was to conceal +themselves sufficiently near the game trail to see +the Flatheads if they passed. It was a bold resolve, +and the eyes of the daring young Sioux +flashed with excitement. They had been taught +from infancy that the noblest aim of a warrior +was to inflict punishment upon his enemies, and +they determined to make the most of their opportunity. +They concealed themselves within easy +bowshot of the trail, and waited anxiously for the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>Flatheads to appear. It was not long before the +Sioux heard them approaching.</p> + +<p>"They are coming," whispered Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>They watched in breathless suspense, and in a +few moments they saw the first horseman appear +at the edge of the plateau. His companions followed +closely behind him. The Sioux were greatly +surprised when the Flatheads stopped their ponies +in the center of the open park and began to dismount. +Then the ponies were left with two warriors +and the other members of the company passed +up the game trail on foot. The Sioux had a splendid +view of them at close range. They were tall, +muscular men, whose high, flattened skulls gave +them a weird and sinister expression. As they +were not painted for war, the Sioux believed they +were hunters.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps they will find our tracks," Sun Bird +whispered, uneasily, after they had passed.</p> + +<p>White Otter looked serious. The possibility +had already flashed through his mind, and he was +troubled about it. He knew that even one indistinct +impression of a fresh moccasin track would +arouse the suspicions of the Flatheads, and send +them hurrying to the plateau to investigate. Then +it would be impossible to capture the ponies, and +difficult to get away.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>"The ground is hard," Sun Bird said, hopefully. +"We did not make many tracks."</p> + +<p>"The eyes of a hunter are sharp," White Otter +cautioned him.</p> + +<p>Realizing that there was nothing to be gained +by worrying over the possibility of the Flatheads +discovering their tracks, the Sioux dismissed the +thought from their minds and turned their attention +upon the warriors with the ponies. The latter +had incautiously turned loose the ponies to +graze in the center of the park and had stationed +themselves on opposite sides of the plateau to +watch them. The Sioux instantly saw their opportunity.</p> + +<p>"Those warriors are very foolish," Sun Bird +said, excitedly. "Now we can creep up and get +two of those ponies."</p> + +<p>"We must be quick," White Otter told him. +"Those other warriors may come back."</p> + +<p>"I will take that yellow pony, it looks fast," said +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"I will take the spotted pony with the white +tail," said White Otter.</p> + +<p>Having made their selection, the Sioux realized +that they must attempt their daring coup without +a moment's delay. They moved through the undergrowth +with the alert, silent stealth of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>Huhasapedan, +the fox. When they were almost at the +edge of the park they stopped to plan their reckless +dash upon the ponies. The animals which +they hoped to secure were grazing near the edge +of the timber and the Flathead who guarded them +was picking berries a short distance away. The +Sioux crawled a bowlength nearer. Then as one +of the ponies suddenly raised its head, they stopped +and waited with thumping hearts to learn if they +had been discovered. The unsuspecting animal +resumed its feeding, however, and the Sioux +breathed more easily. Again they moved carefully +toward the border of the park. Their eyes +were fixed upon the ponies, and their ears were +open to catch the first warning that the Flatheads +had found their tracks.</p> + +<p>When they finally reached the edge of the timber, +the ponies which they had selected were almost +within reach of them. They were grazing +quietly, and the long rawhide lariats were trailing +between their feet. The Flathead had turned +his back upon them and was stooped over searching +for berries in the long grass. The warrior +on the opposite side of the park was lying in the +shade of a tree. The Sioux realized that their +opportunity was at hand. Each fastened his eyes +upon the animal he planned to capture and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>prepared +to rush into the park. At that moment, +however, they heard a signal from the upper end +of the game trail. The truth instantly flashed +through their minds. The Flathead hunters had +discovered their trail.</p> + +<p>"Come!" cried White Otter.</p> + +<p>They jumped to their feet and rushed recklessly +into the park. Then as the startled ponies turned +in panic, the Sioux sprang forward and seized the +lariats. The next moment they had mounted and +were riding furiously down the game trail. They +chuckled with boyish glee as they heard the +alarmed Flathead guards yelling frantically for +their companions.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER XIII</h2> + +<h3>A CLEVER STRATAGEM</h3> +<br /> + +<p>At the time that Sun Bird and White Otter set +out to climb the ridge to search for the +Blackfeet camp, Lean Wolf and Sitting Eagle rode +northward along the edge of the timber to look for +signs of their enemies. They were particularly +anxious to locate the Crows, who, they feared, were +somewhere in the vicinity. They rode until the day +was half gone, and then, having seen nothing of +their foes, determined to return to their companions. +As they were cantering slowly toward a +deep ravine which they had crossed earlier in the +day, their ponies suddenly began to raise their +ears and whinny. The Sioux instantly stopped in +alarm.</p> + +<p>"Watch out!" cautioned Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>He had barely given the warning when a great +company of horsemen rode out of the ravine and +raced toward the astounded Sioux. The latter +instantly recognized the riders as Crows. They +were almost upon them and the Sioux wheeled +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>their ponies and rode madly across the plain.</p> + +<p>"This way! This way!" cried Sitting Eagle, +as he turned toward the north.</p> + +<p>The Crows were within bowshot and their arrows +were falling all about the crouching Sioux. +The latter urged their ponies to a frantic burst +of speed to escape from the fierce attack. Stride +by stride they distanced their pursuers until they +were beyond arrow range. Then the Crows withheld +their arrows and began to lash their ponies +in an attempt to again get within bow range.</p> + +<p>"Keep low on your pony," cautioned Lean +Wolf. "Perhaps they do not know who we are."</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes, we will try to fool them," replied +Sitting Eagle.</p> + +<p>Then as the two ponies raced along side by side +he told Lean Wolf about a narrow, shut-in cañon +which extended back into the foothills. He said +it was only a short distance ahead of them.</p> + +<p>"If we run into that place the Crows cannot +get us," Sitting Eagle declared, confidently.</p> + +<p>"It is good, we will go there," agreed Lean +Wolf.</p> + +<p>The Crows were trying desperately to come +within arrow range, but the gallant Sioux ponies +were holding their lead and their riders had little +fear of being overtaken. They believed that the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>Crow ponies had reached the limit of their speed +and that further urging would cause them to collapse.</p> + +<p>The Sioux finally reached the cañon a safe distance +ahead of their pursuers. After they had +ridden through the narrow entrance, they dismounted +and sought safety behind two great boulders +which guarded the pass.</p> + +<p>"Now we can hold off our enemies," Sitting +Eagle said, with evident relief.</p> + +<p>"Yes, it will be hard for them to come through +here," declared Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>The Crows, however, showed no disposition to +make the attempt. They seemed to realize the +strength of the Sioux position and appeared reluctant +to make an attack. They gathered in a +compact group well beyond arrow range, and held +a council of war.</p> + +<p>"They will wait until it gets dark," declared +Sitting Eagle. "Then they will try to get into +this place."</p> + +<p>"We will be ready," Lean Wolf said, doggedly. +"But perhaps the Crows will keep us here a long +time. We have no water. It is bad."</p> + +<p>"There is a little pool a short ways behind us, +and there is plenty of grass for the ponies," Sitting +Eagle assured him.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>"It is good," Lean Wolf declared, heartily. +"We can stay here until the Crows get tired and +go away."</p> + +<p>When the day finally ended and twilight fell +upon the plain, the Sioux became more alert. They +feared that the crafty Crows would make an attempt +to creep into the cañon under cover of the +darkness, and they determined to be prepared. +Crouching behind the bowlders, they peered anxiously +into the night, listening for the sound of +stealthy footfalls at the entrance to the cañon. +Then, as time passed and the stillness was unbroken, +they began to wonder. Had the Crows +suddenly departed? The Sioux had grave doubts.</p> + +<p>"No, they have not gone away," Lean Wolf +told Sitting Eagle. "I believe they took us for +Blackfeet. They are very mad at those people. +I believe they will try hard to kill us."</p> + +<p>"Listen!" cautioned Sitting Eagle.</p> + +<p>They heard something moving cautiously near +the entrance to the pass. Fearing that the Crows +were about to make an attack, the Sioux fitted +arrows to their bows and prepared to offer desperate +resistance. Then they again heard some one +creeping stealthily toward them through the night.</p> + +<p>"It is a scout," whispered Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>Sitting Eagle rose to his knees, and shot his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>arrow toward the sounds. There was a noisy +scramble from the pass, and they knew that the +invaders had been driven off. Then for a long +time they heard nothing further from their foes. +Shortly before daylight, however, a small company +of reckless young warriors rushed boldly +into the narrow defile and made a valiant attempt +to overcome the Sioux. The latter fought furiously, +and the Crows were forced to withdraw. +Their foolhardy display of bravery had cost the +lives of several of them.</p> + +<p>The Sioux were greatly encouraged by their +success in holding the pass. They believed that +the Crows would be slow to renew the attack. +They had withdrawn beyond arrow range, and as +dawn lighted the plain the Sioux saw them gathered +in earnest discussion some distance from the +cañon.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps they will go away," Sitting Eagle +said, hopefully.</p> + +<p>"No, I do not believe it," replied Lean Wolf. +"Listen, they are singing their war songs. We +must be ready."</p> + +<p>A few moments afterward the entire Crow war +party galloped toward the cañon. As they came +within arrow range, however, they dropped behind +their ponies and raced past yelling fiercely.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>"Save your arrows!" shouted Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes, I see what they are trying to do," +Sitting Eagle told him.</p> + +<p>They realized at once that their wily foes were +attempting to make them waste their arrows. +When the Crows saw that the trick had failed, +they immediately withdrew beyond arrow range. +This time, however, they disappeared from sight +over a rise of the plain. The Sioux looked at +one another in surprise. The unexpected maneuver +made them suspicious.</p> + +<p>"They are trying to fool us," said Sitting +Eagle.</p> + +<p>"Yes, they are trying to make us come out so +that they can catch us," declared Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>Then their suspicions were confirmed as they +saw several warriors peeping over the crest of the +rise. The Sioux laughed and jeered at them, and +the Crows instantly withdrew from sight. They +remained hidden for the rest of the day, but the +Sioux had little doubt that sharp-eyed scouts were +constantly watching the pass.</p> + +<p>"If they do not come when it gets dark, we will +know that they have gone away," said Sitting +Eagle.</p> + +<p>They watched in weary suspense as the long +day finally drew to a close. The Crows, however, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>failed to appear. It seemed as if they really had +abandoned the siege, and still the Sioux feared +to believe it. Experience had taught them that +the Crows were crafty and treacherous foes, and +they feared that they were planning some clever +ruse to gain admission to the cañon.</p> + +<p>"We must keep watching," Lean Wolf said, suspiciously.</p> + +<p>The night was well advanced before they heard +anything to arouse their fears. Then they again +caught the sound of some one moving toward the +cañon.</p> + +<p>"Watch out, they have come!" whispered Sitting +Eagle.</p> + +<p>"I hear them," Lean Wolf replied.</p> + +<p>The next moment a wild chorus of yells warned +them that the entire Crow force was crowding +into the narrow pass. The Sioux knew that the +critical moment was at hand. The Crows had left +their ponies out on the plain and had crept toward +the cañon on foot. It was evident that they were +determined to kill their foes at any cost, and the +Sioux realized that unless they could stop the first +fierce rush there was no hope for them.</p> + +<p>"Come, we are Dacotahs, we will show these +people how to fight!" Lean Wolf cried, savagely.</p> + +<p>They rose behind the bowlders and delivered a +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>deadly volley of arrows that threw the Crows +into confusion. For a moment they hesitated, and +the Sioux took hope. Then the Crows rallied and +rushed recklessly upon their foes. The Sioux took +shelter behind the bowlders and fought with the +fury of despair. They realized that it was only +a matter of moments before they would be overcome, +and they determined to make the Crows pay +dearly for the victory.</p> + +<p>At that instant, however, the great war cry of +the Dacotahs echoed through the night, and a +moment afterward the thunderous hoof beats of +running ponies reverberated across the plain. The +Sioux could scarcely believe their ears. The Crows +turned in panic.</p> + +<p>"The Blackfeet! The Blackfeet!" they cried +hysterically. "They have run off our ponies!"</p> + +<p>They believed that they had been led into a trap +by the treacherous Blackfeet, and the thought demoralized +them. Their one thought was to escape +from the cañon before their foes barred the +way. They scrambled wildly through the narrow +pass and fled into the darkness.</p> + +<p>"Come!" cried Lean Wolf, as he sprang upon +his pony.</p> + +<p>The Sioux galloped from the pass, and raced +across the plain to join the Minneconjoux war +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>party. They heard the Sioux war cry directly +ahead of them, and they raised their voices in +reply. Several riderless ponies crossed their path, +but they made no attempt to capture them. Their +one thought was to join their comrades in an attack +upon the bewildered Crows. Then they heard +some one galloping toward them and shouting their +names. A moment later White Otter raced the +fiery piebald beside them.</p> + +<p>"You are alive—it is good," he said. "Come, +we will run away before the Crows find out about +it."</p> + +<p>"Where are our brothers?" Lean Wolf inquired, +anxiously.</p> + +<p>"Little Raven and Running Dog are waiting +over there," White Otter told him.</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes, but where are the others?" inquired +Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>"They did not come," laughed White Otter. +"We made all that noise to frighten the Crow +ponies and bring the Crows out on the plain. I +did it a long time ago. Now I have done it again. +The Crows are very foolish."</p> + +<p>"White Otter, you are a great chief!" Lean +Wolf said, warmly. "You have given us our +lives. We will tell our people about it."</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER XIV</h2> + +<h3>THE BLACKFEET CAMP</h3> +<br /> + +<p>They soon found Little Raven and Running +Dog, and then they set out to join the war +party. As they rode swiftly through the night +Lean Wolf asked White Otter to tell about his +daring stratagem against the Crows.</p> + +<p>"How did you come to find us?" Lean Wolf +asked him.</p> + +<p>"When we came back from the ridge, Sun Bird +asked our friends about you," said White Otter. +"They told us that you went away and did not +come back. We felt bad about it. Sun Bird sent +us to look for you. Pretty soon we found the +tracks of your ponies. We followed them to that +gully. Then we saw what had happened. We +thought the Blackfeet had caught you. It was +easy to follow all those pony tracks. Then we +came in sight of the place where you were hiding. +We lay down behind a ridge to watch. We saw +a war party of Crows. Then I told Running Dog +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>and Little Raven how I fooled those people. I +said, 'I will fool them again.' Then we frightened +away the ponies and made the Crows run out. +That is all I have to say about it."</p> + +<p>Soon afterward they encountered the Minneconjoux +war party advancing carefully along the +edge of the timber. However, when Sun Bird +learned that the Crows were only a short distance +ahead of him, he immediately ordered a halt.</p> + +<p>"If we keep going ahead we will run into those +people," he told his companions. "That would +be foolish. We have set out to fight the Blackfeet. +We must keep ourselves strong until we +meet them."</p> + +<p>"Yes, it would be foolish to risk our lives until +we have done what we set out to do," the Minneconjoux +told one another.</p> + +<p>They made a wide detour, therefore, and circled +far out on the plain to avoid meeting their +enemies. Daylight was close at hand when they +finally returned to the foothills. Having passed +safely by the cañon without hearing anything of +the Crows, the Sioux believed that there was little +further danger of again encountering those hated +foes.</p> + +<p>"We are getting close to the Blackfeet camp, the +Crows will not come this way," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>"They have gone to tell their people how the +Blackfeet fooled them," Lean Wolf said, jokingly.</p> + +<p>"White Otter can tell them about it," laughed +the Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>As the last lingering night shadows lifted from +the plain, the Sioux entered the timber to avoid +being seen by prowling companies of Blackfeet. +Although the danger of meeting the Crows appeared +to have passed, they knew that they would +be in constant peril from the Blackfeet. Dancing +Rabbit said that they were within a day's journey +of the great camp, and the announcement roused +them to their danger. They moved carefully along +the base of the ridge until they found a sheltered +hiding place.</p> + +<p>"Now, my friends, I will tell you what I propose +to do," said Sun Bird. "You have heard +the words of Dancing Rabbit. He says that we +are getting near the great Blackfeet camp. It is +good. That is what we set out to do. But we +must be cautious. We must not let the Blackfeet +see us until we run off those ponies. We must +hide in the timber until we are ready to fight. But +first we must find the Blackfeet camp. I believe +we can see it from the top of this ridge. Pretty +soon I am going to climb up there and look around. +You must wait here until I come back. Then when +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>it grows dark we will go ahead. I have finished."</p> + +<p>Soon afterward he set out with White Otter +and Dancing Rabbit. They climbed to the top of +the ridge and looked anxiously toward the north. +It was some time before Dancing Rabbit spoke. +Then he pointed eagerly toward a low, sage-grown +ridge.</p> + +<p>"Do you see that long hill?" he asked excitedly.</p> + +<p>"Yes, I see it," replied Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Well, there is a river on the other side of it," +Dancing Rabbit told them. "Many trees grow +along that river. The Blackfeet camp is between +that river and that long hill. I hid on top of that +hill when I ran away from the camp."</p> + +<p>Sun Bird and White Otter heard him in silence. +Now that the goal was almost in sight they showed +little emotion. Only the sudden flash of their eyes +betokened their interest. They were intently +studying the low, sage-grown sweep of the plain +which Dancing Rabbit declared concealed the +Blackfeet camp.</p> + +<p>"See, see, there is the smoke from the village!" +cried Dancing Rabbit, as he pointed to a thin +column of smoke which was rising above the ridge.</p> + +<p>"I have been watching it a long time," Sun Bird +told him.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>"Yes, I saw it," said White Otter, as Sun Bird +looked inquiringly at him.</p> + +<p>"See, there is a high place over there," said +Sun Bird, as he pointed toward a great ledge some +distance to the northward. "If we climb up on +those rocks we can see the Blackfeet lodges."</p> + +<p>"Yes, I believe you can see the camp from that +place," Dancing Rabbit declared, eagerly.</p> + +<p>They made their way slowly along the ridge until +they reached the base of the great ledge. It +rose many bow lengths above them and was so bare +and conspicuous that the Sioux were somewhat +fearful of being seen if they climbed it. They +knew that when enemies were expected, every +great camp was protected by sentinels posted on +elevations of the plain to watch for the approach +of their foes. As the Blackfeet had every reason +to expect an attack from both the Minneconjoux +and the Crows, the Sioux felt quite certain that +they had taken the usual precautions to guard +their village. Still, the possibility of seeing the +great Blackfeet camp was a strong temptation, +and the Sioux finally decided to climb the ledge.</p> + +<p>They had barely made the decision, however, +when they saw something which instantly changed +their plans. A small company of horsemen had +suddenly appeared on the summit of the ridge +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>which hid the camp. The Sioux knew at once that +they were Blackfeet, and they watched anxiously +to see which way they would go. They were considerably +relieved when the riders reached the +foot of the slope and turned toward the east. They +rode off at a smart canter and soon disappeared +into a dip of the plain.</p> + +<p>"I believe they are hunters," said White Otter.</p> + +<p>"Well, they have gone away," Sun Bird told +him. "Come, we will climb up there and look +around."</p> + +<p>"No, it would be foolish," White Otter declared. +"I see some one down there watching this place."</p> + +<p>Sun Bird and Dancing Rabbit started in amazement. +Both had unusually sharp vision, and they +had kept their eyes steadily on the ridge, but +neither of them had seen any one except the horsemen.</p> + +<p>"Where is that person?" Sun Bird inquired, +curiously.</p> + +<p>"Look sharp at that twisted tree, near the top of +the ridge," said White Otter.</p> + +<p>His companions looked in vain. They could find +no evidence of any one either in or about the tree +which White Otter had designated. They feared +that he had been mistaken.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>"I do not see any one," declared Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Well, there is a warrior sitting up there among +the branches," White Otter told him. "If you +look sharp along that crooked limb you will see +him. He is far away, but my eyes tell me that he +is looking this way. We must be cautious."</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes, I see him!" Sun Bird said, excitedly.</p> + +<p>"He must be a scout. Perhaps those riders left +him there to watch for enemies. Perhaps it is a +war party."</p> + +<p>"We will wait and see what he is going to do," +said White Otter.</p> + +<p>As they were high up, and well sheltered in the +timber, the Sioux had little fear of being discovered. +They were curious to know what the +warrior in the tree was watching for, and they +determined to wait until they learned. Then they +suddenly discovered a horseman near the spot +where the Blackfeet had disappeared. The Sioux +felt sure that he was one of the company. He was +facing toward the ridge where the warrior was +watching from the tree. Apparently aware that +the latter had seen him, he dismounted and began +to signal with his robe. First he held it directly +in front of him between his outstretched arms. +The Sioux recognized the signal as the sign for +buffaloes. Then he waved the robe up and down +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>several times before his body. It was the signal +for many.</p> + +<p>"Those men are Blackfeet hunters," declared +White Otter. "They have found some buffaloes. +That man is telling about it."</p> + +<p>In the meantime the warrior had descended from +the tree and hurried to the top of the ridge. Then +he stooped and raised his robe from the ground. +He faced toward the north, and repeated the signals +which he had just received. Then both warriors +disappeared.</p> + +<p>"That man has told the people in the village +about the buffaloes," said White Otter. "I do +not believe it is a big hunt. Perhaps some buffaloes +came near the camp and some young men +went out to kill them."</p> + +<p>"Well, we must not show ourselves," Sun Bird +said, with a tinge of disappointment. "I would +like to look at that camp, but I believe it would be +foolish to climb up there."</p> + +<p>"Yes, my brother, it would be foolish," White +Otter warned him. "The Blackfeet are moving +around. Their eyes are sharp. We must watch +out."</p> + +<p>"I will tell you how I feel about it," said Sun +Bird.</p> + +<p>"I am listening," replied White Otter.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>"I am going to ask Dancing Rabbit to go back +to our brothers," explained Sun Bird. "I am +going to ask him to tell them to come ahead when +it grows dark. Sitting Eagle knows this place. +He must be the leader. When it gets light they +must hide in the timber and wait for us. Dancing +Rabbit, you must come back here and tell us where +they are. Then we will go to them and tell them +what we saw. White Otter, I will ask you to stay +here with me. When it gets dark we will climb +up on that high place and hide. When the light +comes we will see the Blackfeet camp."</p> + +<p>"It is the best thing to do," White Otter told +him.</p> + +<p>Shortly after Dancing Rabbit left them, they +saw a great company of Blackfeet riding slowly +over the ridge. There were both men and women, +and many of the ponies were dragging the pole +<i>travois</i> upon which burdens were transported +across the plains.</p> + +<p>"Those hunters have killed some buffaloes," +said White Otter. "These people are going to +bring in the meat."</p> + +<p>They watched the interesting cavalcade move +slowly across the plain and disappear on the trail +of the hunters. The Blackfeet were sending their +women to bring in the meat. It was apparent, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>therefore, that they had little fear of either the +Minneconjoux or the Crows retaliating for the recent +attacks which they had made upon them. The +reckless boldness of their arrogant foes caused the +eyes of the Sioux to flash with anger.</p> + +<p>"We will fool those boastful people," Sun Bird +said, fiercely.</p> + +<p>"They feel safe—it is good," White Otter replied, +quietly.</p> + +<p>They saw nothing more of the Blackfeet until +the end of the day and then the hunters returned. +A short way behind them came the women and +a few men, leading the pack ponies laden with +meat. After the Blackfeet had passed over the +ridge, the Sioux listened anxiously for sounds +from the camp. When they failed to hear anything +they began to wonder if the camp was farther +away than they supposed.</p> + +<p>"I do not believe it is far beyond that ridge," +declared White Otter. "The wind has carried +away the noise."</p> + +<p>"Yes, that may be true," agreed Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>They waited impatiently for darkness, and when +it finally came they immediately began to climb +the ledge. It was hard, perilous work, as the +night was unusually black, and the ledge was high +and steep. There were places where a false step +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>would have meant severe injury, or even death, +and the Sioux realized the necessity for caution.</p> + +<p>"Well, we have had a hard time," Sun Bird +panted, as they finally reached the top.</p> + +<p>"Yes, it is a hard place to get to," agreed White +Otter.</p> + +<p>They went as far as possible along the top of the +ledge, hoping at daylight to be able to see over +the ridge which hid the camp. Then they concealed +themselves behind two high pinnacles of +rock which rose some distance above the ledge and +waited anxiously for the night to pass.</p> + +<p>"See, the light is coming," Sun Bird said, +eagerly, as the first faint trace of dawn appeared +in the east. "Pretty soon we will see the great +Blackfeet camp."</p> + +<p>"It is good," replied White Otter.</p> + +<p>They waited impatiently for darkness to leave +the plain. Dawn seemed a long time coming. +However, the pale narrow streak across the eastern +sky gradually widened, the stars grew dim, +and a bird note sounded from the timber. Day +was close at hand. The Sioux stirred restlessly. +Their long vigil was almost over. Would they see +the Blackfeet camp? they wondered. They longed +to sweep aside the heavy black mantle which hid +the plain. Then, after some moments of trying +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>suspense, they saw the night shadows slowly retreating. +The stars had disappeared. A soft gray +twilight was creeping out of the east. Like a great +hand, it spread slowly over the plain and wiped +away the darkness. Dim, shadowy shapes appeared +in its wake. It passed over the ridge and +drove the shadows into the north. The Sioux followed +it with eager eyes. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, +it extended across the plain and laid bare +the secrets of the night.</p> + +<p>"Look, look, there are the lodges!" Sun Bird +cried, eagerly.</p> + +<p>They seemed suddenly to have sprung from the +plain—like pale, ghostly phantoms on the trail of +dawn. One after the other, they appeared from +the gloom in great sweeping circles that extended +far out on the plain until the entire camp was exposed +before the fascinated eyes of the Sioux. It +was ideally situated beside the waters of a wide, +willow-lined stream. The Sioux marveled at its +size. For a long time they studied it in silence. +Trained from infancy in the art of observation, +they noted every detail. They counted the lodges, +estimated the number of persons each would accommodate, +determined the nearest and easiest approach +to the camp, noted the distance from the +ridge, the distance from the water, and many other +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>details which skillful scouts were expected to know.</p> + +<p>Then they turned their attention to the ponies. +There was a great herd of them grazing some distance +to the eastward of the lodges. The Sioux +watched them with covetous eyes. They knew +that many of those animals had come from the +Minneconjoux camp. They intended to take them +back, and many Blackfeet ponies besides. Near +the edge of the camp was a smaller herd of ponies +confined in a strong pole corral. The Sioux knew +that those were the more valuable animals, the +fleet-footed war and hunting ponies. White Otter +studied them with great interest. He was trying +to identify the famous black war pony of Many +Buffaloes, the Blackfeet chief. However, he was +unable to convince himself that any of the ponies +in the corral was that animal. He had little doubt +that it was securely guarded somewhere near the +lodge of the chief.</p> + +<p>"There are many lodges," Sun Bird said, finally.</p> + +<p>"Yes, it is a great camp," replied White Otter.</p> + +<p>The Blackfeet were beginning to stir. The +Sioux saw them moving about between the lodges. +They looked like dwarfs at the distance. Then +smoke began to rise above the camp. Some people +were running toward the river. The Sioux <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>believed +they were boys. The splashes were distinctly +visible as they threw themselves into the +water. The faint, far-away sound of their voices +came up from the plain. Then a shadow swept +across the ledge. The Sioux looked into the sky. +Huya, the great war bird, was soaring out over +the Blackfeet camp.</p> + +<p>"Hi, there is our brother, Huya!" said Sun +Bird. "He has come to bring our people to the +Blackfeet camp."</p> + +<p>"It is a good sign," declared White Otter.</p> + +<p>They watched until the day was well advanced, +and then they crept carefully over the top of the +ledge and descended to the summit of the ridge. +They found Dancing Rabbit waiting for them.</p> + +<p>"Well, my brother, have you brought our +friends here?" inquired Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"They are hiding down there in the timber," +replied Dancing Rabbit.</p> + +<p>"Come, we will go to them," said Sun Bird.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER XV</h2> + +<h3>A PERILOUS RECONNAISSANCE</h3> +<br /> + +<p>They found the war party camped in a secluded +ravine which led far back into the foothills. +Having ridden throughout the night, most +of the Minneconjoux were sleeping when Sun Bird +and White Otter arrived at the rendezvous. The +spot was strongly guarded by sentinels, however, +who took turns at keeping watch. Sun Bird and +White Otter immediately asked for water, and +Dancing Rabbit led them to a splendid spring on +the side of the ravine. Then they supplied themselves +with generous rations of dried meat and +ate heartily. In the meantime their arrival had +awakened most of the war party, and they gathered +about the famous young scouts and waited +anxiously for them to speak.</p> + +<p>"Well, my friends, I have something good to +tell you," Sun Bird said, at last. "We saw the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>Blackfeet camp. It is close by. There are many +lodges. There must be many people to live in +them. We saw many ponies. Some belong to +our people. We have come to take them away. +We will take them. Then we saw the fast ponies. +They are near the lodges. We will try to take +some of those. But, my friends, I must tell you +that it will be a hard thing to do. There are many +warriors in that camp. They are brave. Perhaps +we will have to fight hard to get those ponies."</p> + +<p>"My brothers, I have listened to your words," +said Sitting Eagle. "You say that the Blackfeet +are brave. It is true. I have fought many battles +against them. They are braver than the Pawnees. +They are braver than the Kiowas. They are +braver than the Crows. Now you know that they +are very brave. Well, my friends, the Dacotahs +are braver than the Blackfeet. Yes, the Dacotahs +are the bravest of all. We will go to that great +camp, and take away those ponies. Sun Bird is +a good leader. Our brother, White Otter, is a +great chief. I see many brave warriors sitting +here. We are very strong. Yes, my brothers, +we will take away those ponies."</p> + +<p>The boastful assurance of Sitting Eagle roused +the Minneconjoux to a great pitch of enthusiasm. +For the moment their ardor overcame their <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>caution, +and they began to talk loudly and utter wild +threats against their foes.</p> + +<p>"Come! come!" Lean Wolf cried, impatiently. +"We are making too much noise. Are we like old +women who cackle like foolish Magasapa, the +goose?"</p> + +<p>The Minneconjoux instantly subsided into silence. +They knew that it was not the part of +warriors to give way to their emotions, and they +felt guilty and ashamed. As Sun Bird showed +no inclination to tell them anything more about +the Blackfeet camp, most of them threw themselves +upon the ground and resumed their slumbers. +The three young scouts who had just returned +from the top of the ridge followed their +example, and it was not long before all except the +vigilant sentinels about the edge of the camp were +sleeping soundly.</p> + +<p>The day had ended and twilight had fallen upon +the plain when Sun Bird and White Otter finally +awakened. They felt rested and refreshed, and +were eager to begin the great adventure which +lay before them. As the entire company was +awake, Sun Bird prepared to carry out his plans +for advancing upon the Blackfeet camp. He called +the sentinels who had watched through the night, +and asked if they had seen or heard anything of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>their foes. They assured him that the night had +passed without alarm.</p> + +<p>"It is good," said Sun Bird. "Now, my friends, +I will tell you what I propose to do. See! the +light has almost gone. When it gets dark I am +going away to find out about that great camp. I +am going to creep up close. Then I will find out +what we want to know. Then we will know how +to get those ponies. Now I am going to ask White +Otter to go with me. He is a great scout. He +has been to the Pawnee camp. He has been to +the Crow camp. He has crawled up to the lodges +of the Kiowas. Now I will ask this great scout +to go to the Blackfeet camp with me."</p> + +<p>"I will go," White Otter told him.</p> + +<p>There were many others who were anxious to +risk their lives for a peep into the great Blackfeet +camp, but Sun Bird refused them. He knew +that numbers increased the chances of discovery, +and he determined to run no unnecessary risks. +Besides, there were few, if any, warriors among +the Minneconjoux who could match the scouting +abilities of the Ogalala. As Sun Bird realized +that the success of the undertaking might depend +upon the thoroughness of the reconnaissance which +he planned to make, he determined to rely solely +upon White Otter and himself to carry it through.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>It was barely dark when they left the war party +and set out for the Blackfeet camp. Their companions +watched them depart, in silence, for they +knew the danger to which they were about to expose +themselves, and many alarming possibilities +flashed through their minds.</p> + +<p>"They are very brave," said Sitting Eagle, as +Sun Bird and White Otter disappeared into the +shadows.</p> + +<p>Believing that it would be easier to accomplish +their purpose if they traveled on foot, they left +their ponies with their companions. Once at the +edge of the plain, they hurried away in the direction +of the low sage-grown ridge. When they +finally saw it looming up before them, they realized +that they must advance with more caution. +If the Blackfeet expected an attack it was probable +that they had posted sentinels at that spot, and +the Sioux determined to take every precaution. +The discovery of the warrior in the tree led them +to believe that the ridge was a favorite watching +place of their foes.</p> + +<p>Once at the base of the slope, the Sioux stopped +and spent some time listening for the sound of +voices. Then as they heard nothing to rouse their +fears, they moved cautiously up the side of the +ridge. When they reached the top they instantly +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>located the camp by the glow from the fires. For +a moment or so they watched silently. Then they +descended through the sage, and moved out across +the grim, black plain.</p> + +<p>"Now we must watch out," warned Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>Side by side, they sped through the night as +swiftly and noiselessly as wolves on the trail of +their prey. Their eyes were fixed on the alluring +glow from the Blackfeet fires, they relied upon +their ears to warn them of danger. The plain, +however, was steeped in silence. They heard nothing +but their own soft footfalls, and the gentle +rustling of the grass against their buckskin leggings.</p> + +<p>"It is good," whispered Sun Bird. "The Blackfeet +are in the camp eating buffalo meat. There +is no one to stop us."</p> + +<p>"We must not be too sure about it," White Otter +cautioned him.</p> + +<p>Then they heard something which brought them +to a sudden stop. The dogs were barking furiously +in the Blackfeet camp. The Sioux listened uneasily. +Several disturbing possibilities entered +their minds. Had the dogs caught their scent? It +seemed impossible. White Otter raised a moistened +finger to test the breeze. It blew from the +camp. They felt relieved. Then another thought +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>presented itself. Perhaps the Crows had moved +against the Blackfeet camp. The Sioux listened +for sounds of an attack. They heard only the +savage baying of the dogs.</p> + +<p>"I believe the dogs are fighting for meat," said +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"It is bad," White Otter replied, seriously. "If +those dogs keep moving around, it will be hard +to get near the camp."</p> + +<p>The thought troubled them. They knew that +if one of those gaunt, wolf-like creatures caught +their scent it would instantly skulk out upon the +plain to investigate. Once it found them it would +set up a racket that would soon draw the rest of +the pack upon them, and the Blackfeet would be +quick to realize the significance of the commotion.</p> + +<p>"There is only one thing to do," said White +Otter. "We will wait here until the dogs quiet +down. Then we will wait until they lie down to +sleep. Then we will creep up to the camp. If we +go ahead now, those dogs will find out about us."</p> + +<p>"Yes, I see that it is the only thing to do," +agreed Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>It seemed a very long time to the impatient Sioux +before the dogs finally became silent. However, +as they had heard nothing to indicate alarm in +the Blackfeet camp, they decided that the uproar +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>had been caused by the dogs fighting over the +scraps of buffalo meat which the Blackfeet had +thrown them from their feast. In spite of the +stillness, however, the Sioux feared to approach +the camp until they had allowed the dogs time to +gorge themselves and settle down to sleep. They +waited, therefore, watching the twinkle of the +camp fires, and listening for sounds from their +foes.</p> + +<p>"Come," Sun Bird said, suddenly. "Everything +is still. I believe the dogs have gone to +sleep. We will creep up to the camp."</p> + +<p>"I am ready," White Otter assured him.</p> + +<p>Again they moved cautiously through the night +until they were actually within bowshot of the +lodges. Then they suddenly heard the solemn +booming of the war drums, and the sound of singing. +For a moment they turned to one another +in alarm. Were the Blackfeet preparing for war? +Then they guessed the truth.</p> + +<p>"It is the hunters," whispered White Otter, +"They are dancing the Buffalo Dance."</p> + +<p>"It is good," Sun Bird told him. "All the +people will be around the dancers. We can get +close to the lodges."</p> + +<p>"Watch out for the dogs," cautioned White +Otter.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>They advanced within half a bowshot of the +camp, and then they dropped to the plain to watch. +The camp was brightly illuminated by the light +from the fires, and the Blackfeet were clearly visible +as they passed between the lodges. The booming +of the war drums and the singing continued, +and the Sioux could hear even the short, sharp +exclamations of the dancers as they kept time with +the music. Still they were unable to see into the +camp, and they determined to advance still closer.</p> + +<p>Slowly, a bow length at a time, they crept toward +the nearest lodges. They moved with great +caution, and stopped many times to make sure that +the way was clear. They were in constant fear of +the dogs. Although they had seen nothing of +them, they realized that at any moment they might +encounter them prowling about the borders of the +camp.</p> + +<p>The Sioux had almost reached the lodges when +they suddenly heard something moving directly +behind them. They turned in alarm. Had a dog +circled about them, and caught their scent? Their +hearts beat wildly at the thought. Each moment +they expected to hear the first savage yelp which +would announce their approach to the Blackfeet. +Then, as they listened, they heard footsteps. Some +one was walking directly toward them. They +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>were seized with panic. Discovery seemed certain. +There was not a moment to spare. Pressing +themselves close against the ground, they prepared +to drive their arrows through their foe before +he could utter an outcry. At that moment +he turned from his course and passed +without seeing them. His bent form, and slow, +faltering gait convinced the Sioux that he was an +old man. As he emerged into the firelight at the +edge of the camp they saw that their guess was +correct. A moment afterward he disappeared behind +a lodge.</p> + +<p>"I believe he is a Medicine Man," whispered +Sun Bird. "Perhaps he was out there making +Medicine."</p> + +<p>"Perhaps," replied White Otter.</p> + +<p>Having recovered from their alarm, they +crawled to the edge of the camp, and hid in the +shadow of a lodge. Then they looked upon their +enemies. The Blackfeet were gathered in the center +of the camp. They were watching the wild +antics of a company of dancers who were circling +about the fire. The Sioux studied the assemblage +with great care. White Otter was particularly +curious, as it was the first time he had seen those +people.</p> + +<p>The Blackfeet presented an interesting <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>spectacle, +as they celebrated the success of their hunters. +The latter were especially picturesque. +They had painted their faces and bodies and decorated +themselves in a most weird and grotesque +manner. Many wore the entire skin of a buffalo +bull, including the head and horns. Others had +fastened buffalo feet to their ankles so that they +rattled and clacked at each stride of the dancer. +Thus arrayed, they cavorted wildly about the +fire, imitating the antics of the buffaloes. They +pranced, and reared, and kicked, and roared. +Some pawed the ground, and then lay down and +wallowed as the buffaloes would do to rid themselves +of flies. Others imitated the fierce encounter +between two great rival bulls, pushing and +jostling each other, and butting their heads together +until the spectators shrieked with delight. +It was a clever exhibition of mimicry, and more +than once the Sioux were forced to smile.</p> + +<p>Then they turned their attention upon the spectators. +Men, women and children had assembled +in a great circle about the dancers. The Sioux +made special note of the men. They were dark +and tall, and powerful, with deep, broad chests, +and wide sloping shoulders. They compared favorably +in physique and bearing with the gallant +Dacotah fighting men, and the two young scouts +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>realized that they had come upon worthy foes. +Closer to the dancers were the musicians, six old +men, who thumped the war drums and sang the +Buffalo Song in high, cracked tones. The Sioux +gave little attention to them. Their eyes were +focused on a small group of men who stood together +some distance to the right of the singers. +Their dress and manner proclaimed them men of +importance, and the Sioux knew that they were +the chiefs and counselors of the tribe.</p> + +<p>"That warrior who wears the bear robe is Many +Buffaloes," Sun Bird whispered, excitedly.</p> + +<p>White Otter nodded understandingly, as he concentrated +his attention upon the man whom Sun +Bird had designated. The great Blackfeet war +chief was a man slightly past the prime of life, +whose massive frame, and bold, fearless features +well confirmed the stories of his marvelous exploits +on the war trail. He wore a great trailing +war bonnet of eagle plumes, and carried a long +coupstick decorated with the trophies which he +had taken from his enemies. He carried himself +with the dignity and hauteur of a great leader, +and the Ogalala looked upon him with respect.</p> + +<p>"He looks like a warrior," White Otter told Sun +Bird.</p> + +<p>"He is a great chief," declared Sun Bird.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>Many Buffaloes took no part in the ceremony. +He stood apart with several of his associates and +showed little interest in the wild capers of the +dancers. His keen eyes, however, noted every action, +and it was evident that his apparent indifference +was largely assumed. He appeared to +consider it beneath the dignity of a great war +chief to show emotion upon so trivial an occasion.</p> + +<p>"Where is his black pony?" White Otter asked, +eagerly.</p> + +<p>"I cannot tell you," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Come, we will try to find it," White Otter told +him.</p> + +<p>Sun Bird looked uneasily into the eyes of his +friend. White Otter's bold resolve filled him with +alarm. A disturbing possibility swept through +us mind. Did the daring Ogalala plan to enter the +Blackfeet camp in search of the famous war pony? +Sun Bird feared that it would be a fatal blunder +to make the attempt at that time. Even if White +Otter should succeed in leading away the pony +without being seen, the loss would rouse the entire +Blackfeet nation. They would immediately +send strong war parties to search the plain, and +the long, perilous journey of the Minneconjoux +would have been in vain. Sun Bird appeared <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>reluctant +to agree to the proposal. White Otter instantly +guessed the reason.</p> + +<p>"I see that you do not feel good about it," White +Otter said, quietly. "I am a war leader. I am +not going to do anything foolish. I am not going +to try to take away that pony. I am going to find +out where it is. Then I will wait until our brothers +have run off the other ponies. Then perhaps I +will try to take away that black pony."</p> + +<p>"It is good," Sun Bird said, with evident relief.</p> + +<p>They began to circle cautiously about the camp. +It was perilous work. Bow in hand, they crept +stealthily along in the shadows from the lodges, +stopping every bow length to watch and listen. +Where were the dogs? They would have given +much to know. They knew that at any moment +they might stumble upon them. They had gone +about an arrow flight when they suddenly discovered +one of the dogs lying beside a lodge. Was +it asleep? they wondered. It was lying with its +back toward them, and was only five or six bow +lengths away. The Sioux watched it with bated +breath. They realized that the slightest sound +might rouse it. They feared to move. Still, it +seemed equally perilous to loiter.</p> + +<p>"Come," breathed White Otter.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>For an instant Sun Bird hesitated. It was caution, +not fear which held him back. It seemed +folly to risk discovery when they had already +learned so much about their foes. White Otter, +however, was already creeping noiselessly into the +shadows, and Sun Bird determined to follow him. +Inch by inch they dragged themselves forward +until they were opposite the dog. Then for a moment +they hesitated. It had every appearance +of being asleep, and the Sioux passed on.</p> + +<p>Then they discovered what they were risking +their lives to see. Beside a great decorated lodge +was a strongly made log corral, and above it appeared +the long slender head and graceful neck +of the famous black war pony. It was watching +the glow in the center of the camp, and nervously +twitching its ears at the noise. White Otter gazed +upon it with eager, fascinated eyes. It was a +noble trophy, and he longed to possess it. The +opportunity seemed before him. Impulse urged +him to act. He paused to consider. Loyalty held +him back. He realized that his own ambition must +be sacrificed to insure the success of the Minneconjoux. +They had suffered a great loss at the hands +of the Blackfeet. They had made a long and perilous +journey to recover the stolen ponies. Their +success depended upon keeping the Blackfeet in +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>ignorance of their approach until they were at the +camp. White Otter made a quick, and final decision.</p> + +<p>"Come," he whispered. "I have found out what +I wanted to know. We will go."</p> + +<p>"It is good," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>They crept slowly from the edge of the camp. +Then when they were a safe distance from the +lodges they rose to their feet and sped away into +the night.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER XVI</h2> + +<h3>OFF WITH THE PONIES</h3> +<br /> + +<p>The following night the Minneconjoux set out +to make their attack upon the Blackfeet. +Long before it was dark Sitting Eagle and Lean +Wolf and Running Dog left the ravine and rode +away to watch from the ridge to the southward of +the camp. Then as the twilight faded from the +plain the war party followed swiftly on the trail of +the scouts. Riding in pairs, the Sioux passed on +their way in grim silence. When they finally saw +the low ridge directly before them, they stopped +and listened anxiously for word from the scouts.</p> + +<p>"Ho, my brothers, the way is clear, but the +fires are still burning in the Blackfeet camp," said +Lean Wolf, as he suddenly rode out of the night.</p> + +<p>"We must wait," Sun Bird told him.</p> + +<p>In a few moments they heard the sharp bark +of the little gray fox, a short distance to the eastward. +Sun Bird waited until he heard it three +times, and then he replied. Soon afterward Running +Dog appeared.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>"I have been a long ways over there," he said, +indicating the east. "I saw nothing of our enemies. +Their fires are burning. We must wait."</p> + +<p>"Yes, my brother, we will wait," Sun Bird assured +him.</p> + +<p>It was some time before Sitting Eagle finally arrived. +Then he too suddenly rode out of the darkness.</p> + +<p>"I have been close to the Blackfeet camp," said +the famous scout. "I saw the light of many fires. +It is bad. We must wait."</p> + +<p>"We will wait," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>Then, as the stern Minneconjoux fighting men +gathered about the youthful war leader, Sun Bird +announced his plans for running off the ponies.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, we are in sight of the great Blackfeet +camp," he said, softly. "It is not far beyond +this ridge. We have come a long ways. We +have come to do a big thing. We must go through +with it. We will wait here until the fires die +down. Then we will know that the Blackfeet have +gone to the lodges. Then we will ride over there +and run off the ponies. Now I will tell you how +to do it. There are many ponies out there on the +plain. There are other ponies near the lodges. +When we cross over this ridge I will show you +where to find the ponies. When we get near the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>camp we must separate. Some must go out on +the plain to get those ponies, and some must go +to get the ponies that are near the camp. White +Otter is a great war chief. I will ask him to be +the leader of those who go to get the ponies that +are near the camp. Sitting Eagle is a great war +leader. I will ask him to be the leader of those +who go to run off the ponies on the plain. Many +of us must wait near the camp to fight back the +Blackfeet. I will be the leader. Now I have told +you the way to do this thing."</p> + +<p>"It is good," agreed the Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>While they waited impatiently for the Blackfeet +fires to die down, many of the war party left +their ponies with their friends and crawled to the +top of the ridge to watch the camp. Others dismounted +and threw themselves upon the plain to +rest. There was little talking. The Sioux realized +that they were about to match themselves +against a strong and wily foe who greatly outnumbered +them, and the thought made them serious. +They knew that the time for boasting had passed, +and the time for action was at hand. There was +not one of the company, however, who had the +slightest fear. They believed that Dacotah courage +would more than offset the superior strength +of the Blackfeet, and they felt confident of success.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>The night was more than half gone when the +watchers returned from the ridge and reported +that the last flickering glow had faded from the +Blackfeet camp. The announcement roused the +Sioux to action. Springing upon their ponies, +they waited eagerly for the word to advance.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, the Blackfeet have gone to their +lodges," said Sun Bird. "Pretty soon they will +be asleep. It is good. They will not know about +us until they hear us running off the ponies. +Come, Dacotahs, we will go."</p> + +<p>The summons stirred their fighting blood. They +longed to send the Dacotah war cry ringing across +the plain as a challenge to their foes. They stifled +the temptation, however, and crossed the ridge in +silence. All evidence of the Blackfeet camp had +vanished into the night, and Sun Bird chose the +north star to guide him on his way.</p> + +<p>The preliminary reconnaissance which Sun Bird +and White Otter had made the previous night +proved of great value. At that time they had +carefully noted the contour of the plain between +the ridge and the camp, and had estimated distances +between certain prominent landmarks which +they had retained in their memory. Now, as they +found them, they were able to guess how closely +they were approaching the Blackfeet camp. When +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>he believed that they had gone half way, Sun Bird +ordered a halt, and proceeded to divide the war +party. The younger, less experienced warriors +were assigned to the companies who were to run +off the ponies, while the renowned fighters and famous +scouts were chosen as a rear guard to fight +back the Blackfeet. Then Sun Bird carefully explained +the location of the ponies.</p> + +<p>"Now we are ready to go ahead with this thing," +he said. "But before we begin I will tell you +something. When you are ready to ride off the +ponies that are on the plain you must make many +quick barks of the little gray fox. Then you must +wait. When White Otter and his brothers hear +it they will know that you are ready. Then when +they are ready they must make that signal. When +it stops you must go ahead to run off the ponies. +Then if the Blackfeet hear you we will be ready to +hold them back. Keep these words. Do not go +ahead until you hear the signal. I have finished."</p> + +<p>A short distance farther on the Sioux separated +to make their raid against the Blackfeet. Sitting +Eagle and his companions turned aside to approach +the spot where the loose ponies were pastured. +White Otter and his company continued +toward the camp, and Sun Bird and the fighting +men followed close behind him.</p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span> + +<p>When they were within several bowshots of the +camp they stopped, and White Otter and three +companions went forward. He had asked Little +Raven to accompany him, and the young Minneconjoux +rode at his side.</p> + +<p>"If the ponies begin to call we must make the +signal, and be ready to rush ahead," said the Ogalala.</p> + +<p>When they finally saw the black, indistinct outlines +of the corral, they stopped to listen. They +knew that the lodges at the end of the camp were +less than half a bowshot away. The slightest +sound, therefore, might arouse the Blackfeet. +White Otter turned to Little Raven.</p> + +<p>"Get down from your pony," he whispered.</p> + +<p>They dismounted and left their ponies with the +two warriors who accompanied them. Then they +moved swiftly toward the corral. They were +within bow length of it when they heard the +quick barks of the little gray fox some distance +toward the east. Their hearts bounded at the +sound. Sitting Eagle and his companions were +ready to run off the ponies. White Otter rushed +to the corral. He turned in dismay. The corral +was empty.</p> + +<p>At that instant a horse whinnied in the Blackfeet +camp. The Sioux ponies replied. A dog +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>barked. Voices sounded close at hand. The +Blackfeet were alarmed. Realizing that further +caution was useless, White Otter sounded the +signal.</p> + +<p>"Run to the ponies!" he cried to Little Raven.</p> + +<p>They heard their comrades riding forward to +meet them. They also heard the thunder of many +hoofs, and the wild yells of the Blackfeet. Springing +upon his pony, White Otter raced recklessly +toward the camp. Little Raven followed him. +They found the village in wild disorder. The +Blackfeet had been completely surprised.</p> + +<p>Out on the plain Sitting Eagle and his companions +were driving away the captured ponies. +The raid had been entirely successful, and the +elated Sioux were already many arrow flights beyond +the camp. Behind them Sun Bird and his +force of fighting men were loitering within bowshot +of the village, watching for White Otter with +the other bunch of ponies. When he failed to appear, +Sun Bird rode toward the corral to find him. +He encountered the two warriors who had accompanied +the Ogalala on his perilous mission.</p> + +<p>"Where are the ponies? Where is White Otter? +Where is Little Raven?" Sun Bird asked, excitedly.</p> + +<p>"That place was empty," they told him. "White +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>Otter and Little Raven rode away toward the +Blackfeet camp."</p> + +<p>Sun Bird stared wildly into the face of the +speaker. He could scarcely believe him. Then +the truth suddenly flashed across his mind. He +understood why White Otter had risked himself.</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes, I know about it," he said.</p> + +<p>He called the two riders to follow him and galloped +away to lead his valiant company against +the Blackfeet. The latter had rallied from their +confusion and were riding from the camp.</p> + +<p>In the meantime White Otter and Little Raven +had ridden boldly along the edge of the camp until +they reached the spot where the famous black war +pony was kept. Then White Otter dismounted, +and left his pony with Little Raven. Taking advantage +of the darkness and the confusion in the +Blackfeet camp, the daring Ogalala moved swiftly +between the lodges. It was only a moment or so +before he encountered his foes. A frightened old +woman took him for one of her people and ran to +him for protection. He grumbled fiercely at her +and sprang away before she recognized him. The +next instant two excited warriors dashed past +within bow length, and called him to follow them. +Then the way seemed clear, and he hurried toward +the corral. His heart beat wildly as he suddenly +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>saw the log inclosure before him. When he reached +it, however, he saw that it, too, was empty. The +famous black pony had been taken away.</p> + +<p>For some moments the disappointed young +Sioux lingered beside the corral. He was blaming +himself for having refused the opportunity +which had presented itself the night before. At +that time the great trophy had been almost within +his grasp. Now he believed it was forever beyond +his reach. He told himself that he had been foolish +to surrender his chance. Then he suddenly +thrilled with the pride of sacrifice. He was a Dacotah, +and the Dacotahs had relied upon him to +help them against their foes. He had nobly performed +his duty to the tribesmen who had given +him their confidence. His act had brought success +to the Minneconjoux. The thought roused +him. His own loss was forgotten as he rejoiced +in the victory of his people.</p> + +<p>"I have done a good thing," he said, joyfully.</p> + +<p>Then as he saw fires beginning to gleam in various +parts of the camp, he realized that it was time +to go. As he ran toward the edge of the camp a +dog suddenly appeared before him. It faced him +with bared fangs and flashing eyes, and its deep, +ugly growls gave warning of an intention to fight.</p> + +<p>"Hi, you foolish Blackfeet dog," cried White +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>Otter, as he drove his arrow through it. "Now +your people will know that I have been in their +village."</p> + +<p>He bounded past the struggling dog, and ran +from the camp. Little Raven was waiting with the +ponies.</p> + +<p>"Come," cried White Otter, as he sprang upon +the piebald. "The Blackfeet have ridden away +on the war ponies. Some one took away that black +pony. Now we must go to help our brothers. Listen! +I hear them making a big fight."</p> + +<p>Sounds of battle came from directly ahead of +them, and White Otter knew that Sun Bird and his +companions were fighting back the Blackfeet. +Calling Little Raven to follow him, the daring +young war chief raised his voice in the war cry, +and raced away to engage in the fight.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER XVII</h2> + +<h3>HOTLY PURSUED</h3> +<br /> + +<p>Once aware of what had happened, the enraged +Blackfeet rushed from the camp like +a swarm of angry bees. Led by their great war +chief, Many Buffaloes, they rode recklessly out +upon the plain to overtake the daring foes who +had run off their ponies. They had not gone an +arrow flight, however, before they collided with +the Sioux.</p> + +<p>"Come, my brothers, it is time to fight!" cried +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>The resolute band of Sioux fighting men charged +furiously upon their foes. They were outnumbered +three to one, but the fierceness of their attack +deceived the Blackfeet and threw them into +confusion. Having recognized the Dacotahs, the +Blackfeet knew from experience what sort of resistance +to expect from those powerful and courageous +foes.</p> + +<p>"The Sioux! The Sioux!" they cried, fiercely.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>Then, as Sitting Eagle and his companions raced +the captured ponies through the night, Sun Bird +and his company of warriors fought desperately +to hold back the Blackfeet. The latter, however, +soon became aware of their superiority in numbers, +and the discovery gave them confidence. +Recovering from their momentary disorder, they +made a desperate attempt to break through their +enemies.</p> + +<p>The Sioux, however, held their ground, and the +fighting was at close quarters. There were many +thrilling encounters. Lean Wolf fought three +Blackfeet warriors and overcame all of them. Sun +Bird had his pony killed beneath him, and then +killed his foe and took his horse. Feather Dog +became separated from his companions and was +compelled to fight off an entire company of Blackfeet +until some of his friends discovered his plight +and rushed to his assistance.</p> + +<p>In spite of their bravery, however, the Sioux +were unable to overcome the odds against them. +It was not long before they realized that it would +be folly to sacrifice themselves in attempting to +match strength with their foes. The Blackfeet +were too strong to be held back. The Sioux saw +that their only chance of success was in making +a running fight.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>"We must follow after the ponies," said Sun +Bird.</p> + +<p>The moment they gave way the Blackfeet interpreted +it as a sign of defeat. Feeling sure of victory, +they charged recklessly forward, and attempted +to throw the Sioux into a rout. Instantly +alert to his peril, Sun Bird brought his company +to a stand, and fought with a grim ferocity that +soon convinced the Blackfeet of their mistake. +They realized that victory was far from being won, +and they became somewhat more cautious. After +several costly and futile attempts to make the +Sioux give ground, they suddenly divided their +forces, and a strong company swept around the +Sioux flank.</p> + +<p>"They are passing! They are passing!" the +Minneconjoux cried in alarm.</p> + +<p>At that moment White Otter and Little Raven +joined the war party. They had fought their way +through the very midst of their foes, and reached +their companions in safety. The presence of the +famous young war chief greatly encouraged the +Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>"There is only one thing to do," White Otter +said, hurriedly, as Sun Bird turned to consult him. +"We must keep ahead of those Blackfeet."</p> + +<p>Acting upon his advice, the Sioux suddenly gave +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>way and raced across the plain in pursuit of Sitting +Eagle and the band of ponies. Behind them thundered +the main force of Blackfeet, and at their +right rode the company that had succeeded in getting +past them.</p> + +<p>"When we come to the ponies we must make a +big fight," White Otter declared, grimly, as he +rode beside Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes," agreed Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>The Blackfeet kept close behind them, and the +Sioux were in constant peril from their arrows. +Whenever the Blackfeet came too near, however, +the Sioux turned upon them and fought them off. +Thus they made their way across the plain until +they overtook Sitting Eagle and his companions. +The latter had heard them approaching, and had +rounded up the ponies and prepared to fight.</p> + +<p>"Keep going! Keep going!" shouted Sun Bird. +"We will hold back the Blackfeet."</p> + +<p>"Yes, keep going!" cried White Otter. "Run +the ponies until you come to that big gully. Then +wait for us."</p> + +<p>Sitting Eagle and his company barely got the +ponies under way before the Blackfeet were upon +them. Sun Bird and the war party fought savagely +to hold them off, but the company of Blackfeet +who had ridden along the Sioux flank circled +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>under cover of the darkness and reached the herd.</p> + +<p>"Hold the ponies! Hold the ponies!" shouted +Sitting Eagle, as the wily Blackfeet attempted to +stampede them.</p> + +<p>Yelling fiercely, they charged close up to the +alarmed ponies, and threw them into wild disorder. +Frightened into a panic by the noisy tumult, the +bewildered animals tried to break from their captors +and flee across the plain. Sitting Eagle and +his companions made valiant efforts to hold them +under control, but the Blackfeet were riding furiously +about the herd, and making desperate efforts +to kill the men who guarded it.</p> + +<p>In the meantime Sun Bird and the Minneconjoux +war party were fighting a thrilling battle +with the main force of their foes. The latter had +again rushed to close quarters, and the Sioux were +in desperate straits. Greatly outnumbered, they +fought with a reckless courage that astounded +their enemies. Try as they might, the Blackfeet +were unable to break through the heroic company +that confronted them. Led by Many Buffaloes +himself, the bravest warriors in the Blackfeet nation +hurled themselves against the Sioux with a +daring abandon that would have speedily routed +less valiant foes. The Sioux, however, repulsed +each savage attack with a dogged ferocity that +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>gradually shattered the confidence of their foes.</p> + +<p>Sitting Eagle and his gallant band were less +successful. They found it impossible to keep the +ponies under control, and at the same time defend +themselves against the Blackfeet. They were +threatened with disaster and began to lose heart.</p> + +<p>"Come, Dacotahs, show these people how to +fight!" cried Sitting Eagle.</p> + +<p>At that moment White Otter led a company of +Minneconjoux against the Blackfeet who had attacked +the herd. Roused by the courage of the +young Ogalala war chief, the Minneconjoux warriors +charged furiously upon the surprised Blackfeet +and completely overwhelmed them with the +fierceness of their attack. For a moment only the +Blackfeet opposed them, and then as White Otter +drove his arrow through the leader of the company +the others lost courage and retreated into +the night.</p> + +<p>"Come," shouted the Ogalala. "Drive away the +ponies!"</p> + +<p>Sitting Eagle and his comrades instantly got +the ponies in motion. Then the determined Blackfeet +again charged forward to gain possession of +the herd. This time, however, they were met by +White Otter and his gallant band of fighters. They +fought with a fiery zeal that soon threw fear into +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>the hearts of their foes. Riding boldly at the +head of his companions, White Otter dashed recklessly +among the Blackfeet, and threw them into +confusion. Then as they wavered he raised the +piercing Dacotah war cry, and led his tribesmen +in a furious assault that caused the astounded +Blackfeet to flee wildly before him. He followed +them a long distance across the plain, and exacted +heavy toll from the laggards. Then he suddenly +heard Sun Bird and the rest of the war party riding +toward the south.</p> + +<p>"Come," he cried. "Our brothers are running +ahead of the Blackfeet. We must find out about it."</p> + +<p>Having subdued his foes, he turned and led his +comrades to join the Minneconjoux. When he +finally overtook them he found Sun Bird in high +spirits. The skillful young war leader had completely +defeated his foes.</p> + +<p>"The Blackfeet are getting cautious," said Sun +Bird. "See, they are keeping far behind. I believe +they are afraid of us."</p> + +<p>The Blackfeet appeared to have lost much of +their confidence. Having lost heavily in the desperate +fighting with the Sioux, they seemed unwilling +to risk coming again to close quarters with +those indomitable foes. Although they still continued +to follow them, they were content to remain +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>safely beyond arrow range. The Sioux hoped that +they would soon abandon the pursuit.</p> + +<p>"Pretty soon they will turn back," declared +Sun Bird. "Then they will go to the village, and +tell their people what a great fight they made."</p> + +<p>"Well, they will not bring back those ponies," +laughed Little Raven.</p> + +<p>Daylight was breaking when the Sioux again +overtook their comrades with the captured ponies. +Sitting Eagle had stopped in the bottom of a deep +ravine through which trickled a tiny stream. The +Sioux saw at once that it offered them splendid +protection against their foes.</p> + +<p>"It is good," Sun Bird said, heartily. "Now +we will see what the Blackfeet will do."</p> + +<p>The latter had already stopped, and were apparently +discussing the advisability of attempting +to drive the Sioux from their shelter. For +a long time they seemed unwilling to make the effort. +The Sioux had left the ponies in the bottom +of the ravine, and were lying along the top of the +bank watching their foes with great interest. +They had no intention of leaving the ravine until +the Blackfeet had either made an attack or withdrawn +from the vicinity.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps they will wait until it gets dark," suggested +Little Raven.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>"No, I do not believe it," Sun Bird told him. +"I believe they will do something pretty soon."</p> + +<p>"Yes, my brother, that is how I feel about it," +said White Otter.</p> + +<p>The three young warriors were lying beside one +another at the top of the ravine. On each side +of them were the other members of the war party, +except a few young warriors who had been left in +charge of the ponies. White Otter noted, however, +that some of the Minneconjoux were missing. +Among them were Proud Hawk and Painted Bird, +the two young warriors who had served as scouts +for the war party. The eyes of the Ogalala flashed +threateningly as he realized that they and their +absent companions had been killed by the Blackfeet.</p> + +<p>"It is bad," Sun Bird said, solemnly. "Those +brave warriors were my friends. I saw Proud +Hawk fall from his pony. I was close beside him. +I tried to carry him off, but the Blackfeet killed +him. I saw Painted Bird making a great fight. +The Blackfeet were all around him. They must +have killed him. I tried to get near him, but some +Blackfeet rushed upon me and killed my horse. I +had a hard time to get away."</p> + +<p>"Well, we must not think about it," said White +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>Otter. "A warrior must always be ready to die. +Those men were very brave. It is enough. We +will tell our people about them."</p> + +<p>"Yes, we will call out their names when we ride +through the camp," replied Sun Bird. "We will +tell our people that we sent many Blackfeet to +walk behind our brothers on the Long Trail."</p> + +<p>Then their thoughts were diverted by the sudden +activity of the Blackfeet. They were advancing +slowly across the plain, singing their war +songs, and shouting boastful threats against the +Sioux. The latter watched them with little fear. +They realized that the possession of the ravine +had turned the odds in their favor. Besides, they +strongly doubted that the Blackfeet would actually +venture within bowshot.</p> + +<p>"They will keep away," Sun Bird said, confidently.</p> + +<p>It was not many moments before his words were +verified. The Blackfeet had suddenly stopped beyond +arrow range. They were still chanting the +war songs, and shouting threateningly, but they +showed no inclination to approach nearer the ravine. +The Sioux, however, watched them closely. +They knew that at any moment their wily foes +might throw aside their caution and sweep forward +in a furious attack.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>"See, that great chief, Many Buffaloes, is giving +them strong words," Sun Bird said, eagerly, +as he seized White Otter by the arm.</p> + +<p>The Ogalala made no reply. His eyes were +following every move of the famous Blackfeet war +chief. The latter had ridden out in front of his +tribesmen and was making a fiery address. Several +times he wheeled his pony and swept his arm +toward the Sioux. They felt certain that he was +rousing his warriors for a final attempt to recapture +the ponies. It was evident that his words +were accomplishing the desired effect. The Blackfeet +were becoming greatly excited. The Sioux +grew serious. They had great respect for the courage +and ability of the renowned Blackfeet leader, +and they feared that he was preparing to carry +through some bold stroke which might still bring +victory to the Blackfeet.</p> + +<p>"Many Buffaloes is going to do something big," +Sun Bird told White Otter. "He is very brave. +We must watch out."</p> + +<p>White Otter took little notice of the warning. +His entire attention was concentrated upon the +spirited black pony, and its famous rider. Everything +else had passed from his mind. Even the +great company of jeering Blackfeet had suddenly +faded from his vision. He saw nothing but the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>Blackfeet war chief, and his prancing black pony. +He watched them with flashing, fascinated eyes. +Then Many Buffaloes dramatically passed his +bow, quiver and arrows to one of his tribesmen, +and turned toward the Sioux with his war +club raised. White Otter uttered a short, fierce +exclamation of satisfaction. He had instantly interpreted +the maneuver, and his heart bounded +with hope.</p> + +<p>As the Blackfeet chief rode slowly toward the +ravine, singing his war song and flourishing his +war club, White Otter passed his bow and arrow-case +to Sun Bird and scrambled wildly down the +steep side of the ravine.</p> + +<p>"That man is very brave," he cried, excitedly. +"Tell your people that they must not try to kill +him when he comes close. I am going to ride out +there to meet him."</p> + +<p>"No, no, that would be foolish!" Sun Bird +shouted in alarm. "He is riding that great Medicine +Horse. You cannot catch him. He will lead +you over there to the Blackfeet, and they will kill +you."</p> + +<p>"We will see," White Otter replied, lightly, as +he ran to the piebald.</p> + +<p>In the meantime the Blackfeet chief was fearlessly +approaching the ravine. He was already +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>well within bow range, but the Sioux withheld +their arrows. There were two reasons. In the +first place Sun Bird had called out and warned +them against killing Many Buffaloes, and in the +second place his bold defiance insured his safety. +The Sioux understood his reckless maneuver as +a challenge to their manhood, an invitation for +one of their leaders to come out and meet him in +personal combat. To have killed him from shelter, +under those circumstances, would have made +them weaklings and cowards in the eyes of their +foes. The Sioux felt compelled to respect the +code of honor which prevailed even between the +most bitter enemies. They realized, therefore, +that one of their number must accept the defiant +challenge of the Blackfeet chief, or else the latter +must be permitted to return to his tribesmen in +safety. Nevertheless, the Minneconjoux knew that +if any one went forth to meet him the wily war +leader would rely upon the phenomenal speed of +his pony to carry him to safety, and decoy his +enemy within bow shot of his warriors. For that +reason they made great efforts to dissuade White +Otter from his purpose.</p> + +<p>"Many Buffaloes has done this thing many +times, but we have no ponies that can come up +with him," the Minneconjoux told White Otter. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>"If you follow him the Blackfeet will surely kill +you."</p> + +<p>"I am going," White Otter replied, firmly.</p> + +<p>A moment afterward he rode out upon the plain. +The Blackfeet greeted his appearance with savage +yells of derision. The Sioux raised the great Dacotah +war cry to give him courage. Many Buffaloes +stopped and waited for him to approach.</p> + +<p>"White Otter is a great warrior; he is very +brave; that pony is very fast, but I believe he will +be killed," Sun Bird said, fearfully.</p> + +<p>The solemn faces of the Minneconjoux gave endorsement +to his fears. They, too, believed that +the reckless Ogalala was going to his death. Having +witnessed the speed of the famous black war +pony, they felt certain that White Otter would +never get within striking distance of the Blackfeet +chief. Their only hope was that the Ogalala +would discover his peril in time to turn back and +save himself from the treacherous Blackfeet.</p> + +<p>"Then we must be ready to rush out and help +him," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>At that instant White Otter raised the war cry, +and raced toward the Blackfeet chief. The latter +waited until the Ogalala was almost upon him, and +then he turned his pony and rode furiously toward +his yelling tribesmen. A moment afterward he +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>twisted about and laughed shrilly, as he shook his +war club at the Sioux. Enraged by the taunt, +White Otter struck his pony with the heavy rawhide +quirt. The piebald bounded forward at a +speed which caused the Minneconjoux and the +Blackfeet to stare in silent amazement. With each +stroke of the lash the wonderful little beast ran +faster. The famous Blackfeet pony was a full +length in the lead, but the piebald was actually +gaining. The Minneconjoux could not believe it +possible.</p> + +<p>"Many Buffaloes is holding back," they told +one another. "He is trying to draw White Otter +near his people."</p> + +<p>"No, no, it is not so!" Sun Bird shouted, excitedly. +"See, the Dacotah pony is running faster!"</p> + +<p>It was true. Sioux and Blackfeet both realized +it. Many Buffaloes looked over his shoulder and +was equally astounded. The piebald had cut his +lead in half and was still gaining. Alarmed at the +discovery, Many Buffaloes lashed the black pony +to its best speed. It ran as no other horse in the +great Blackfeet nation had ever run before, but +the piebald ran even faster. White Otter was +within less than half a pony-length of the Blackfeet +chief. The latter, however, was almost within +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>bow shot of his tribesmen. The Minneconjoux +realized that unless White Otter overtook the black +pony within the next few strides he would be at +the mercy of his foes. The thought drove them +into a frenzy of excitement.</p> + +<p>"See, see, he has caught Many Buffaloes!" Sun +Bird shouted, wildly.</p> + +<p>The piebald had closed the gap, and was drawing +abreast of the Blackfeet pony. Enraged by +the glorious achievement of the Sioux pony, the +Blackfeet raced forward to save their chief from +defeat. At that moment, however, White Otter +drew even with his foe. Yelling defiantly, Many +Buffaloes swung his war club at the head of the +Ogalala. White Otter crouched and barely escaped +the deadly blow. Then before the Blackfeet +chief could regain his balance the agile young +Sioux swung his own weapon and knocked Many +Buffaloes from his horse. The next moment he +secured control of the famous black war pony. +Turning the ponies in their tracks, he raced toward +the ravine with the entire company of Blackfeet +close behind him.</p> + +<p>Leaving a few warriors in the ravine to guard +the ponies, the Sioux galloped madly across the +plain to rescue White Otter. Once he got the +ponies under way, however, there was slight +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>chance of the Blackfeet overtaking him. Stride +by stride he drew away from his pursuers, who +were too busily engaged lashing their ponies to +think of shooting their arrows. When they finally +did make use of their bows they found themselves +already within range of the Minneconjoux. The +latter shot their arrows with deadly effect, and +the disheartened Blackfeet wavered before the attack. +Then, as White Otter dashed among them, +the Sioux flashed about and raced back to the +ravine without losing a man.</p> + +<p>"Well, my brothers, I have showed you that the +Dacotah ponies can run," White Otter said, quietly +as he dismounted in the midst of his enthusiastic +tribesmen.</p> + +<p>"White Otter, I believe the pony that Curly +Horse gave you is a Medicine Pony," Sun Bird +declared, seriously. "Perhaps that is why it was +so fierce when you began to ride it. I believe my +father had something to do with it. He is a great +Medicine Person."</p> + +<p>"It may be true," White Otter told him, as he +stroked the neck of the little piebald.</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes, Rain Crow must have had something +to do with it," declared the superstitious Minneconjoux.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER XVIII</h2> + +<h3>THE STAMPEDE</h3> +<br /> + +<p>The Blackfeet made no attempt to follow the +Sioux to the ravine. Instead, they turned +about, and rode far from arrow range. They carried +off their chief and several warriors who had +fallen in the skirmish, and the Sioux were in doubt +whether the famous war leader had been killed, +or only wounded, by the blow from White Otter. +It was plain, however, that the Blackfeet had finished +the fight. They stopped for a few moments +to shout idle threats against the Sioux and then +rode slowly toward the north.</p> + +<p>"Well, my brothers, the Blackfeet have gone," +said Sun Bird. "It is good. We have done what +we came here to do. We have taken away these +ponies. We have made a big fight. We have sent +the boastful Blackfeet back to their lodges. My +friends, those are big things to talk about. Well, +I will tell you that White Otter has done the biggest +thing of all. You all know about it. Look +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>at that black pony. You all know how it came +here. It is something to tell about. Now, my +brothers, I must tell you something different. We +must not feel too big about these things. We are +a long ways from our people. We have many +ponies. We cannot travel fast. The Crows and +the Flatheads are still ahead of us. Perhaps we +shall meet them. We must keep thinking about +it. Yes, my brothers, we must be cautious."</p> + +<p>"My friends, those are good words," declared +Lean Wolf. "What Sun Bird says is true. We +have fought back the Blackfeet, but other enemies +may be waiting for us. We have many good +ponies. We must take them to our village. Perhaps +it will be a hard thing to do. The Crows +would like to get those ponies. Yes, I believe the +Flatheads would like to get them. We would feel +foolish if we lost them. We must be cautious."</p> + +<p>The Minneconjoux found it difficult to restrain +their enthusiasm. The younger warriors, especially, +were eager to celebrate their victory over the +Blackfeet. They rushed to the bottom of the ravine, +and crowded forward to count coup upon +the Blackfeet pony by striking it with their hands. +The act was a substitute for striking an enemy, +and gave them the privilege of reciting the details +of some daring exploit which they had performed +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>in the fight with their foes. Besides, the Minneconjoux +still looked upon the black war pony as +something mysterious, a strange Medicine Creature +possessing superior powers of speed and endurance. +They hoped that in laying their hands +upon it they might in some way absorb some of its +mystical powers.</p> + +<p>In the meantime Sun Bird had sent scouts to +follow the Blackfeet, to make sure that they were +actually going to their village. Other riders had +crossed the plain to the southward to learn if it +would be safe to travel in that direction with the +ponies. The day was well advanced when the +scouts returned to the war party. The Minneconjoux +gathered eagerly about them to learn what +they had seen.</p> + +<p>"The Blackfeet are still going ahead," said +Running Dog, who had followed them. "I believe +they are going to their village."</p> + +<p>"Did you see anything of Many Buffaloes?" +Sun Bird asked, anxiously.</p> + +<p>"Yes, I saw him sitting on a pony," declared +Running Dog. "He was between two riders. I +believe they were holding him up. I saw some +other warriors lying across the backs of ponies. +I believe they were tied there. Perhaps they were +dead. The Blackfeet are traveling slow."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>"Well, we know that Many Buffaloes is alive," +said Sun Bird. "No one can harm him. He must +be very strong. Perhaps he is a Medicine Person."</p> + +<p>"My brother, I will tell you something different," +said Sitting Eagle. "Perhaps the Blackfeet +expected us to follow them. Perhaps they +were holding Many Buffaloes on that horse to fool +us. Perhaps he was dead."</p> + +<p>"Yes, that may be true," declared the Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>Still, as they could not be sure, they were unable +to reach a definite conclusion regarding the fate +of the Blackfeet chief. While they were discussing +it the scouts from the southward returned. They +declared that the plain was free from foes.</p> + +<p>"It is good," said Sun Bird. "Now we will go +ahead."</p> + +<p>The cautious young war leader planned his advance +with the care and skill of a veteran. He +realized that one blunder might undo all that had +been accomplished, and turn the splendid victory +into a staggering defeat. The Minneconjoux were +fatigued, and their ponies were jaded, and Sun +Bird knew that it might be difficult to overcome a +strong force of foes if they were fresh and +eager for battle. He determined, therefore, to use +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>every safeguard against encountering his enemies.</p> + +<p>When the Sioux were ready to leave the ravine, +scouts moved across the plain in advance and +on both sides of them, and a small detail of warriors +were left behind to make certain that the +Blackfeet did not return. Then the war party was +divided. White Otter and half of the force rode +ahead. Behind them followed Sitting Eagle and +the warriors in charge of the ponies. Sun Bird +and the balance of the company brought up the +rear.</p> + +<p>The day was far spent, and the Sioux hoped to +reach water by the time night came upon them. +Sun Bird planned to stop when it grew dark, and +allow the ponies to rest until daylight. Then he +decided to travel in the early morning and after +nightfall, and to stop in some suitable shelter during +the heated hours of the day.</p> + +<p>"We must keep the ponies fresh," he told his +companions.</p> + +<p>Shortly before dark they came upon a large +shallow pool on the open plain. As there was a +heavy stand of grass for the ponies, Sun Bird determined +to stop there for the night. The ponies +were immediately turned loose to feed, and guards +were appointed to watch them until daylight.</p> + +<p>It was not long, however, before the Sioux heard +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>something which caused them considerable uneasiness. +Low, rumbling peals of thunder sounded +from the west. The Sioux looked anxiously into +the heavens. The stars shone brightly overhead, +but the distant sky appeared black and threatening. +As they watched, a quick, darting flash of +light zigzagged across the western sky. A dull, +thudding crash of thunder boomed in the distance.</p> + +<p>"The Thunder Birds are talking—it is bad," +Sun Bird said soberly, as he seated himself beside +White Otter.</p> + +<p>"Yes, my brother, it is bad," agreed White Otter.</p> + +<p>Then for some time they sat in gloomy silence, +watching the sky. A great mass of ominous black +clouds rose steadily out of the west and blotted +out the stars. Sharp, jagged streaks of lightning +cut through the night. A fresh breeze stirred +across the plain. The thunder sounded louder. +It was evident that the storm was approaching.</p> + +<p>The possibility filled the Sioux with alarm. +They looked anxiously toward the herd of ponies. +They knew that it would be difficult to hold them +under control when the storm broke upon them. +Once thoroughly alarmed they might stampede, +and race wildly across the plain. Then it would be +necessary for the Sioux to ride recklessly through +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>the night in an attempt to keep possession of the +herd. It was a perilous task, in which many brave +riders might lose their lives.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, the Thunder Birds are coming—it +is bad," cried Sitting Eagle, as he came to find +Sun Bird. "The ponies are sniffing the wind. +They are uneasy. Some of them are running +around."</p> + +<p>"We must hold them," said Sun Bird. "Every +one must go out there and keep riding around +them."</p> + +<p>"It is good," replied Sitting Eagle, as he galloped +away.</p> + +<p>The war ponies had been either picketed or +hobbled and left to feed, while the riders threw +themselves upon the plain to rest from their exertions. +Now, as the storm approached, there was +great confusion as each warrior rushed to find his +pony. Those who had picketed their ponies had +little difficulty, but the hobbled animals had wandered +some distance away, and their owners spent +many anxious moments searching for them. White +Otter and Sun Bird had picketed their ponies and +they found them at once.</p> + +<p>"White Otter, you have done some big things—it +is enough," said Sun Bird. "You must stay +out of this. You have taken away the great black +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>war pony. You must not lose it. When the +Thunder Birds fly over us you must hold fast to +that pony. Do not try to do anything else. I am +your brother. Listen to my words."</p> + +<p>"I will do as you tell me to do," agreed White +Otter.</p> + +<p>"It is good," cried Sun Bird, as he galloped +toward the ponies.</p> + +<p>The riders had already stationed themselves +about the herd and Sitting Eagle was racing about +shouting instructions. The Sioux were in a high +tension of excitement. The great storms which +swept across the plains always filled them with +superstitious awe. They believed that they were +caused by the Thunder Birds, which they imagined +to be two giant birdlike monsters that lived high +up in the most inaccessible peaks of the loftiest +mountains. The Sioux believed that these weird +creatures possessed all sorts of mysterious powers +and that at certain intervals they flew across the +country to destroy those unfortunate people who +had incurred their displeasure.</p> + +<p>"Some one has made the Thunder Birds mad—they +are coming to drive away the ponies," the +Minneconjoux told one another, in alarmed whispers.</p> + +<p>Their hearts filled with gloomy premonitions of +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>impending disaster, as the storm rushed upon +them. The breeze had freshened to a gale, the +stars above them had vanished, the plain was +smothered in darkness. Vivid flashes of light flickered +across the sky. Loud, crashing peals of +thunder rolled through the night. The ponies +showed signs of terror. They crowded nervously +together, with heads raised, snorting and whinnying. +The Sioux rode anxiously around them, fearful +that each startling flash would cause them to +run.</p> + +<p>Then the storm suddenly broke upon them. A +dazzling flare of light was followed by a terrifying +crash of thunder and the ponies leaped forward +in blind panic. The Sioux made desperate +efforts to hold them in the herd, but the panic had +spread to the riding ponies, and they were rearing +and plunging in a manner that demanded the +entire attention of the riders. Some of the more +fiery animals bolted from control and raced wildly +through the night. A moment afterward the herd +broke through the gap in the circle and thundered +across the plain. The fears of the Sioux were realized—the +stampede had begun.</p> + +<p>Having witnessed the first break of the startled +ponies, Sun Bird rode recklessly after the leaders +in the hope of guiding them across the plain. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span>Beside +him rode Little Raven. Allowing their ponies +to run at will, the Minneconjoux soon found themselves +at the front of the herd. Then they suddenly +realized their peril. Their lives depended +upon the agility of their ponies. A fall meant instant +destruction beneath the hoofs of the panic-stricken +beasts behind them. However, there was +little time to think of the danger. The foremost +ponies had swerved toward the west and Sun Bird +and Little Raven tried to turn them back.</p> + +<p>"We must not let them go that way!" Sun Bird +shouted, anxiously. "The Crows and the Flatheads +are over there."</p> + +<p>Lashing vigorously with their heavy riding +quirts, they forced the ponies from their course +and kept them running toward the south. Thus +they rode through the height of the storm, risking +their lives to redeem their pledge to return the +ponies which the Blackfeet had driven away.</p> + +<p>Then, as the storm finally spent its fury, and +passed across the plain, the wild stampede suddenly +came to an end. Having run themselves into +exhaustion, the ponies were glad to stop. A third +of the herd, however, were missing. Sun Bird was +dismayed by the discovery.</p> + +<p>"Come, my brothers, tell me how those ponies +got away from you," he said, sharply.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>"We could not hold them all together," said +Sitting Eagle. "I saw some ponies breaking +away and when I rode after them some more ponies +got away."</p> + +<p>"Yes, that is how it happened," declared Lean +Wolf. "I saw two ponies turning away, and I +chased them. When I was driving them back, I +saw a big bunch of ponies turning around. Then +I rode after them and brought some of them back. +Then I stayed close by the herd. I saw it was the +best thing to do."</p> + +<p>"Well, my friends, it is bad, but I see that you +did the best you could," Sun Bird told them. "We +had a hard time getting those ponies. We must +not leave them for our enemies. There is only +one thing to do. Sitting Eagle, you must keep +going ahead with these ponies. When you get +near our village you must stop and wait for us. +Do not let our people see you until we come. My +brothers, most of you must go with Sitting Eagle +to help him fight our enemies. Some of us must +stay here until it gets light. Then we will go out +and look for the ponies that got away. I believe +we will find them close by. Now I will call out the +names of the men who must go with me to find the +ponies. Listen, my brothers, I am going to call +those names: Lean Wolf, Little Raven, Feather +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>Dog, Running Dog, Falling Eagle, Brave Bear, +Two Elks. These men will go with me. The rest +of you must go with Sitting Eagle."</p> + +<p>As he finished speaking they heard two ponies +galloping toward them. A few moments afterward +White Otter appeared. The piebald and the +Blackfeet pony were lathered with sweat. Neither, +however, showed the slightest trace of exhaustion.</p> + +<p>"I have been a long ways," said the Ogalala. +"These foolish ponies ran the wrong way. It was +a long time before I could turn them around. Then +I came very fast."</p> + +<p>"Now White Otter is here," said Sun Bird. "It +is good. I am going to ask him to be the leader +of the men who go with Sitting Eagle."</p> + +<p>Then the Sioux separated. Sitting Eagle and +his escort of warriors rode away toward the south +with the ponies while Sun Bird and his company of +scouts remained behind to search for the missing +horses.</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER XIX</h2> + +<h3>TRAILING THE RUNAWAYS</h3> +<br /> + +<p>Sun Bird and his companions were greatly +encouraged when they looked across the plain +at daylight and saw several of the stray ponies +feeding a short distance to the northward. They +hoped that others might be concealed behind some +of the low hummocks which broke the level of the +plain.</p> + +<p>"See, there are some of the ponies!" said Sun +Bird. "We will go and get them. Then we will +ride up on those little hills and look around. I +believe we will see some more ponies."</p> + +<p>They cantered slowly toward the grazing ponies. +There were five and they were feeding close together. +They raised their heads and watched curiously +as the horsemen approached, but they showed +little fear. The Sioux, however, determined to +take no chance of frightening them into another +exhausting dash across the plain. As they rode +within bow range they separated and circled carefully +about the ponies. Then they gradually closed +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>the net, and the ponies made little effort to escape.</p> + +<p>"Now I will tell you what to do," said Sun Bird, +when they had secured the horses. "Some of you +must keep these ponies. The rest of us will ride +up on those high places and look around. I will +ask Falling Eagle and Brave Bear and Two Elks +to keep these ponies. Leave them where they are +until we come back. Then we will drive them +away."</p> + +<p>The three warriors who had been selected stationed +themselves about the ponies and their comrades +turned toward a low grassy slope to the +westward. They had gone less than an arrow +flight when their ponies suddenly raised their +heads and looked toward the north. A moment +afterward one of the ponies behind them whinnied. +"There is something over there behind that hill," +said Sun Bird as he turned about.</p> + +<p>At that instant a horseman appeared. They +recognized him as Many Feathers, one of the warriors +who had been left in the ravine to watch for +the return of the Blackfeet. Having recognized +his friends, Many Feathers returned their signal, +and then disappeared behind the ridge.</p> + +<p>"Where has he gone?" Little Raven asked, anxiously.</p> + +<p>"We must watch," Sun Bird told him.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>Then Many Feathers and two comrades rode +over the rise of the plain, driving four of the stray +ponies before them. They came directly toward +Sun Bird and his companions.</p> + +<p>"It is good," said Lean Wolf. "Our brothers +are bringing some more ponies. Pretty soon we +will find all that got away."</p> + +<p>"Well, my brothers, I see that you found some +ponies," said Sun Bird, as Many Feathers and +his comrades rode up.</p> + +<p>"Yes, we found them back there on the plain," +said Many Feathers.</p> + +<p>The young warrior appeared to know about the +stampede. He said that he and his companions +had read the story from the tracks which they had +followed from the pool.</p> + +<p>"Did you see anything of the Blackfeet?" inquired +Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"No," replied Many Feathers. "We waited a +long time but they did not come back."</p> + +<p>"Did you see any more ponies?" Lean Wolf +asked him.</p> + +<p>"No, we did not see any more," said Many Feathers.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, it is good you came here," Sun +Bird told them. "Now I am going to ask you to +take these ponies over there where you see <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>Falling +Eagle and Brave Bear and Two Elks. You +must stay with them and help them watch the +ponies until we come back."</p> + +<p>"We will go," said Many Feathers.</p> + +<p>Then Sun Bird and his companions rode to the +top of the low ridge to the westward. They saw +the rest of the ponies gathered in a small herd some +distance out on the open plain. The sight filled +them with joy. As they were about to go after +them, however, they suddenly discovered two +riders watching from a ridge beyond the ponies.</p> + +<p>"Hi, hi," Sun Bird cried, excitedly. "Someone +has found the ponies. Now they are watching +us."</p> + +<p>"It is bad," said Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>Feeling certain that they had already been seen, +the Sioux made no attempt to hide. They remained +in open sight and tried to identify the +distant horsemen. The latter were too far away +to be recognized. The Sioux took hope at the +thought. They knew that if they could not identify +their foes, the latter would find it impossible to +recognize them.</p> + +<p>"They must be Crows or Flatheads," said Sun +Bird. "Anyway, I believe they are scouts."</p> + +<p>"It is bad," said Running Dog. "They will +bring their people here to get those ponies."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>The Sioux were greatly disturbed by the possibility. +As their little company numbered only +eleven, they knew that they would be powerless +before a strong force of their enemies. Aware +that the unexpected emergency demanded quick +action, they held a hurried council to decide what +should be done. They saw many difficulties. In +the first place they realized that if they rode directly +toward the ponies they might drive them +toward their foes. Still, to circle around behind +the herd it would be necessary to approach close +to their enemies. Then, too, the Sioux knew that +if they succeeded in running off the ponies they +would probably be followed by a strong force of +their foes. As the ponies were already fatigued +from their strenuous exertions, another long race +might cause them to collapse.</p> + +<p>"It will be hard to get them away if our enemies +try to stop us," Running Dog said, gloomily.</p> + +<p>As he spoke the horsemen suddenly disappeared +from the ridge. The Sioux looked at one another +in alarm. They felt certain that one of the scouts +had gone to warn his people, while the other concealed +himself to watch. Sun Bird realized that +it was time to act. Delay might prove fatal.</p> + +<p>"Come, my brothers, we must do something," +cried the bold young war leader. "I am going to +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>circle around behind those ponies. I will ask Lean +Wolf to go with me. The rest of you must hide +behind this hill until we drive the ponies to you. +If our enemies come after us do not wait to help +us. Go to our brothers and help them drive away +those ponies. Send some one ahead of you to +bring back the war party. Come, Lean Wolf, we +will go."</p> + +<p>They were gone before their friends found time +to reply. Moving boldly down the ridge, the daring +scouts turned sharply toward the north and +rode away at top speed. Their companions concealed +themselves below the crest of the slope and +watched them with anxious eyes. They believed +that they were rushing into great peril and they +had grave fears for their safety.</p> + +<p>"I do not feel good about this thing," Little +Raven said, uneasily. "Perhaps those people +over there are trying to fool us. Perhaps they +are waiting until our brothers come close. Then +they will come over the top of that hill and kill +them."</p> + +<p>"Sun Bird is a good war leader. Lean Wolf is +a great scout. They are sharp. Their ponies are +fast. I do not believe they will let those people +catch them," Feather Dog replied, reassuringly.</p> + +<p>Sun Bird and Lean Wolf rode many arrow +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>flights toward the north before they finally swerved +to the west. Some of the ponies were watching +them, but as yet showed no inclination to run. The +Sioux felt much relieved. They had feared that +the nervous beasts might take fright at sight of +them and flee toward the distant ridge.</p> + +<p>"If they keep still we will soon get behind them," +Sun Bird said, hopefully.</p> + +<p>"Watch that hill," Lean Wolf cautioned him.</p> + +<p>"Do you see any one up there?" Sun Bird asked +him.</p> + +<p>"No, I do not see any one, but we must be cautious," +replied Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>When they had passed the ponies they began +to circle to come up on the other side of them. +They were almost within arrow range of the ridge +and they kept a sharp watch for foes. Then, as +they turned to approach the ponies they heard a +shout behind them. Glancing back they saw four +Crow warriors racing down the slope at breakneck +speed.</p> + +<p>"Come, get the ponies running!" shouted Sun +Bird as he lashed his pony into a furious sprint.</p> + +<p>They rode madly toward the startled ponies, +shouting and waving their arms to get the animals +in motion. Once started, the ponies needed little +urging. They had not entirely recovered from +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>their wild panic of the previous night and the fierce +shouts behind them sent them racing across the +plain at their best speed.</p> + +<p>"Keep after the ponies, I will fight the Crows," +Sun Bird cried, impulsively.</p> + +<p>"No, no, you must keep going ahead!" Lean +Wolf shouted, fiercely. "If the Crows come close +we will fight them back. Pretty soon we will reach +our brothers. Then these warriors will turn back."</p> + +<p>He had barely ceased speaking before Little +Raven and Feather Dog and Many Feathers and +Running Dog swept over the ridge some distance +to the northward of the ponies. Yelling savagely, +they raced to the assistance of their tribesmen +and at sight of them the Crows stopped in confusion. +The odds had suddenly turned against +them and they lost courage. They turned and +raced away before the Sioux got within bowshot +of them. The Sioux made no attempt to overtake +them. Their one thought was to get away with +the ponies before a stronger force of their foes +came upon them.</p> + +<p>"We have driven away our enemies, now we +must run off the ponies," cried Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"Yes, we must keep going," said Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>They drove the ponies over the ridges and ran +them toward Falling Eagle and the warriors who +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>were waiting with the other horses. Then Little +Raven and Many Feathers hid below the top of +the ridge to watch for the Crows.</p> + +<p>The Sioux knew that the Crow village was somewhere +in the vicinity and they had little doubt +that a strong force of those foes would soon set +out in pursuit of them. However, they hoped to +gain a sufficient lead to make it impossible for the +Crows to overtake them before nightfall. Then +they believed the Crows would abandon the chase.</p> + +<p>When they reached Falling Eagle and his companions +the Sioux turned directly toward the +south and drove the ponies across the plain at +top speed. They hoped to reach the deep ravine +in which they had hidden from the Crows and the +Blackfeet.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps the Crows took us for Blackfeet," +suggested Running Dog. "Perhaps they will go +the other way to find us."</p> + +<p>"No, I do not believe it," said Lean Wolf. +"Those warriors came close. I believe they know +we are Dacotahs."</p> + +<p>For some time they kept the ponies running at +their best speed and then as they saw nothing of +their foes they gradually slackened the pace. For +the balance of the day they rode over the plain at +an easy canter and shortly before dark they came +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>in sight of the abandoned stream bed. Their +spirits revived at sight of it. They believed that +even if the Crows should overtake them it would +be possible to hold them off until scouts found +White Otter and the war party and brought them +to the ravine.</p> + +<p>"I do not believe the Crows can catch us now," +said Sun Bird, as they drove the tired ponies into +the ravine.</p> + +<p>"We can make a big fight in this place," Lean +Wolf told him.</p> + +<p>As night fell Feather Dog followed the ravine +toward the west to listen for the approach of the +Crows. Soon after he had gone Little Raven and +Many Feathers arrived. Their ponies showed the +effects of fast riding.</p> + +<p>"Tell us what you have seen," said Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>"The Crows are coming," declared Little Raven. +"It is a big war party. Those scouts tried to +follow you, but we drove them back. We did that +many times. Then the war party came and we ran +away. The Crows are coming straight ahead. We +rode fast to keep ahead of them. Pretty soon they +will be here."</p> + +<p>"Well, there will be many against us, but we +must get ready to fight," Lean Wolf said, fearlessly.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>"No, my brother, I believe that would be foolish," +Sun Bird told him. "The Crows are too +strong for us. I am going to fool them. I will +tell you how to do it. I am going to ask Running +Dog and Falling Eagle and Brave Bear and Two +Elks and Many Feathers and Broken Hand and +Mad Bull to ride away with the ponies. I will +make Running Dog the leader. At first you must +turn toward the-place-where-day-begins. Then you +must circle back and go toward our village. Pretty +soon you will find our brothers. Then you must +stop. When you go away the rest of us will stay +here to fool the Crows. When they come close +we will ride out and make a great noise. Then we +will ride toward the mountains. We will keep +shouting as if we are driving ponies. The Crows +will follow us. Then we will circle around and +fool them. I will ask Lean Wolf and Little Raven +and Feather Dog to help me do this thing. Come, +my brothers, drive away the ponies."</p> + +<p>"Hi, that is a great thing to do," Lean Wolf +said enthusiastically. "Yes, I believe we will fool +the Crows."</p> + +<p>As there was little time to spare, Running Dog +and his companions immediately drove the ponies +from the ravine and disappeared into the night. +Sun Bird listened anxiously until the sounds of the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>hoofbeats had died away and then he turned to +his comrades.</p> + +<p>"Well, my brothers, pretty soon the Crows will +come, we must be ready," he said.</p> + +<p>A moment later Feather Dog appeared. He said +that he had heard the sound of galloping ponies +and had come to investigate.</p> + +<p>"It was our brothers taking away the ponies," +explained Sun Bird.</p> + +<p>Then he acquainted Feather Dog with the details +of the wily trick to fool the Crows. The famous +Minneconjoux scout immediately endorsed +the plan.</p> + +<p>"It is good," he said, as his eyes twinkled merrily.</p> + +<p>"Listen," cried Little Raven.</p> + +<p>The Sioux immediately became silent. The +hoofbeats of many ponies echoed across the plain. +The Crows were galloping boldly toward the ravine. +The thought filled Sun Bird with anxiety. +He realized that if the bold stratagem failed, the +warriors with the ponies were doomed. Once overtaken +on the open plain, he felt sure they would +be speedily surrounded and annihilated by the +great Crow war party. He grew weak at the possibility. +Then his pony called and his thoughts +were diverted. The hoofbeats suddenly ceased. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>Having located their enemies the Crows had become +cautious. The Sioux pony called again and +Sun Bird made no attempt to stop it.</p> + +<p>"It is good," he said. "The Crows will think +the ponies are here. Come, ride around and make +a noise."</p> + +<p>They rode rapidly to and fro to make it appear +that there were a number of ponies in the ravine. +Then they suddenly swept up the side of the gully +and raced across the plain. As they rode they +snapped their riding quirts and yelled excitedly +at imaginary ponies. Then they listened anxiously +for sounds from the Crows. When they failed +to hear them they gave way to despair. Sun Bird +grew sick at heart. He feared that he had sent +his comrades to their death.</p> + +<p>"Perhaps the Crows are keeping quiet until they +get across that gully," suggested Lean Wolf. +"Perhaps they believe that some of us are waiting +there to fight them back."</p> + +<p>At that instant a shrill yell of triumph rang +through the night, and a moment afterward the +Sioux heard the quick, sharp hoofbeats of galloping +ponies directly behind them. The Crows +had been deceived. They were following blindly +on the false trail. The Sioux were wild with joy. +Unmindful of their own peril, they were satisfied +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>to know that their comrades and the ponies were +safe.</p> + +<p>"It is good! It is good!" Sun Bird cried, joyfully. +"We have fooled the Crows. Now our +brothers will get away with the ponies."</p> + +<p>They continued to make a great noise, lest the +Crows should suddenly discover their blunder. +They rode furiously toward the west, and rejoiced +in the thought that each stride of the ponies was +luring their foes farther from those whom they +wished to overtake. It was not long, however, +before the Sioux realized that the Crows were +gaining upon them. The discovery aroused them +to their peril. They knew that if the Crows came +up with them there would be little chance of escape.</p> + +<p>"Come, we must ride faster," Sun Bird cried, +anxiously.</p> + +<p>They lashed the ponies into a terrific burst of +speed and slowly drew away from their enemies. +They knew, however, that it would be impossible +to maintain the pace. They also realized that +each moment was taking them farther from their +course.</p> + +<p>"Now we must try to circle around," Sun Bird +told them. "Do not make any more noise."</p> + +<p>They suddenly subsided into silence and turned +sharply toward the south. Then their hearts +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>bounded with joy as they heard the Crows blunder +from the trail and continue toward the west. Having +once lost them in the night, it seemed doubtful +if the Crows would be able to find them before daylight.</p> + +<p>"We have got away," Sun Bird said, confidently. +"The Crows cannot find us. Pretty soon +they will go back."</p> + +<p>"Yes, I believe we are safe," replied Lean Wolf.</p> + +<p>"Sun Bird, you have done a big thing," declared +Feather Dog. "You are a great war leader. I +will tell our people about it."</p> + +<p>The Sioux laughed gleefully as they heard the +Crows signaling far away toward the west. Then +they turned toward the east to find their tribesmen. +They rode steadily through the night and at daylight +came upon the entire Minneconjoux war party +at the waterhole which marked the boundary of the +Minneconjoux hunting grounds. They were within +a short day's travel of the great Sioux camp. +The long war journey was almost at an end. Success +seemed assured. The Sioux were elated.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, we have come together again," +said Sun Bird. "I see you have kept the ponies. +Now we are close to our village. Pretty soon we +will be with our people. It is good."</p> +<br /> +<br /> +<br /><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span> +<br /> + +<hr /> +<br /> +<h2>CHAPTER XX</h2> + +<h3>SAFE AT LAST</h3> +<br /> + +<p>The Sioux waited until the ponies had recovered +somewhat from their fatigue and then +they set out for the Minneconjoux camp. They +rode gayly across the plain, talking and laughing +and singing their war songs. Their task had been +accomplished. Their fears had vanished. The +wearying suspense was at an end. They were +eager to reach their people, for they knew that a +royal welcome awaited them. The day had almost +ended, however, when they finally came in sight +of the Minneconjoux village.</p> + +<p>"See, there are the lodges of our people," said +Sun Bird. "Pretty soon some one will see us. +We must get ready to ride into the camp."</p> + +<p>"You are the leader, you must go ahead," said +Feather Dog.</p> + +<p>"Yes, Sun Bird must go ahead," cried the +others.</p> + +<p>"Well, I will ask Dancing Rabbit to ride with +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>me; it will make old Spotted Face feel good to +see him," Sun Bird told them. "Then White +Otter must follow close behind me. He has done +the biggest thing of all."</p> + +<p>"It is good," cried the Minneconjoux.</p> + +<p>They advanced slowly toward the camp. Sun +Bird and Dancing Rabbit rode in front. White +Otter followed, leading the famous black war pony, +and Little Raven rode beside him. Then came +Lean Wolf and Feather Dog and Sitting Eagle and +Running Dog and all the famous scouts. Behind +them followed the great herd of ponies, surrounded +by the balance of the war party.</p> + +<p>The Minneconjoux soon discovered the approaching +horsemen and rushed from the camp in +great excitement. As they recognized the riders +and saw the great herd of ponies they were thrown +into an ecstasy of joy. They gathered at the edge +of the camp, singing and dancing and calling out +the names of the warriors who had gone to fight +the Blackfeet.</p> + +<p>"See, see, the great war party is coming!" they +cried. "They are bringing many ponies."</p> + +<p>The war party raised their voices in the piercing +Dacotah war cry. It echoed triumphantly +across the plain and threw the camp into a tumult. +Then the Minneconjoux suddenly recognized <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span>Dancing +Rabbit. Men, women and children began to +call his name.</p> + +<p>"Our brothers have brought back Dancing Rabbit!" +they shouted. "See, Dancing Rabbit has +come back to us! Look, Spotted Face, your grandson +is alive! He is coming to your lodge."</p> + +<p>The aged warrior shaded his eyes with his hand +and looked eagerly across the plain. He was +trembling with anxiety. The Minneconjoux waited +for him to speak.</p> + +<p>"Yes, my friends, it is Dancing Rabbit," he said, +finally. "Wakantunka, the Great Mystery, has +sent him back to me. It is good."</p> + +<p>A moment afterward the Minneconjoux discovered +the black war pony. The sight of it astonished +them into silence. They looked upon it with +wild, inquiring eyes. Had they been mistaken? +Could it really be the famous war pony of the +great chief Many Buffaloes?</p> + +<p>"Yes, yes, it is the great black war pony!" Rain +Crow cried, excitedly. "White Otter, my son, has +brought it to our camp."</p> + +<p>When the war party came within bow range +they stopped and waited while a delegation of +noted warriors rode out to escort them to the camp. +At the same time a company of youths raced +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>eagerly across the plain to take charge of the +ponies.</p> + +<p>Then the war party rode triumphantly into the +village, singing their war songs and calling the +names of the warriors who had been killed by the +Blackfeet. As each missing warrior was mentioned +his people began to mourn and cry out dismally +in their grief. However, as his companions +extolled his bravery the mourners stifled their +sobs and thrilled with pride at his noble sacrifice.</p> + +<p>"A warrior must be ready to die," said Pretty +Star, the mother of Proud Hawk. "My son was +very brave. They are calling his name. He did +a great thing for his people. It is enough."</p> + +<p>As the victorious warriors paraded through the +village the people gathered eagerly about White +Otter and the famous black war pony. Many of +the old men and boys ran forward and struck the +Blackfeet pony with their hands to count a coup +against their foes. When he reached the center +of the camp White Otter stopped and tied the +Blackfeet pony before the lodge of Curly Horse, +the Minneconjoux war chief.</p> + +<p>"See, White Otter has given the black war pony +to Curly Horse," said the Minneconjoux. "It is +a great thing to do."</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span>Curly Horse and the great men of the tribe had +assembled before the medicine lodge to greet the +war party. When the warriors lined up before +him the famous chief stepped forward to address +them.</p> + +<p>"I will call Sun Bird and White Otter to come +and stand before me," said Curly Horse. "My +brothers, both of you are young men, but you have +done big things. Sun Bird, you are the leader +of this war party. You have done what you set +out to do. You have brought back the ponies that +the Blackfeet took away. It was a hard thing to +do. White Otter, you are a great chief. You +have done many big things. Now you have done +the biggest thing of all. I see that you have tied +that great pony in front of my lodge. It makes +me feel good. But I will not take it. You must +take it to your people. Now I will speak to those +brave warriors who went with you. My brothers, +you have done a big thing. You were very brave. +Now I will ask Rain Crow to give you some +words."</p> + +<p>"My friends, you have done a great thing for +your people," said Rain Crow, the Medicine Man. +"Now we have many ponies. Some of them were +Blackfeet ponies. It is good. Sun Bird, you are +my son. Little Raven, you are my son. White +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span>Otter, I have called you my son. All three of you +were very brave. It makes me feel big. White +Otter, you have done the biggest thing of all. Our +people will talk about it a long time. I have finished."</p> + +<p>When Rain Crow ceased speaking the Minneconjoux +cried out for Sun Bird to talk to them.</p> + +<p>"Well, my people, you have asked me to give you +some words," said Sun Bird. "First I will tell +you about White Otter. He was very brave. He +went into the Blackfeet camp. He fought back +many Blackfeet. He rode after the great chief +Many Buffaloes and caught up with him. Then +he knocked him on the head and ran off with his +pony. He has brought it here. Now I will tell +you about Little Raven. He was very brave. He +went with White Otter to the Blackfeet camp. He +fought many Blackfeet. Now I will tell you about +all these great warriors that you see standing here. +They were very brave. Lean Wolf fought four +Blackfeet warriors and killed all of them. Sitting +Eagle ran off the ponies. Feather Dog did some +great things. Running Dog found our enemies. +All of these brave warriors fought hard to bring +the ponies here. Now I have told you about it."</p> + +<p>"White Otter! White Otter!" shouted the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>Minneconjoux. +"Come, White Otter, give us some +words."</p> + +<p>The Ogalala received a stirring ovation. It was +some time before he was able to speak.</p> + +<p>"My brothers, I have not many words to give +you," he said, modestly. "I will tell you that Sun +Bird is a great war leader. He told us what to do. +I will tell you that the Minneconjoux are very +brave. I will tell my people about them. I will +tell you that the Dacotah ponies can run. Curly +Horse gave me that great pony that I rode to the +Blackfeet camp. It is very fast. That is how I +caught Many Buffaloes. I believe Rain Crow must +have had something to do with it. He is a great +Medicine Person. I believe he helped me to do +this thing. Now I will speak to your great chief +Curly Horse. Curly Horse, I have tied that black +pony in front of your lodge. It must stay there. +You gave me a great pony to ride to the Blackfeet +camp. I will keep it. Now I will give you that +great Blackfeet pony. You must keep it. Rain +Crow, you have called me your son. Well, my +father, I have brought you a fast spotted pony. +I took it from the Flatheads. Now I will not talk +anymore."</p> + +<p>"White Otter, I see that you have a good heart," +said Curly Horse. "I will listen to your words, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>I will keep that great war pony. I feel big to +own that pony."</p> + +<p>When it grew dark the Minneconjoux lighted a +great fire and assembled about it to celebrate the +success of the war party. They spent the entire +night dancing and singing and telling of the great +exploits performed by the men who had gone to +the Blackfeet camp.</p> +<br /> + +<h3>THE END</h3> + +<div class="tr"> +<p class="cen"><a name="TN" id="TN"></a>Transcriber's Note</p> +<br /> +Typographical errors corrected in the text:<br /> +<br /> + TOC Runways changed to Runaways<br /> +Page 27 murmered changed to murmured<br /> +Page 33 murmered changed to murmured<br /> +Page 59 susspense changed to suspense<br /> +Page 96 unkown changed to unknown<br /> +Page 164 Siting changed to Sitting<br /> +Page 211 desperated changed to desperate<br /> +Page 253 Wakantanka changed to Wakantunka<br /> +</div> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The War Trail, by Elmer Russell Gregor + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WAR TRAIL *** + +***** This file should be named 36888-h.htm or 36888-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/6/8/8/36888/ + +Produced by Chris Curnow, Barbara Kosker, Michael and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: The War Trail + +Author: Elmer Russell Gregor + +Release Date: July 29, 2011 [EBook #36888] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WAR TRAIL *** + + + + +Produced by Chris Curnow, Barbara Kosker, Michael and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + + + + + + + + + _By ELMER R. GREGOR_ + + + JIM MASON, BACKWOODSMAN + JIM MASON, SCOUT + + _Western Indian Series_ + + WHITE OTTER + THE WAR TRAIL + THREE SIOUX SCOUTS + + _Eastern Indian Series_ + + SPOTTED DEER + RUNNING FOX + THE WHITE WOLF + +[Illustration: NOW WE MUST WATCH OUT! [Page 186]] + + + + + THE WAR TRAIL + + + + + BY + ELMER RUSSELL GREGOR + + AUTHOR OF "THE WHITE WOLF," + "RUNNING FOX," "WHITE OTTER," ETC. + + + + + [Illustration] + + + + + D. APPLETON AND COMPANY + NEW YORK :: 1924 :: LONDON + + + + + COPYRIGHT, 1921, BY + D. APPLETON AND COMPANY + + PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA + + + + + CONTENTS + + + CHAPTER PAGE + + I. A COURIER FROM THE WEST 1 + + II. OFF ON THE WAR TRAIL 13 + + III. THE COUNCIL FIRE 30 + + IV. AWAY INTO THE NORTH 44 + + V. SIOUX SCOUTS 56 + + VI. THE LONE RIDER 68 + + VII. SMOKE SIGNALS 75 + + VIII. A CLOSE CALL 87 + + IX. ANXIOUS MOMENTS 101 + + X. REBELLIOUS PONIES 115 + + XI. AN UNUSUAL ADVENTURE 128 + + XII. AN ENCOUNTER WITH THE FLATHEADS 147 + + XIII. A CLEVER STRATAGEM 158 + + XIV. THE BLACKFEET CAMP 167 + + XV. A PERILOUS RECONNAISSANCE 181 + + XVI. OFF WITH THE PONIES 197 + + XVII. HOTLY PURSUED 207 + + XVIII. THE STAMPEDE 224 + + XIX. TRAILING THE RUNAWAYS 236 + + XX. SAFE AT LAST 251 + + + + +THE WAR TRAIL + + + + +CHAPTER I + +A COURIER FROM THE WEST + + +The sun was setting behind the western rim of the plain, as White Otter, +a famous young war-chief of the Ogalala Sioux, drew near the low ridge +of foothills which he had been approaching since daylight. He was bound +on a hunting expedition for deer, having promised to kill a fat young +buck for his grandfather, old Wolf Robe, the aged Sioux chief. + +White Otter approached the timber with his usual caution. He knew that +the forest often concealed foes as well as game, and he determined to +take no risks. He rode slowly toward the cover, therefore, watching for +the slightest warning of danger. He was within easy arrow range of the +woods when his pony suddenly stopped and snorted nervously. White Otter +instantly became alert. Drawing his bow, he slid to the ground, and +sheltered himself behind his pony. Then for some time pony and rider +watched the forest. + +A loud crackling of undergrowth, and a number of soft, bounding +footfalls told him the cause of his alarm. He had startled a deer from +its feeding ground at the edge of the plain. Convinced that the place +was free of foes, he mounted his pony, and rode to the edge of the +timber. + +This range of heavily timbered foothills was a favorite hunting ground +of the Ogalalas, and White Otter had visited the locality many times. He +was entirely familiar with the usual haunts of game, and knew the +location of every spring and salt lick. Once in the timber, therefore, +the young Sioux rode slowly along a well-worn game trail which brought +him to a small grassy park in the dip of the hills. A little stream +trickled through one end of it, and made it an ideal feeding ground for +deer and elk. As it was also an attractive and sheltered camp site, and +offered an abundance of feed for his pony, White Otter decided to remain +there for the night. + +The twilight shadows were already gathering as the Sioux tied his pony +in the woods and seated himself at the edge of the little park to watch +and listen. Although the day was about gone he hoped that he might +secure his game before darkness finally settled down. It was not long +before he was roused by a rustling of wings above his head. Looking up, +he saw a pair of plump spruce grouse on a limb directly over him. As the +birds stretched their necks and cocked their heads to look at him, he +drove an arrow through the body of the cock grouse. The bird fluttered +helplessly to the ground, and White Otter immediately broke its neck. +The remaining grouse still sat peering down at him. He made no attempt +to kill it. It was a law of his people to kill only what they required +that there might always be sufficient game to replenish the supply. + +"Wakantunka, the Great Mystery, has sent me something to eat," White +Otter said, reverently. "It is good." + +As it was getting quite dark, and as there seemed little probability of +seeing game, the Sioux decided to abandon his vigil until daylight. He +brought his pony from the timber and tied it in the center of the park +to graze. Then he selected his camp site and made a tiny fire of dry +sticks. As a precaution against being seen by some prowling foe, he +inclosed it with a barricade of rocks to hide its feeble glow. He +plucked the grouse and spitted it on a forked stick before the fire. +Then he drew his elk skin robe about his shoulders and seated himself to +enjoy his evening meal. + +After he had eaten the grouse White Otter allowed the fire to die out. +Then for a long time he sat in the darkness, listening to the night +sounds. The wind whispered softly in the tree tops. The shrill yelping +of the coyotes came from the open plain. Then the plaintive cry of the +little red owl sounded within bowshot. White Otter listened anxiously. +He knew that the call often was used as a signal, and he determined to +be on his guard. However, he soon convinced himself that it was genuine, +and dismissed it from his mind. Shortly afterward he brought his pony +from the park and tied it near him. Then he wrapped himself in his robe +and lay down to sleep. + +White Otter awakened at daylight and crept stealthily to the edge of the +park. As he saw no game, he sat down to watch. He felt quite sure that +either deer or elk would soon come there for food and water. In fact he +had waited only a short time when he heard something approaching through +the undergrowth. Fitting an arrow to his bow, White Otter looked +anxiously in the direction of the sound. In a few minutes he saw an old +bull elk standing in the shadows at the edge of the woods. It was thin +and emaciated, and White Otter knew that its flesh would be tough and +unpalatable. It was well within bowshot, but he had no thought of +killing it. He had promised his aged grandfather a fat young buck, and +he had no intention of disappointing him. As the old bull walked slowly +into the open, White Otter grunted, and the elk instantly stopped and +looked toward him. Then as the Sioux rose to his feet and showed himself +the aged bull turned awkwardly and trotted stiffly into the cover. + +"Go, old man," laughed White Otter. "You have lived a long time. I will +let you live on. I am----" + +He stopped abruptly, for at that moment he heard a loud snort, and a +great crackling of brush, as the buck for which he had been waiting +raced safely away through the woods. The young hunter flushed with +anger. + +"I am like a noisy old woman," he grumbled, savagely. + +After he had gone to examine the trail of the buck, he again seated +himself at the edge of the woods to watch for game. A long time passed +before he heard anything. Then he was surprised to hear something coming +directly toward him through the woods. It made a great noise, and +sounded like a deer or an elk in wild flight. White Otter sprang to his +feet and held his arrow in readiness. + +In a few moments a splendid blacktail buck leaped into the open. White +Otter was astonished to see a huge gray lynx clinging to the buck. As it +reached the park, the deer was dragged to its haunches. Then, apparently +unmindful of the interested young hunter, the lynx relaxed its hold and +sprang at the throat of its victim. The cruel fangs sank deep into the +flesh, and although the buck struggled desperately it was soon overcome. + +Then White Otter drove his arrow through the lynx. It fell dead with the +arrow through its heart. A second arrow ended the agony of the blacktail +buck. Elated at his luck the Sioux ran forward to examine his game. He +lifted the head of the lynx and gazed intently into the cruel face. Then +he addressed the dead animal and made excuses for having killed it, so +that its spirit would not depart in anger and seek to avenge itself upon +him at some future time. + +"Ho, old man, you were very fierce," White Otter said, softly. "You were +a good hunter. If I had not come here you would have had something good +to eat. Well, I saw you. I came here to get meat for my grandfather, the +great chief Wolf Robe. When I saw that buck I decided to take it. That +is why I killed you. But you must not feel bad about it. You have done +many bad things to my people. Yes, that is why I felt like killing you. +You have killed many young ponies. You have driven away many deer. You +have made it hard for our hunters to find meat. Now you know why I +killed you. But you must not feel bad about it. Now I am going to do +something good for you. I am going to give you some meat to take with +you on the Long Trail. Then I am going to tell my people about you. I +will speak good words about you. Now you must feel good about this +thing." + +Having complied with the ancient custom of his people, White Otter +opened the carcass of the deer and placed the entrails beside the lynx. +Then he packed the buck upon his pony with a long lariat of twisted +rawhide and rode from the park. + +When he reached the edge of the timber, White Otter stopped to search +the plain. A prairie wolf trotted slowly from sight over a rise of +ground. It was the only sign of life on the vast sage-grown waste. +Assured that there was nothing to fear, White Otter set out upon his +journey. + +White Otter had covered two thirds of the distance to the Sioux camp +when his pony suddenly turned its nose toward the wind and whinnied +shrilly. White Otter looked about him with considerable alarm. He felt +certain that other horses were somewhere in the vicinity. The +possibility roused his suspicions. He dismounted and grasped his pony +by the nose to keep it silent. It was snorting and nervously watching a +low grassy knoll several arrow flights away. + +"There are horses behind that hill," White Otter told himself. + +Two possibilities suggested themselves. Perhaps there was a small bunch +of stray ponies grazing on the opposite side of the hill. Perhaps his +foes had discovered him and were lying in ambush behind the knoll. The +thought made him uneasy, as the day was far spent, and he was still a +considerable distance from his people. He had great confidence in the +ability of his pony, however, which was one of the best in the entire +Sioux tribe. He believed that in an open chase he would have little +difficulty in keeping well beyond range of any pursuers who might set +out upon his trail. + +"I will find out about this thing," he declared. + +He planned to ride about the knoll at a safe distance in the hope of +discovering what lay hidden on the other side. As he was about to mount +his pony, however, he saw a warrior rise to his feet, and stand boldly +outlined on the top of the hill. It was an entirely unexpected maneuver, +and White Otter instantly became suspicious. He feared that it was a +trick to lead him into a trap. He looked anxiously about the plain to +make sure that other crafty foes were not circling around behind him to +cut off his retreat. He saw no one except the mysterious stranger on the +top of the hill. He seemed to be watching White Otter as intently as the +latter was watching him. For some time neither moved. + +White Otter finally decided that, as the unknown scout was too far away +to be identified, it would be foolish to waste more time watching him. +He determined to continue on his way toward the Sioux camp. If he +learned that he was being followed he planned to turn aside on a false +trail until it grew dark. Then he would circle back toward the Ogalala +village. + +As White Otter mounted his pony and started away, however, the warrior +on the knoll suddenly showed signs of life. The Sioux had ridden less +than an arrow flight when the sentinel disappeared over the brow of the +hill. White Otter felt quite certain that his pursuit had begun. He +watched anxiously over his shoulder for the first glimpse of his foes. +The Crows had lately been seen in that vicinity, and he wondered if a +company of those hated enemies were about to come racing along his +trail. He did not force his pony, however, as he was eager to learn the +identity of his pursuers before he raced away for the Sioux camp. + +White Otter did not have long to wait. In a few moments a solitary +horseman swept over a rise of the plain and galloped toward him. The +Sioux felt sure that it was the warrior who had been watching him. As +the stranger appeared to be alone, and eager to fight, White Otter +prepared for battle. Before venturing within arrow range, however, the +rider suddenly wheeled his pony, and raced around White Otter at great +speed. The Sioux immediately stopped and prepared to defend himself. +Then he suddenly discovered that the horseman was a friend. + +"Ho, Dacotah! Ho, my brother!" shouted the rider. + +"Yes, yes, now I see who you are," cried White Otter, as he lowered his +bow. + +A moment later they dismounted beside each other. White Otter recognized +the rider as a Minneconjoux warrior named Lean Wolf, an old friend with +whom he had shared several perilous adventures. + +"I have brought you some words from your brother, Sun Bird," said Lean +Wolf. + +"It is good," White Otter replied, eagerly, as his eyes lighted with +pleasure. + +"It is bad," Lean Wolf said, soberly. + +"Has something bad happened to my brother Sun Bird?" the young Ogalala +inquired anxiously. + +"No, I have not come to tell you that," Lean Wolf assured him. "I have +come to tell you that our enemies, the Blackfeet, came to our camp. They +crawled around the village in the dark like dogs. We did not hear them. +They ran off many ponies. Sun Bird is going to bring back those ponies. +He is the leader of a war party. He is going to fight the boastful +Blackfeet. He wants his brother White Otter to go with him." + +Lean Wolf finished speaking, and looked inquiringly at the young Ogalala +war chief. For some moments the latter remained silent. He knew that a +warrior must not speak hastily, or pledge himself too eagerly. Although +his heart beat wildly at the thought of joining his friend in a war +expedition against the Blackfeet, he carefully concealed his emotion +lest he might lose respect in the eyes of the stern Minneconjoux scout. +Then, after the proper interval, White Otter replied: + +"Lean Wolf, tell my brother Sun Bird that I will go with him to fight +the Blackfeet," he said, quietly. + +"It is good," replied Lean Wolf. + +"See, pretty soon it will be dark," said White Otter. "You must go with +me to my people." + +"No, I will go back," Lean Wolf told him. "I was going to your village +to find you. Then I saw you here. It is good. I have brought you the +words of your brother Sun Bird. It is what I set out to do. I have done +it. Now I will turn back. Sun Bird is waiting." + +"Go, my brother," replied White Otter. "Tell Sun Bird that I will come +to meet him at the end of three suns. If I do not come then he must wait +one sun more. Then if I do not come he will know that something bad has +happened to me. Now I am going away." + +They parted without further ceremony, riding away into the twilight in +opposite directions. Once they had separated neither looked back. After +he had ridden a short distance, however, White Otter raised his head and +uttered the wild, piercing war cry of the Dacotahs. It echoed defiantly +across the plain, and the young war chief thrilled at the sound. Then, +after a short silence, it was answered from the west. White Otter +laughed gleefully as he raced his pony toward the Sioux camp. + + + + +CHAPTER II + +OFF ON THE WAR TRAIL + + +When White Otter reached the Sioux camp he rode directly to the lodge of +old Wolf Robe, the famous Ogalala war chief. + +"Ho, grandfather, see, I have brought you some meat," he cried gayly. + +"Ho, I see that you have killed a fat young buck," said Wolf Robe, as +his eyes lighted with pleasure. "Come, woman, cut some meat." + +At his command, old Singing Wind, the grandmother of White Otter, came +from the lodge. White Otter dragged the buck from his pony. Then, as +Singing Wind called some of the younger women to help her, White Otter +asked if he might talk with Wolf Robe. + +"Yes, my son, come into the lodge and sit down with me," said Wolf Robe. + +The old chief listened attentively while White Otter described his +unusual adventure with the lynx. Then he told of his meeting with Lean +Wolf, the Minneconjoux scout, and the message which the latter had +brought from Sun Bird. Wolf Robe looked sharply at his grandson. + +"I am going with Sun Bird to fight the Blackfeet," declared White Otter. + +Wolf Robe nodded understandingly, but made no reply. For a long time he +gazed thoughtfully at his battle-scarred war shield which hung on a +tripod of poles at the rear of the lodge. It appeared as if the aged war +leader was recalling his own glorious achievements on the war trail in +the days of his youth. White Otter waited patiently for him to speak. + +"It is good," Wolf Robe said, finally. "The voice of a friend travels +far. The ears of a Dacotah are open for the words of a friend. Sun Bird +has called you. He is your friend. You must go." + +Having given this advice, Wolf Robe again subsided into silent +meditation. As White Otter rose to leave, however, his grandfather +motioned for him to be seated. + +"Wait, my son, I have some words for you," he said. + +"It is good," replied White Otter. + +"You say that you are going to fight the Blackfeet," said Wolf Robe. +"Those people are strong. They are braver than the boastful Pawnees. I +have fought with them many times. When I was a young man I was taken to +their village. They kept me there many moons. Those were bad days. Then +I got away. After that I fought many battles against those people. Once +I went to their camp, and took away some ponies. It was a hard thing to +do. Yes, my son, the Blackfeet are great warriors. Well, I have told you +about them. Now you can tell our brothers, the Minneconjoux, about it. I +believe you will have a big fight to get back those ponies. My son, you +are a Dacotah. It is enough. I have spoken. Go!" + +The following day, at sunrise, White Otter set out to join the +Minneconjoux war party. He was dressed and decorated for the war trail. +Naked above the waist, he had daubed and streaked his face, chest and +arms with yellow clay. A great war bonnet of eagle plumes proclaimed his +rank as a famous Ogalala war chief. His dress consisted of buckskin +leggings, buffalo-hide moccasins, a buckskin breechcloth, and a silky +cow buffalo robe for protection against wind and storm. He carried a +wolfskin case containing his bow and arrows, a flint knife in a buckskin +sheath, his buffalo-hide war shield, and a weasel-skin pouch containing +his fire sticks and some dried meat. Mounted upon his best war pony, +the dashing young warrior made a striking appearance as he rode proudly +from the great Sioux camp. + +Many friends shouted good wishes from the edge of the village. White +Otter turned his pony, and answered them with the thrilling war-cry of +the Dacotahs. Then he raced away toward the west. + +Once beyond range of the camp, however, White Otter drew his pony to a +walk, and carefully scanned the plain. He had little fear of +encountering foes so near the Ogalala village, but he determined to take +every precaution. A small band of antelope were feeding far away toward +the south, and as they seemed to be the only living creatures on the +vast expanse of plain White Otter urged his pony into a canter and +proceeded on his way. + +It was a glorious day in early summer. The sky was blue and cloudless. +The prairie was dotted with flowers. Birds sang gayly from the thickets. +The air was perfumed with the fragrance of blossoms, the sweet aroma of +growing grass, and the faint, spicy scent of distant sage. + +White Otter rode on his way in high spirits. He was carefree, and happy, +and eager for adventure. The fact that he was about to expose himself +to the perils of the war trail caused him slight concern. He had +implicit confidence in the ability and courage of his tribesmen, the +fearless Minneconjoux, and he had little doubt that their expedition +against the powerful Blackfeet would be entirely successful. The thought +of being injured or killed in the adventure never entered his mind. If +it had he would have wasted little time upon it, as he had long since +learned to scoff at danger, and to accept injury and death as inevitable +possibilities in the life of every warrior. + +Toward the end of the day White Otter came in sight of a familiar little +grove of aspens which marked a former camp site. He had encountered a +company of Ute warriors at that spot the previous year, and he was +somewhat suspicious of it. It offered a splendid hiding place to foes, +and the wily young Sioux determined to make sure that the place was +unoccupied before he ventured within arrow range. He stopped at a safe +distance out on the plain, and watched the grove with considerable +anxiety. Then, as he saw nothing to arouse his suspicions, he rode +slowly about the camp site, looking for fresh pony tracks. He soon +discovered them. They led away from the grove. White Otter dismounted, +and studied them with great care. He saw that it was the trail of a +single pony, and the tracks were several days old. Having learned that +much, he walked slowly ahead of his horse, watching carefully to +discover where the trail had entered the grove. + +"Perhaps it was Lean Wolf," he told himself. + +He soon learned otherwise, as the trail approached the grove from the +south. White Otter followed the tracks a short distance out on the +plain, and found evidence which convinced him that the pony had carried +a rider. As there seemed little to be gained by following the trail +farther in that direction, he turned and followed it to the grove. + +The camp site was unoccupied, and as there was a spring, and plenty of +grass for his horse, White Otter decided to stop there for the night. He +picketed his pony, and then began to examine the place for signs. The +ashes from a small fire, and some charred bones scattered near by, told +him that some one had spent the night at that spot several days before. +He worked diligently to find a clew to the identity of the traveler, but +found nothing which would tell him what he wished to know. The little +mound of ashes, the remnants of a meal, and the pony tracks were his +only clews. + +The fact that the unknown horseman had come from the south aroused White +Otter's interest. Both the Pawnees and the Utes lived to the southward. +As he had already encountered a war party of the latter at the grove he +wondered if it was a favorite stopping place for those mysterious foes. +However, as the signs were at least two days old, the possibility caused +him little concern. + +Having finished his reconnaissance, White Otter seated himself at the +edge of the grove to watch the plain. The sun had already set, and the +purple evening shadows were creeping out of the east. The prairie +appeared lifeless. The Sioux was at a loss to account for the scarcity +of game. He feared that foes of some sort had driven it from the +locality. The thought suggested the possibility that the lone rider was +a scout, loitering behind a hunting party to watch for enemies. + +At dark White Otter returned to his pony. He feared to make a fire, lest +the gleam might betray him to his foes. He sat beside the little spring, +and ate several cakes of pemmican, composed of dried meat and berries, +which he had brought for just such an emergency. + +Before he ventured to sleep, White Otter returned to the edge of the +plain, and spent a long time listening for a warning of approaching +enemies. The howling of some distant prairie wolves, the gentle rustling +of the aspens, and an occasional grunt from his pony were the only +sounds. He continued to listen, however, until the night was half gone. +Then he returned to the camp site, and lay down to sleep. + +Dawn was just breaking when White Otter was suddenly awakened by the +snorting of his pony. Seizing his bow, he moved cautiously to the edge +of the grove. A buck antelope was standing within easy bowshot. It had +scented the pony, and stopped to investigate. Unable to resist the +temptation, White Otter drove his arrow through its heart. It was a +yearling in prime condition, and he cut a choice steak from the carcass. +Then, as the light strengthened, and he saw no evidence of foes, he made +a tiny fire and broiled the antelope meat. He ate heartily, and gave +thanks to Wakantunka, the Great Mystery, for sending him food. + +Shortly after sunrise White Otter resumed his journey toward the +Minneconjoux camp. As the pony tracks led in that direction he followed +them with keen interest. If the lone horseman really were a hostile +scout, White Otter knew that to follow him would be the surest and +safest way of locating any enemies who might be in the vicinity. He kept +a sharp watch, therefore, and approached the knolls and ridges with +great caution. + +It was midday before he saw anything to make him suspicious. Then he +discovered a dense cloud of dust rising behind a slight elevation of the +plain. He immediately stopped to watch it. It suggested two +possibilities--a herd of frightened buffaloes or a company of horsemen. +White Otter longed to peep over the top of the ridge, but he realized +that it would be folly to take the risk until he knew what was before +him. He knew that hostile scouts might be watching from that spot, and +the possibility made him cautious. + +"Perhaps some one is hunting buffaloes," he said. + +Realizing that he might have been seen, White Otter looked for a place +of concealment. The plain was open and bare of shelter, however, and +there was no chance to hide. He determined to remain where he was, +hoping that something might appear along the crest of the ridge. + +It was soon evident that whatever was raising the dust was moving +rapidly toward the north. White Otter felt quite certain that it was a +herd of buffaloes in wild flight. Perhaps they were pursued by wolves, +which were always loitering about the herds at that season to prey upon +the young calves. It was just as probable, however, that a hunting +party of foes had invaded the great Sioux hunting grounds. + +"Well, I will wait here and see what comes of it," declared White Otter. + +The dust cloud finally faded out some distance farther toward the north. +White Otter was perplexed. He was undecided as to what he should do. The +ridge extended like a barrier directly across his path, and it would be +necessary to cross it to continue his journey. Still, he realized the +peril of venturing within bow range. + +White Otter waited a long time, and then finally turned his pony toward +the south, and rode along parallel with the ridge. Having seen nothing +which would lead him to suspect enemies, he planned to cross the ridge +some distance to the southward. When he believed that he had gone a +sufficient distance, he turned and approached the ridge. As he finally +came within arrow range he stopped and searched the top of the slope for +signs of foes. Although he failed to discover them, he realized that +they might be lying just below the top of the ridge, in which event it +would be impossible to see them. He rode forward with great caution, +therefore, and was prepared to flee at the first hint of danger. + +White Otter had actually begun to climb the slope when he was startled +by a chorus of whoops and yells, and turning toward the left he saw a +company of horsemen racing toward him. He lashed his pony up the slope +and crossed the ridge. Then he rode furiously toward the west. + +The maneuver completely fooled the Pawnees who had expected him to turn +down the ridge and flee in the opposite direction. Their confusion gave +White Otter a chance to get beyond arrow range before they dashed over +the ridge in pursuit of him. He looked over his shoulder and counted +eight riders whom he instantly recognized as Pawnees. His eyes flashed +dangerously as he thought of those hated foes. + +White Otter was holding his lead over his pursuers when he suddenly saw +a solitary rider gallop from a little grove of trees, and race +diagonally across the plain in an effort to intercept him. The Pawnee +was mounted on a particularly fast little buckskin, and White Otter +realized that unless he swerved from his course he would soon come +within easy bow range of him. The Sioux however, refused to give way. + +"I will kill that man," White Otter declared, grimly. + +The other Pawnees had failed to come within bowshot, and although they +were yelling fiercely, and forcing their ponies to the limit, White +Otter gave little attention to them. His eyes were fixed on the daring +rider who was racing recklessly across the plain in an attempt to get in +front of him. The Pawnee seemed equally intent upon watching White +Otter. The ponies appeared well matched, and the race was a thrilling +one. + +When they finally came within bow range, White Otter was sufficiently in +the lead to foil the plan of the Pawnee. The latter, however, +immediately began to shoot his arrows, and one of them penetrated deep +behind the shoulder of the Sioux pony. Mortally wounded, the unfortunate +animal made one great bound and then crashed to its knees, and White +Otter was thrown heavily over its head. + +Jarred and stunned, the Sioux staggered to his feet to find the Pawnee +almost upon him. Quick to realize his peril, White Otter dropped behind +his dying pony as the Pawnee shot his arrow. The next moment he drove +his own arrow through the body of his foe, as the latter rode at him +with his war club raised for the fatal stroke. As the Pawnee toppled to +the plain, White Otter sprang forward and seized the bewildered pony. An +instant later he was racing away through a volley of Pawnee arrows. + +Enraged at the fate of their comrade, the Pawnees were risking their +necks to overtake the Sioux. White Otter feared that at any moment +either he or the captured pony would be pierced by their arrows. In +their frenzy, however, they shot wildly, and their arrows flew wide of +the mark. White Otter lashed the Pawnee pony without mercy in an effort +to place himself beyond arrow range. He was astonished at the speed and +stamina of the buckskin, and he soon realized that it was the equal of +the horse he had lost. The discovery gave him confidence. A glance +backward told him that two of his pursuers were steadily losing ground, +and he was holding his lead against the others. He was still within +arrow range, however, and he crouched low upon the buckskin, and urged +it to still greater efforts. It responded nobly, and the fierce yells +from his enemies convinced him that they were falling farther behind. +The Pawnee pony was speeding over the plain with great bounds, and White +Otter was forced to admit that his favorite war pony would have been +sorely tried to maintain the pace. + +Having begun to increase his lead, White Otter took hope. The little +buckskin had won his confidence, and he had little fear of being +overtaken. The day was far spent, and he believed that he would have +little difficulty in keeping well ahead of his pursuers until darkness +came to his aid. Then he knew that it would be a simple task to shake +them from his trail. Feeling sure of escape, therefore, he sat erect and +shook his bow defiantly at the helpless Pawnees. They replied with wild +yells of rage, and White Otter laughed mockingly. + +The Pawnees continued the chase until darkness finally blotted them from +sight. Then White Otter turned sharply from his course, and rode +directly toward the north. Feeling confident that the maneuver would +baffle his foes, he slackened the pace of his pony to an easy canter. +Thus he rode until the night was half gone, and then he stopped and +dismounted from the tired little buckskin. + +Fearing that the Pawnees might continue to search for him, White Otter +made no attempt to sleep. He sat close beside his pony, watching and +listening for a warning of his foes. He hoped that if they failed to +find him before daylight they would abandon the pursuit rather than +venture farther into the Minneconjoux hunting grounds. + +Shortly before daylight White Otter mounted his pony and rode away +toward the west. Having heard nothing from the Pawnees he felt quite +certain that he had thrown them from his trail. His confidence was +rudely shaken, however, when he suddenly heard the sharp, husky bark of +the little gray fox a short distance at his left. A few moments +afterward a horse whinnied, and before he could interfere the little +buckskin replied. + +"That is bad," White Otter murmured, uneasily. + +He was fearful and perplexed. The signal was a favorite one among the +Sioux, and still under the circumstances he mistrusted it. He waited, +therefore, listening anxiously to locate whoever confronted him. In a +few moments the call was repeated at his right. He knew that either +friends or foes were on both sides of him. At length he answered the +challenge. A voice sounded from the darkness. + +"Ho, Dacotah." + +"Ho, my brother Sun Bird," White Otter replied, joyfully, as he +recognized the voice of his friend. + +Then Sun Bird and his brother Little Raven rode forward to meet him. The +three young warriors had shared many perilous adventures, and they +greeted one another with boyish enthusiasm. Then Sun Bird repeated the +call of the little gray fox three times in quick succession, and fifteen +grim Minneconjoux warriors came to join them. + +"Lean Wolf told us about this thing," Sun Bird explained. "Come, Lean +Wolf, here is White Otter, tell him about it." + +"Ho, my brother," said Lean Wolf, as he rode up beside White Otter. + +"Ho, my brother Lean Wolf," White Otter replied, heartily. + +"When I was riding back to my people I saw some Pawnee hunters," +explained Lean Wolf. "They saw me, but I was a long ways off. They did +not come after me. I told my people about it. Sun Bird said, 'It is bad. +Those Pawnees may kill White Otter. Perhaps we can help him. Come, my +friends, who will go with me to find White Otter?' That is how we came +here." + +"It is good," said White Otter. "The brave Minneconjoux are my brothers. +I believe when the Pawnees heard your ponies they ran away. But see, my +friends, I am riding one of their ponies. It is very fast. I will tell +you how I come to have it." + +The Minneconjoux listened with great interest while White Otter told of +his adventure with the Pawnees. When he finished speaking there were +many exclamations of approval from the stern warriors who had gathered +about him. + +"White Otter, you have done a good thing," declared Sun Bird. "See, it +is getting light. Come, we will go and tell our people how you fooled +the boastful Pawnees." + +They turned their ponies toward the west, and rode away singing +boastfully of White Otter's triumph over the Pawnees. + + + + +CHAPTER III + +THE COUNCIL FIRE + + +Late the second day the Sioux came in sight of the great Minneconjoux +camp. It was situated beside a wide stream that flowed down from great +snowy peaks farther to the westward. The little company of riders +stopped on the summit of a grassy knoll and looked with pride on the +great circle of lodges which dotted the plain. Their pride was somewhat +humbled, however, by the absence of the vast herd of ponies which +usually were to be seen grazing near the village. The few horses that +had escaped the Blackfeet raid were carefully guarded within the camp. + +The riders had already been discovered and recognized by watchers at the +edge of the village, and a company of horsemen was soon racing across +the plain to meet them. + +"See! my people are coming to take you to their village," Sun Bird told +White Otter. + +As the Minneconjoux dashed up to them White Otter recognized several old +friends in the company who had come out to welcome him. There was +Feather Dog, a famous scout, with whom he had shared a number of +thrilling adventures; and Sitting Eagle, another great scout, was in the +party. Then there was Kicking Bull, a renowned hunter, whom White Otter +had saved from death in a buffalo stampede. All those men greeted the +famous young Ogalala chief with great respect, and his heart filled with +pride as he realized the esteem in which he was held by those renowned +warriors. + +"You have come to help us fight the Blackfeet," said Feather Dog. "It is +good. We will do some big things." + +"I was going with my brother Sun Bird to find you, but the great chief +Curly Horse asked me to stay behind," explained Kicking Bull. "Some of +our young men saw smoke over near the mountains, and we were afraid that +the Blackfeet were coming back. That is why I held back." + +"It is good," declared White Otter. + +As the horsemen approached the camp the Minneconjoux began to shout the +name of White Otter and to sing songs of welcome. The daring exploits of +the young Ogalala war chief had made him famous throughout the great +Dacotah nation, and the Minneconjoux were prepared to honor him with +the courtesies due a great chief. When he reached the edge of the +village he was met by a delegation of noted warriors who led him through +the camp, so that all the people might have a chance to welcome him. + +"See, here is White Otter!" cried the Minneconjoux. "It is White Otter, +the great chief of the Ogalalas. It is White Otter, the great war +leader. See, White Otter, our lodges are open. We have cooked much meat. +You must come to our lodges, and eat with us." + +Men, women and children followed behind his pony, as his escort led him +toward the lodge of the famous chief, Curly Horse. The Minneconjoux war +chief was waiting to receive him. Beside him stood Rain Crow, the noted +Minneconjoux medicine man, who was the father of Sun Bird and Little +Raven. The most renowned men of the tribe composed the company which +Curly Horse had summoned to greet the Ogalala. They were dressed in +their choicest possessions and they made a splendid appearance. Each of +them wore the coveted war bonnet of eagle plumes, and carried his +coupstick with a record of his achievements on the war trail. It was a +notable gathering, and White Otter thrilled with pride as he looked upon +those splendid men of the great Dacotah nation. + +Curly Horse, the chief, was particularly imposing. He was a middle-aged +man, tall, and of powerful physique, with stern features, and steady, +penetrating eyes. His voice was deep and commanding, and he carried +himself with the pride and dignity appropriate to his rank. He wore a +great headdress of eagle feathers which extended to the ground. Each +feather was tipped with a small tuft of hair taken from the scalps of +his foes. His buckskin shirt was decorated with weasel tails, and mystic +symbols traced with colored porcupine quills. His buckskin breeches were +deeply fringed, and ornamented with porcupine quills and elk teeth. A +breastplate composed of the leg bones of deer covered his breast. About +his neck was a necklace of bear claws. His moccasins were of buffalo +hide, beautifully decorated with porcupine quills and colored grass. +Over his arm he carried a magnificent robe of the grizzly bear. + +"White Otter, you have come to my lodge--it is good," said Curly Horse. +"These great warriors have come here to meet you. Many moons have passed +since you came here before. My people have talked about you. They wanted +you to come back. Now I will tell you that we feel good because you have +come here." + +"I have listened to the words of the great chief, Curly Horse," replied +White Otter. "They make me feel good. I will keep them in my heart. The +Minneconjoux are my brothers. When my brothers call, I come. My brother +Sun Bird called me. I am here. I am going with my brothers to fight the +Blackfeet. We will bring back many ponies." + +As White Otter ceased speaking Curly Horse glanced at Rain Crow and the +famous medicine man stepped forward to greet the Ogalala. + +Rain Crow appeared older and less robust than his chief, but he, too, +was of striking appearance. His face was seamed and scarred, and his +hair was streaked with gray. His eyes, however, flashed with the fire of +youth. He wore a large wolfskin cap decorated with a great pair of +buffalo horns. His face was painted with white clay. His hair was +divided into two braids bound with otter skin. His buckskin shirt and +breeches were decorated with mysterious medicine symbols. About his neck +was a necklace of sacred charms or tokens, each believed to possess some +strange power which would aid him in overcoming the Evil Spirits, and +preserve him from the attacks of his foes. In his right hand he carried +the sacred medicine pipe. Over his left arm was a handsome robe of +wolfskins. + +"White Otter, Curly Horse has spoken," said Rain Crow. "Now I will give +you some words. I feel good when I see you here. You are a young man, +but you are a great chief. I believe you will do something big when you +meet the boastful Blackfeet. White Otter, you say that Sun Bird and +Little Raven are your brothers. It is good. I will make you my son. My +son, the lodge of Rain Crow is open for you. I have spoken." + +"Rain Crow, you are a great Medicine Person," replied White Otter. "You +have done some big things. I have heard my people talk about you. It is +true that Sun Bird and Little Raven are my brothers. You have called me +your son. It is a great thing. I feel good about it. I will tell my +people about it. It will make them feel big. My father, I will bring you +some ponies from the Blackfeet camp. I have finished." + +Many other noted warriors made speeches praising the ability and courage +of the young Ogalala, and welcoming him to the Minneconjoux camp. When +the ceremony was finally concluded Sun Bird escorted White Otter to the +lodge of Rain Crow. + +"Now I will tell you how the Blackfeet ran off all those ponies," Sun +Bird said, when they were alone. + +"Yes, tell me about it," urged White Otter. + +"We were dancing the Buffalo Dance," said Sun Bird. "My father was +singing the Medicine Songs. The people were sitting near the fire. The +fast war ponies were tied near the lodges, but many good hunting ponies +were out on the plain. We left them there because our scouts did not see +any signs of enemies. Only a few boys were watching those ponies. Well, +while the people were dancing and singing we heard a great noise. There +were many shouts. Then we heard many ponies running. Pretty soon a boy +rode into the village. He was shouting, 'The Blackfeet! The Blackfeet! +They have run off the ponies!' Then we jumped upon the war ponies, and +were going out to chase the Blackfeet, but Curly Horse held us back. +'Wait!' shouted Curly Horse. 'Perhaps it is a trick. Perhaps a great war +party is about to rush into the camp. We will watch, and see what comes +of it.' We knew that those were good words, and we waited to guard the +camp. Well, no one came. Then we knew that the Blackfeet had gone away +with the ponies. When it got light one of the boys came back. His pony +fell down and died when he came into the village. He rode a long ways to +get away from the Blackfeet. The other boy did not come back. The +Blackfeet must have carried him away." + +"Who is he?" inquired White Otter. + +"He is Dancing Rabbit," Sun Bird told him. + +"His father was Lame Wolf. He was killed by our enemies, the Crows. His +mother fell into the water, and was carried away by the fierce Water +Monsters. Old Spotted Face is his grandfather. He feels very bad about +this thing." + +"I know Spotted Face," said White Otter. "He is a great man. We must try +to help him." + +"Perhaps we will find Dancing Rabbit in the Blackfeet camp," replied Sun +Bird. + +The day had already ended, and as the evening shadows fell upon the camp +the Minneconjoux began preparations for the great war dance. A large +fire was lighted in the center of the village, and the entire tribe +assembled to honor the men who were going to fight the Blackfeet. The +warriors who had enlisted in the war party marched noisily about the +camp, singing their war songs, and shouting boastful threats against +their foes. As they finally approached the council fire they were +greeted with wild yells of approval from the great company who awaited +them. Then all subsided into respectful silence as Curly Horse and the +principal chiefs of the tribe walked solemnly into the council circle. + +After the chief and his escort had taken positions, the warriors lined +up before him and waited for him to address them. He looked upon them +with pride and affection. Most of them were young men in the prime of +their youth, and their bold, flashing eyes and fearless faces proclaimed +their courage. They were led by Sun Bird who had organized the war +party. He called White Otter to stand beside him, and the Minneconjoux +murmured approval of the honor. + +"My brothers, I see that you are ready for war," said Curly Horse. "You +are going to fight the Blackfeet. It is good. They are our enemies. They +have carried off many of our ponies. You must bring them back. You must +also bring some good Blackfeet ponies. Perhaps you will find Dancing +Rabbit in the Blackfeet camp. Then you must carry him away. Spotted Face +is waiting for him. I will not tell you how to fight. You are Dacotahs. +It is enough. Now I will ask Rain Crow to give you some words." + +Before speaking, Rain Crow drew an ember from the fire and lighted the +sacred medicine pipe. Then he puffed the smoke toward the heavens, +toward the earth, and toward each of the four winds. He kept up a weird, +high-pitched chant, and tossed small handfuls of dried sweet grass into +the flames. It was evident that he was asking success for the war party, +and the Minneconjoux watched him with grave interest. When he had +completed the ceremony, he stood some time staring fixedly at the stars. +Then he addressed the war company. + +"My friends, you have seen me smoke the great Medicine Pipe," he said. +"It is good. It will help you. I have asked Wakantunka, the Great +Mystery, to make you strong. I have asked the Good Spirits to help you. +I have asked the Bad Spirits to do you no harm. I believe everything +will be good. I believe you will overcome the Blackfeet. Listen, my +friends, I hear the noise of many ponies running. Yes, yes, those are +Sioux ponies. Yes, I hear some Blackfeet ponies. They are running toward +the Minneconjoux camp. I see these brave young men riding behind them." + +His prophecy roused the Minneconjoux. Men, women and children united +their voices in the war cry of the Dacotahs. It rang through the camp, +and echoed off across the plain as a challenge to their foes. Rain Crow +laughed, and shook his clenched hand toward the north. + +"Hi, you Blackfeet people, do you hear that noise?" he cried, excitedly. +"Pretty soon you will know what it means. Then you will shake, and cry +like young deer when they hear the wolf cry." + +His words again threw the people into a frenzy of excitement. The war +cry again rang out across the plain, and before the sound had died away +the warriors had assembled for the war dance. They formed a large circle +about the fire, and stood awaiting the word from Sun Bird, their leader. +A number of aged men had come forward with the war drums, and taken +places near the dancers. A hush fell upon the vast assemblage, as the +Minneconjoux watched eagerly for the interesting spectacle to begin. + +Then Sun Bird raised his voice in the familiar strains of the great war +song, and the dance began. Keeping time with the solemn, rhythmical +throbbing of the war drums, the dancers moved slowly about the fire +chanting the boastful words of the war song, and flourishing their +weapons. They had not circled many times about the fire, however, before +they cast off restraint, and flung themselves into ecstasies of the +dance with wild abandon. The war song was forgotten, as the dancers +began to shout their boasts and threats against the powerful foes in the +north. Each moment added to their excitement, and as the war drums +throbbed in shorter, quicker beats, the dancers quickened their steps to +hold the rhythm. Although each held his place in the circle, they had +abandoned all attempt to dance in unison, and each man was interpreting +the spirit of the dance to suit himself. All, however, kept time to the +beats of the war drums, and the droning chants of the aged musicians. As +quick and sinewy as mountain cats, the young warriors pranced about the +fire in a frenzy of enthusiasm. Each tried to surpass his fellows in the +mad antics of the dance, and their maneuvers brought yells of approval +from the fascinated onlookers. At one moment the dancers would stoop +near the ground, and dance forward with short, mincing steps, shading +their eyes with their hands, as if searching for the trail of their +foes. Then they would suddenly spring upright and announce their success +with a piercing whoop. A moment afterward they would leap forward with +war club raised to deliver the fatal stroke. Then they would begin a +wild dance about the fallen foe. Some of the older warriors carried +their coupsticks with the trophies won on former war expeditions. As +they danced they shook these priceless possessions before the envious +eyes of their tribesmen. Sometimes one of those dancers would drive his +coupstick in the ground while he and several companions danced wildly +about it, rushing up to touch it and reciting some great achievement as +they did so. Then all would suddenly stand transfixed in their places +while they raised their faces toward the stars, and united their voices +in the piercing Dacotah war cry. + +The spectacle was weird and fascinating. The grotesque contortions of +the dancers in the lurid glare of the fire, the fierce expression on +their faces, the solemn throbbing of the war drums, the picturesque +assemblage of spectators, the dim, ghostly outlines of the lodges in the +shadows, the gaunt, wolf-like dogs skulking along the edge of the camp, +made a striking impression on the memory. + +White Otter, as a famous war chief of the Ogalalas, was entitled to +stand with Curly Horse and the prominent men of the tribe. He declined +the honor, however, and took his place in the circle of dancers. The +Minneconjoux watched him with approving eyes as he threw himself into +the spirit of the dance. When the ceremony was finally brought to an end +toward daylight, Curly Horse called the Ogalala to his lodge. + +"White Otter, you are a great warrior," said Curly Horse. "A great +warrior must have a good horse. The Pawnees have killed your war pony. +It is true that you have taken a good pony from those boastful people. +Well, you are a Dacotah, and you must ride a Dacotah pony. I am going to +give you one of my fastest ponies to ride to the Blackfeet camp. I have +spoken." + +"Curly Horse, you have done a big thing," White Otter replied, +gratefully. "You are a great chief, and I know that you have the fastest +ponies. Yes, I will ride your pony to the Blackfeet camp." + +"It is good," declared Curly Horse. + +When White Otter told Sun Bird of the gift which he had received from +Curly Horse, Sun Bird beamed with pleasure. He believed that there were +few, if any, ponies in the entire Dacotah nation which possessed the +speed and endurance of those owned by the great Minneconjoux chief. + +"Perhaps when you ride that horse you will leave me far behind," Sun +Bird said, banteringly. + +"Well, my brother, if I get to the Blackfeet camp ahead of you I will +leave some Blackfeet for you to kill," laughed White Otter. + + + + +CHAPTER IV + +AWAY INTO THE NORTH + + +As White Otter and Sun Bird came from the lodge at dawn they found a boy +waiting with a fiery little piebald pony. + +"Curly Horse has sent you this pony," said the lad, as he passed the +lariat to White Otter. + +"Tell the great chief Curly Horse that White Otter feels good about this +thing," said the Ogalala. + +"I know that pony," Sun Bird told him. "It is very fast, but it is very +wild. You must watch out for it." + +"I will ride it," White Otter assured him. + +He was no sooner upon its back, however, than the hot-tempered little +beast began to rear and plunge in a manner that would have proved +disastrous to a less expert rider. White Otter, however, refused to be +thrown, and Sun Bird whooped with boyish glee as he capered wildly about +the rearing pony and shouted encouragement to his friend. His shouts +soon brought an appreciative audience from the lodges, and White Otter +realized that his reputation as a horseman was at stake. He set his +sinewy thighs more closely behind the shoulders of the plunging piebald, +and pulled hard on the lariat which was twisted about the animal's lower +jaw. The Minneconjoux soon saw that he was an expert, and they offered +neither criticism nor advice. They watched with flashing eyes as horse +and rider fought for supremacy. Then the pony suddenly whirled about and +dashed among them, and they scattered like a covey of frightened quail +to avoid the flying hoofs. The piebald bucked its way through the center +of the camp, with a great company of men and boys racing along behind it +and yelling at the top of their voices. Some women were broiling meat +near the end of the village, and as they heard the wild commotion, and +saw the pony racing directly toward them, they fled to the lodges in a +panic, crying out that the Blackfeet had invaded the camp. + +In the meantime the piebald had collided with a number of other +high-spirited ponies which were tied before the lodges of their owners, +and several of the animals broke loose and imitated the mad antics of +the piebald. In a few moments the entire camp was in an uproar. The +barking of the dogs, the shouts of the men, the screams of the women, +and the frightened cries of the children mingled in one great din which +turned the village into bedlam. + +"It is bad," cried Curly Horse, as he watched the disorder from the +entrance to his lodge. "Some Evil Spirit must have gone into that +horse." + +The piebald, however, had finally exhausted itself. It stood upon +trembling legs at the edge of the camp, with its head lowered in defeat. +White Otter reached over, and gently stroked the sweaty neck. Then he +raised its head and spoke sharply, and the piebald gave obedience to its +master. He rode directly to the lodge of Curly Horse. + +"That is a bad horse," said Curly Horse. "I will give you another pony." + +"No, no!" cried White Otter. "I will keep this pony. It is fast, and +strong. It will make a great war pony." + +"Well, I see that you can ride it, so I will say no more about it," +replied Curly Horse. + +The wild escapade of the little piebald had aroused the camp, and as the +members of the war party finally rounded up the loose ponies, and +assembled in the center of the village, the entire tribe gathered to +witness the departure. When the gallant company was ready to leave, +Curly Horse came forward to address them. + +"My brothers, you are about to ride away to the great Blackfeet camp," +he said. "Before you lies a long and dangerous trail. We have many +enemies in that country. The Blackfeet are the strongest. They are very +sly. You must be as brave as great Matohota, the bear, and as cunning as +Tokala, the little gray fox. I see many brave warriors among you. I see +Sun Bird, your leader. He is a great warrior. I see White Otter, the +great Ogalala chief. I see Little Raven. He is very young, but he has +done big things. I see Short Bear. He is very brave. I see Feather Dog. +He is a great scout. I see Lean Wolf and Sitting Eagle. They have been +on many war trails. I see many more brave warriors. It is a great war +party. I believe you will do what you are setting out to do. I believe +you will bring back many ponies. I will ask Wakantunka, the Great +Mystery, to help you. I will ask our brother, Huya, the great war bird, +to lead you to the Blackfeet camp. Go, my brothers, Curly Horse has +spoken." + +"Curly Horse, you have given us big words," replied Sun Bird. "We will +keep them in our hearts. We will remember that we are Dacotahs. It is +enough. We will go." + +A few moments afterward the war party rode from the village. Many of the +older warriors who were remaining behind to guard the camp accompanied +the war party some distance across the plain. The old men, the boys, and +the women and children gathered at the edge of the camp, singing the war +songs, and calling upon Wakantunka to protect their warriors from the +fierce and warlike Blackfeet. + +Sun Bird asked White Otter to ride with him at the head of the company. +The youthful Minneconjoux war leader fully realized his responsibility, +and he was glad to have the aid and counsel of the famous young war +chief whom he had asked to accompany him. + +The war party was not a large one. It contained less than a third of the +fighting men of the tribe. The Minneconjoux feared to send a larger +force from the village, for they knew that their old enemies, the Crows, +as well as several scouting parties of Blackfeet, had recently been seen +within a day's travel of the Minneconjoux camp. They determined, +therefore, to send a small force of picked warriors against the +Blackfeet in the hope of recovering the stolen ponies, and learning the +fate of the young Minneconjoux who had been carried away. The company +chosen for the perilous undertaking was composed mostly of young +warriors famous for their courage and fighting ability, and a few older +veterans, like Lean Wolf and Sitting Eagle, whose mature judgment would +check the reckless impetuosity of their younger companions. + +"Well, my brother, how do you feel about this thing?" Sun Bird suddenly +asked White Otter, as they cantered along in advance of the war party. + +"The Blackfeet are very strong," White Otter replied, thoughtfully. +"Wolf Robe, my grandfather, has told me about them. I have never fought +those people. Wolf Robe says that they are braver than the Pawnees. Do +you know about them?" + +"Yes, I have fought against them many times," Sun Bird told him. "They +are the enemies of my people. They are brave. Many Buffaloes is their +chief. He is a great warrior. He rides a mysterious war pony. It is as +swift as the wind, and as black as the night. Its eyes shine like the +little lights up there in the High Place. My people believe it must be a +Medicine Pony. Curly Horse would give many good presents for that pony." + +At that moment their talk was interrupted by the appearance of a golden +eagle, the war bird of the Dacotahs, which was circling slowly some +distance toward the north. The superstitious Minneconjoux immediately +accepted it as a good omen, as they recalled the words of Curly Horse, +their chief. + +"See, there is Huya, the great war bird," they cried. "Curly Horse has +sent him to lead us to the Blackfeet camp. Come, Huya, our brother, look +about you, and show us where our enemies are hiding." + +The eagle, however, soon disappeared into the clouds, and the +Minneconjoux cried, "Huya has gone up there to look around. He is +looking for the Blackfeet. When he sees them he will fly over them, and +show us where they are." + +As they moved farther from the camp Sun Bird began to take precautions +against the possibility of encountering foes. Two scouts were detailed +on either flank of the war party, and other riders dropped back to guard +the rear. Sun Bird, White Otter and Little Raven rode some distance in +front. Thus the courageous band of Dacotahs made their way across the +great plain that extended for unknown leagues into the northward, the +stronghold of the mighty Blackfeet nation. + +The day was two thirds gone when White Otter suddenly discovered a +horseman on the summit of a low ridge far away toward the west. He +immediately stopped and showed him to Sun Bird and Little Raven. +Apparently aware that he had been seen, the distant rider began to ride +rapidly in a circle. It was the signal for danger. Sun Bird appeared +alarmed. + +"It is one of our scouts," he said, uneasily. "Running Dog and Lean Wolf +went that way. That man is far away, but I believe he is Lean Wolf. He +has seen something bad. Come, Little Raven, go and find out about it." + +As Little Raven raced away to meet the scout, the main company of riders +came up. They, too, had discovered the rider on the ridge, and many of +them were eager to go over there in the hope of finding foes. + +"No, that would be foolish," Sun Bird said, firmly. "We will wait here +until Little Raven comes back and tells us about it. That scout has not +called us. He is telling us that he has seen something. See, Little +Raven is a long ways off. Pretty soon we will know about this thing. We +must wait." + +"It is the only thing to do," agreed the famous warrior, Sitting Eagle. + +They watched anxiously as the scout turned his pony down the ridge, and +rode to meet Little Raven. The distance made positive identification +difficult, but most of them agreed that it was Lean Wolf. When the two +riders finally met, the members of the war party watched them with +breathless interest. They also watched the plain in all directions for +the sudden appearance of foes. Then the warriors who had been loitering +in the rear overtook them. + +"What has happened?" they inquired anxiously. "Who is over there?" + +"Lean Wolf has made the danger signal," explained their comrades. +"Little Raven has gone over to find out about it. Did you see anything?" + +"We saw some wolves," replied the scouts. + +"Perhaps they were Pawnees," suggested Sun Bird. + +"No, we saw them running on the plain, and they were wolves," declared +High Hawk, one of the warriors who had composed the rear guard. + +"See, Little Raven is coming back," White Otter told Sun Bird. "He is +riding fast. He has something to tell us." + +"Lean Wolf has gone back to the ridge," said Sun Bird. + +They waited impatiently as Little Raven rode toward them at top speed. +In the meantime the other rider was cantering toward the ridge. When he +reached it he rode up the low slope and disappeared over the summit. + +"Lean Wolf has gone to watch something," declared his tribesmen. + +When Little Raven finally reached them they listened with eager +attention while he told Sun Bird what he had learned. + +"That man is Lean Wolf," said Little Raven. "He found fresh pony tracks +over beyond that ridge. They were going the way we are going. There were +many ponies. They were riding ponies. There were no marks of lodge +poles. Lean Wolf says it must be a war party. He does not know who they +are. Running Dog is following the trail. Lean Wolf says that we must +watch sharp when night comes. He says that we must stop pretty soon at +the water place. Then he will know where to find us. Perhaps he will +come when it gets dark. Perhaps he will go to find the camp of those +people. My brothers, I have brought you the words of Lean Wolf." + +"It is good," replied Sun Bird. "My friends, you have heard the words of +our brother, Lean Wolf. I believe that some of our enemies are over +there behind that ridge. Lean Wolf says there are many pony tracks. +There must be many riders. Perhaps it is a big war party. We must watch +sharp. We will go ahead until we come to the water place. Then we will +stop. Perhaps Lean Wolf will come there after it gets dark." + +As they were about to resume their way they saw one of the scouts from +the east riding toward them. As he came nearer they recognized him as +Feather Dog. + +"Why have you stopped?" Feather Dog inquired, curiously. + +"Lean Wolf found many pony tracks over there behind that ridge," they +told him. + +"Perhaps those are the ponies which the Blackfeet took away," said +Feather Dog. + +"No, the tracks are fresh," Sun Bird explained. + +"Then we must watch out," declared the famous scout. + +"Did you see anything over there?" inquired the Minneconjoux. + +"We saw some buffaloes, but they were far away," replied Feather Dog. + +After he had learned where his comrades intended to stop for the night, +he immediately left them, and rode away to join his companion, a young +warrior named Proud Hawk. At the same time the war party resumed their +way toward the north. They were enthusiastic over the possibility of an +early encounter with their foes, and Sun Bird had considerable +difficulty in restraining some of the younger warriors who were eager to +ride after the unknown horsemen. His rank as war leader, however, gave +him authority to command. They accepted his orders, therefore, and +followed him across the plain, chanting their war songs, and boasting of +the deeds which they pledged themselves to perform. + +The evening shadows were already falling when the Sioux finally came in +sight of the appointed camp site. It was a small water hole in the midst +of a straggling growth of stunted trees. However, as it offered good +pasturage for the ponies, it was a favorite stopping place. It marked +the northern boundary of the Minneconjoux hunting grounds, and few of +even the most venturesome hunters cared to risk going farther into the +north unless accompanied by a strong force of their tribesmen. It was +dangerous ground, as both the Blackfeet and the Crows were constantly +roaming about those boundless northern plains. + +"Well, my friends, we will stop here until the next sun comes up," said +Sun Bird, as he dismounted from his pony. + + + + +CHAPTER V + +SIOUX SCOUTS + + +Alert to their peril, the Sioux took every precaution against an attack. +As the twilight slowly faded, and the night shadows settled upon the +plain, the ponies were picketed in a circle about the camp site, and +details of warriors were appointed to take turns in watching through the +night. There was no fire, and the evening meal consisted of the usual +war rations of dried buffalo meat and berries. + +The warriors who had been scouting behind the war party arrived at the +camp site before dark, but the scouts who had ridden along the flanks +failed to appear. The absence of Feather Dog and Proud Hawk, who had +been scouting toward the east, caused considerable comment. The Sioux +knew that some time might pass before Lean Wolf and Running Dog gained +the desired information about the mysterious horsemen to the westward, +but they were keenly curious to know what had detained Feather Dog and +his companion. + +"Perhaps something bad has happened to them," suggested a young warrior +named Many Feathers. + +"No, I do not believe it," Sun Bird declared, confidently. "Feather Dog +is a great scout. He has been on many war trails. It is hard to catch an +old wolf. Come, White Otter, you are a great war leader. Tell us how you +feel about it." + +"My brothers, what Sun Bird says is true," declared White Otter, +"Feather Dog is a great scout. Perhaps he is trying to find out about +something. I believe he will come here." + +While they were talking the familiar bark of the little gray fox sounded +from the eastward. It was speedily answered, and a few moments afterward +Feather Dog and Proud Hawk rode to the camp site. + +"Well, my brother, what did you find?" Sun Bird asked Feather Dog. + +"We saw three scouts," replied Feather Dog. "They were far away and they +did not see us. We hid behind a hill, and watched them a long time. Then +we followed them. When it got dark we could not find them. They did not +make a fire. I believe they were looking for enemies." + +"Do you know who they are?" Sun Bird inquired, eagerly. + +"No, we could not get close enough to find out about it," Feather Dog +told him. + +"Which way were they going?" asked Sun Bird. + +"They were going the same way we are going, but they were far away +toward the place where the sun comes up," replied the scout. + +"My brothers, you have heard the words of Feather Dog," said Sun Bird. +"Our enemies are on two sides of us. We must be very cautious. We will +wait here until it gets light. Perhaps Lean Wolf will come and tell us +something." + +In the meantime the wily Sioux prepared themselves against the +possibility of a sudden attack. The camp was surrounded by sharp-eared +scouts who stationed themselves some distance out on the plain to listen +for the approach of foes. The ponies were picketed inside the circle of +warriors, who lay upon the plain with their weapons beside them. + +Sun Bird and White Otter, however, remained awake. The young +Minneconjoux war leader was anxious to consult his friend concerning the +perilous advance across the Blackfeet hunting grounds. The young +warriors moved beyond earshot of their companions, therefore, and seated +themselves to talk. + +"White Otter, I believe we are in danger," said Sun Bird. + +"It is true," White Otter replied, soberly. "There are many enemies in +this country. I believe we will have some big fights before we get to +the Blackfeet camp." + +Sun Bird was about to reply when they were startled by a strange +rumbling noise toward the north. They listened a moment in anxious +suspense, and then they leaped to their feet in alarm. It sounded like +the hoofbeats of many ponies bearing down upon the camp site. + +"Call our people! Call our people!" cried Sun Bird, as he rushed to +arouse the sleeping Minneconjoux. + +At that moment they heard the guards, who had been stationed on the +plain, racing toward the camp. The picketed ponies were plunging and +snorting, and the alarmed Minneconjoux were frantically untying the +picket ropes. + +"The Blackfeet! The Blackfeet!" they shouted, excitedly. + +"Tatanka! Tatanka! The buffaloes! The buffaloes!" cried the sentinels +who had been watching on the north side of the camp. + +Then the Sioux suddenly realized the truth. A vast herd of stampeded +buffaloes were thundering down upon them. There was not a moment to +spare. Springing upon the frightened ponies, the Sioux rode madly into +the night to escape from the great mass of panic-stricken beasts behind +them. The buffaloes were sweeping across the plain with the irresistible +force of an avalanche, and the horsemen knew that only the speed of +their ponies could save them. They kept close together, and rode at a +breakneck pace. A false step meant destruction for horse and rider, and +the Sioux made little attempt to guide the agile little beasts beneath +them. + +Sun Bird and White Otter soon found themselves beside one another at the +head of the company. The two ponies were running evenly, and it was +apparent that neither of them had reached the limit of its speed. +Nevertheless, they were well in advance of all the other ponies, and +appeared to be increasing their lead with each stride. + +"That wild horse can run," laughed Sun Bird as his blood tingled with +the excitement of the race. "Come, we will see what that pony can do." + +"Hi!" shouted White Otter, as Sun Bird suddenly took the lead. + +He had carefully estimated the ability of the little roan which Sun Bird +rode, and felt sure that it was a worthy competitor for the piebald. +Now, as Sun Bird applied his rawhide quirt, the roan began to show its +speed. The piebald, however, quickly accepted the challenge, and +although White Otter made no effort to force it the fiery little beast +was soon at the shoulder of the roan. Then they raced madly through the +darkness at a speed which few if any of the ponies in the great Dacotah +nation could equal. Sun Bird was leaning forward and vigorously applying +his whip. White Otter, however, was still allowing the piebald to make +its own pace. Inch by inch it crept steadily forward until the roan's +lead was cut to a nose length. Then, as he perceived that the roan had +reached the limit of its powers, White Otter pulled heavily against the +lower jaw of the piebald. He knew that a few more strides would take it +into the lead, and regard for the pride of his friend made him unwilling +to claim the victory. + +"Listen," he cried, suddenly. "Our people have turned around. Come, we +must follow them." + +"No! No! I see what you are trying to do," Sun Bird cried, impatiently. +"Come, let me see that pony run." + +Then the Minneconjoux struck the piebald a sharp blow with his quirt, +and the marvelous beast bounded past him and raced away at a speed which +astounded its rider. White Otter could scarcely believe that he was +mounted upon a creature of real flesh and blood, for the piebald was +rushing through the night at a pace which seemed beyond the powers of +anything mortal. Carried away with enthusiasm, the Ogalala applied his +quirt for the first time, and the piebald reached the limit of its +speed. White Otter was forced to crouch close over the pony's neck to +keep his breath. He was dazed by the pace at which he was being carried +across the plain. It seemed as if he were flying through space on the +wings of a tempest. + +"It must be a Medicine Horse," he whispered, superstitiously. + +When he finally succeeded in pulling the piebald to a canter, he found +that he had completely lost Sun Bird, and the valiant little roan. He +had also raced beyond sound of the buffalo herd. The piebald was +breathing hard, but it showed no signs of exhaustion, and White Otter +believed that its stamina was equal to its speed. Then, as he stopped to +listen, he heard a signal some distance toward the east. He had heard +the Minneconjoux turn in that direction as Sun Bird forced him into the +last desperate sprint. It was evident, therefore, that having gained a +sufficient lead upon the buffaloes, the Minneconjoux were circling back +toward the camp site. He believed that the signal was from Sun Bird. To +reassure him, White Otter replied with the bark of the little gray fox. + +"Hi! the buffaloes are coming," he said, as he heard the distant rumble +of their hoof beats. + +Realizing that he was directly in their path, White Otter turned his +pony toward the east, and rode off at a brisk canter. The buffalo herd +was a long ways behind him, and he had little fear of being overtaken. +There were other perils, however, which caused him more concern. He had +heard Feather Dog tell of three mysterious riders to the eastward, and +it was possible that they were scouts from a larger company. Therefore, +White Otter determined to advance with caution. He believed that Sun +Bird was close at hand, and his first thought was to find him. It was +not long before he overtook him. + +"Ho, my brother, that pony did not come back as fast as he went away," +laughed Sun Bird. + +"It is foolish to run when the race is finished," replied White Otter. + +"That is the fastest horse I ever saw," Sun Bird declared, +enthusiastically. + +"Do you believe that this pony could catch that great horse of Many +Buffaloes, the Blackfeet chief?" White Otter asked, eagerly. + +"No," Sun Bird told him. "There is no Dacotah pony that can catch that +horse." + +White Otter was not so sure about it. He could not believe that any +horse had greater speed than the piebald. He kept his opinion to +himself, however, as he did not wish to appear boastful before his +friend. + +"Well, we got away from those buffaloes," said Sun Bird. "Now we must go +back to the water place. We will find our friends there." + +Feeling sure that they had passed beyond the edge of the great buffalo +herd, they began to circle toward the camp site. They were riding at an +easy canter, when they were suddenly halted by the howling of a prairie +wolf directly ahead of them. Determined to take no chances, they +listened to convince themselves that the call was genuine. + +"Yes, it is Mayash," declared Sun Bird. + +As White Otter agreed that it really was a wolf which had raised the +cry, they advanced on their way. However, they neither saw nor heard +anything of the skulking gray prowler. It was evident that the wolf had +slunk away at their approach. + +Then as they drew near the camp site the little piebald raised its head, +and whinnied softly. The cautious young Sioux again stopped to +investigate. They knew that the piebald had caught the scent of other +ponies. While they waited, listening for a clew, the familiar Dacotah +signal sounded within bow range of them. + +"It is good," said Sun Bird. "We have found our people." + +A few moments later they met the scout who had challenged them. He was +Hollow Bear, a famous Minneconjoux hunter. + +"We have been watching for you," Hollow Bear told them. "There is much +buffalo meat at the water place. Some of the buffaloes ran against the +trees. Some fell into the water hole. Some were dead. Some we killed. +There must have been many buffaloes in that herd. The ground is all +broken up." + +"Has Lean Wolf come here?" Sun Bird inquired, eagerly. + +"No," replied Hollow Bear. + +They left the scout, and rode on toward the camp site. They found the +members of the war party lying some distance out on the plain, as the +camp site was littered with the bodies of dead buffaloes. The Sioux said +that they had dragged several of the great beasts from the pool. + +"It is good that we got away," said Sun Bird. "Those buffaloes would +have pounded us into the ground." + +"Well, there is good meat over there but we cannot use it," complained +Sitting Eagle. "There are many robes, but there is little hair upon +them." + +The Minneconjoux said that they had ridden far enough to get a safe +distance in front of the herd, and then they had turned eastward and +circled back to the camp site. They seemed rather curious to know why +Sun Bird and White Otter had been so long returning. Those crafty young +warriors, however, made no explanation. White Otter had no desire to +proclaim the superiority of his pony, and Sun Bird was quite content to +keep silent concerning the defeat of his famous little roan. + +Dawn was breaking when Running Dog, the companion of Lean Wolf rode in +from the west. The war party crowded eagerly about him, asking for news +of the horsemen whom he and Lean Wolf had followed. + +"We followed those people a long ways," Running Dog told them. "When it +got dark we saw their fire. We went pretty close. Then we got down from +our ponies. We turned their heads out of the wind so they would not +call. I held the ponies. Lean Wolf crawled up near the fire. He was +away a long time. Then he came back, and told me about those people. +They are Crows. They are carrying meat. It is a great hunting party. +They are going straight ahead. Lean Wolf says that you must watch sharp. +Perhaps the Crows will send out scouts. Perhaps they will see you. Then +there will be a fight. Lean Wolf says to go straight ahead. We will keep +following the Crows until we find out where they are going. Then we will +come and tell you about it. I cannot tell you any more." + +"It is good," replied Sun Bird. "Tell Lean Wolf that we will do as he +tells us to do. We will keep a sharp watch for our enemies." + + + + +CHAPTER VI + +THE LONE RIDER + + +After Running Dog had left them, Sun Bird made preparations to resume +their advance toward the distant Blackfeet camp. Profiting by the +warning which the scouts had brought, the cautious young war leader +determined to make every provision for the safety of the war party. In +addition to the two expert scouts riding along each flank, Sun Bird +appointed a strong rear guard under command of Sitting Eagle. Then, as a +further precaution against blundering into a trap, he asked White Otter +and Little Raven to accompany him on a reconnaissance far in advance of +the war party. + +"My brothers, you must wait here until we are far ahead," he told the +Minneconjoux, as he rode away. + +Once beyond sight of their comrades, the three young scouts realized +that their mission was a perilous one. They had little doubt that foes +were on both sides of them, and it was possible that the Sioux war +party had already been discovered. In that event there was great +probability that crafty foes might circle around behind them, and +separate them from their companions. + +"We must watch sharp," cautioned Sun Bird. + +He hoped to lead the war party within an easy day's travel of the +Blackfeet camp. Then he planned to go into hiding and send scouts under +cover of the darkness to locate the Blackfeet ponies and reconnoiter +about the village. In the meantime Sun Bird realized the constant peril +of colliding with his enemies. However, he relied upon the skill and +daring of his scouts to give him timely warning of an approaching war +party. As they were riding cautiously across the plain they again saw +the war eagle circling high up toward the eastward. They stopped and +watched it with great interest. + +"See! our brother, Huya, has come down out of the clouds," said Sun +Bird. "I believe he is flying around over there to show us where our +enemies are hiding." + +Soon afterward they saw a solitary horseman ride over a distant rise of +the plain. He quickly discovered them, and immediately stopped his pony. +For some moments he continued to watch them. Then he turned about and +galloped from view. The Sioux also had stopped at sight of the +stranger, and now that he had disappeared Sun Bird was at a loss to +determine just what to do. The rider had been too far away to be +identified, but his actions made it plain that he was neither Feather +Dog nor Proud Hawk. + +"Perhaps he is one of the scouts that Feather Dog told about," suggested +Little Raven. + +"Yes, that may be true," said Sun Bird. "White Otter, what do you make +of it?" + +"I do not know what to make of it," acknowledged White Otter. "That man +saw us. If he is a scout he will go to tell his people about us. It is +bad. We must watch sharp." + +"We are scouts," said Sun Bird. "We must tell our brothers about this +thing." + +"It is the best thing to do," agreed White Otter. + +"I will go back, and tell them about it," Little Raven volunteered. + +As the others agreed, he immediately turned his pony, and rode back to +warn the war party. The main company of Minneconjoux had not come in +sight, and Sun Bird and White Otter felt somewhat anxious for the safety +of the youthful scout who had gone to meet his tribesmen. If a strong +force of foes were loitering in the vicinity, it would be easy for them +to intercept the solitary Minneconjoux. In spite of his youthfulness, +however, Little Raven was an experienced warrior, and Sun Bird felt +certain that he was competent to look after himself in an emergency. + +"Sun Bird, I believe that warrior is watching over the top of that +hill," White Otter declared, suspiciously. + +"How do you know that?" Sun Bird inquired, anxiously. + +"I do not know it, but I believe I saw him peeping over the top of that +hill," replied White Otter. + +They looked anxiously toward the grassy knoll, and strained their eyes +to discover the skulking foe. The thought that he was watching made them +uneasy, and they were eager to learn if their suspicions were true. It +was some moments before White Otter finally became convinced. + +"Yes, I see him," he declared, positively. "He is peeping over the top +of that hill. I see his head over there near that little bush. Watch +sharp." + +"Yes, yes, I see his head," Sun Bird declared, a moment later. + +Convinced that the mysterious horseman really was watching them, they +believed that he was waiting to learn if they were followed by a larger +company. They had little doubt that he was a scout reconnoitering in +advance of a force of their foes. + +"It is bad," White Otter said, uneasily. "That man saw Little Raven ride +away. He will know that some one is following behind us. He will watch +until our friends come. Then he will tell his people about it." + +"Yes, I see that it is bad," said Sun Bird. "Perhaps if we ride over +there we can chase him away." + +"Come," White Otter proposed, recklessly. + +As they cantered briskly toward the knoll, the scout withdrew from +sight. They felt quite sure that he had merely slipped farther down the +opposite side of the ridge, and was still peering cautiously over the +top. As they felt convinced that the horseman was alone, they had little +fear of running into an ambush. When they got within arrow range, +however, they approached with great care. As a precaution against +attack, they separated and rode forward several arrow flights apart. +Once at the foot of the slope they rushed their ponies to the top, and +prepared to attack whoever confronted them. The scout, however, was +nowhere in sight. They searched the plain in vain; the mysterious +stranger had entirely disappeared. For a moment or so they were +completely baffled. Then White Otter suddenly smiled, and nodded +understandingly. + +"I know about it," he told Sun Bird. + +"Tell me," Sun Bird asked, eagerly. + +"That scout is very sharp," declared White Otter. "He has thrown his +pony, and he is hiding over there in that high grass." + +"Yes, I believe that is where he is hiding," agreed Sun Bird. + +The spot where they believed the scout had concealed himself was many +arrow flights away, and they knew it would be difficult to discover him +at that distance. They felt almost certain, however, that he was still +watching them from his new hiding place. The thought disturbed them. His +persistence made them suspicious. They wondered if he were trying to +fool them with some wily bit of stratagem. + +"Well, we will ride over there and chase him out," proposed Sun Bird. + +They had not gone an arrow flight, when a pony suddenly rose to its feet +in the long grass. An instant later the rider sprang upon its back and +raced away toward the south. He was too far in the lead to be easily +overtaken, and besides, the Sioux realized that it would be perilous to +follow him. They watched, therefore, while he sped across the plain. + +"We have chased him away--it is good," said Sun Bird. + +"Perhaps something bad will come of it," White Otter warned him. "If +that man is a Blackfoot, he will tell his people about us. Then it will +be hard to get near the camp." + +"Perhaps he is a Crow," Sun Bird suggested, hopefully. + +"Lean Wolf has told us that the Crows are over there," White Otter +reminded him, as he pointed toward the west. + +"That is true," agreed Sun Bird. "But perhaps they sent scouts over here +to look for the Blackfeet." + +White Otter remained silent. The appearance and the actions of the +unknown scout had made him wary. He feared that the Sioux war party was +in imminent danger of being surrounded and attacked by a superior force +of foes. The possibility distressed him. There seemed little chance of +avoiding the peril. + +"Sun Bird, I believe the best thing to do is to find our people," White +Otter declared, finally. "Perhaps Lean Wolf and Feather Dog have told +them something." + +"Yes, we will go to find our brothers," agreed Sun Bird. + + + + +CHAPTER VII + +SMOKE SIGNALS + + +As Sun Bird and White Otter rode cautiously over the ridge they saw the +Minneconjoux war party moving slowly across the plain. As soon as the +Minneconjoux discovered the two horsemen they immediately stopped to +watch them. + +"Our brothers are as cautious as Hitunkasan, the weasel," laughed Sun +Bird. "Well, we will tell them who we are." + +He raised his arms and clasped his hands together above his head. It was +the sign for friends. Then the two scouts rode rapidly toward the war +party. The Minneconjoux soon recognized them, and came across the plain. +Little Raven raced on in advance of his friends. + +"Well, my brothers, I see that you have come back," he said, as he rode +up to them. "It is good. What became of that scout?" + +"He has gone away," White Otter told him. + +"Did you kill him?" Little Raven inquired, eagerly. + +"No," replied Sun Bird. "When we rode after him he ran away." + +"Well, when he saw that you were Dacotahs he was frightened," Little +Raven said, boastfully. + +While they were talking the war party came up to them. Sun Bird found +Lean Wolf in command. He said that he had followed the Crows until he +felt sure that they were going to their village. Then he left Running +Dog to scout along the western flank of the war party, and returned to +his companions. + +"Do you believe those people know about us?" Sun Bird asked, anxiously. + +"No," Lean Wolf assured him. "They are far away. The scouts did not go +far from their people. Those Crows have killed plenty of game. They are +afraid the Blackfeet will catch them, and take it away." + +"Have you seen Feather Dog?" inquired Sun Bird. + +"No," replied Lean Wolf. + +Then the Minneconjoux inquired anxiously about the solitary horseman. +They said that Little Raven had told them about him, but they were eager +to know who he was and where he had gone. + +"I cannot tell you that," Sun Bird told them. "He was far away, and we +could not find out who he was. When we went after him he ran away. +Perhaps Feather Dog will tell us about him." + +"Yes, yes, perhaps Feather Dog will find out about him," the +Minneconjoux told one another, hopefully. + +"Well, my brothers, we will keep going ahead until we find a good place +to stop," said Sun Bird. "Then we will wait for Feather Dog and Proud +Hawk, and Running Dog. I believe they will have something to talk +about." + +The day was little more than half gone, however, when they saw three +riders approaching from the east. As the horsemen did not stop when they +discovered the war party, the Sioux believed that two of the riders must +be Feather Dog and Proud Hawk. As they came nearer they recognized them. + +"They are bringing a prisoner!" the Minneconjoux cried, excitedly. "It +must be that scout. Hi! now we will see who he is." + +Then they were suddenly astonished into silence. The three horsemen had +come sufficiently near so that the Minneconjoux could plainly discern +the dress and features of the third rider. They could scarcely believe +their eyes. They looked many moments before they were convinced. Then +they were thrown into an ecstasy of joy. + +"See! See! It is Dancing Rabbit!" they shouted. + +The young Minneconjoux who had disappeared when the Blackfeet ran off +the band of Sioux ponies was riding between Feather Dog and Proud Hawk. +He was mounted on a pinto pony, and as Sun Bird and White Otter +recognized it the mystery of the lone horseman was solved. + +"That is the pony we saw on the ridge," they told their friends. + +As the riders joined the war party, the Minneconjoux crowded eagerly +about their young tribesman to learn the story of his adventures. He was +a tall, sinewy youth of about fifteen winters, and he exhibited the +dignity and reserve of a seasoned warrior. + +"Come, Dancing Rabbit, tell us how you come to be here," said Sun Bird. + +"My brothers, you are great warriors," replied Dancing Rabbit. "I am a +young man. I cannot talk big. I will tell you that the Blackfeet carried +me away to their village. Well, they treated me very bad. Then I found a +chance to get away. I took this pony. It is fast. I got far ahead and +the Blackfeet did not come up with me. I was going to our village. Then +I saw three riders. I hid behind a ridge and watched them. They were far +away, and I could not make out who they were. I said, 'Perhaps they are +Blackfeet scouts. Perhaps they are Crows.' Then they rode after me and +I ran away. Then I found Feather Dog. That is how I come to be here." + +"It is good," Sun Bird told him. "Your words are the words of a +warrior." + +Feather Dog then explained how he had chanced to encounter the young +Minneconjoux. + +"I was watching for our enemies," said Feather Dog. "Then I saw some one +riding toward me. He was a long ways off, but he was coming fast. I rode +my pony down into a gully to hide. Then I crawled up the side of the +gully and peeped out. That rider was coming right where I was. I waited +for him. When he got near I was going to jump up and shoot my arrows at +him. Well, when I jumped up I saw who he was. Then we rode away and +found Proud Hawk. Then we came here. That is all I know about it." + +"Did you see any Blackfeet?" Sun Bird asked him. + +"Yes, we saw four Blackfeet scouts," said Feather Dog. "Two of them were +the same riders we saw before. This time they were close, and we could +see them. Then we saw that they were Blackfeet. They were going straight +ahead. I believe they are going to the Blackfeet village. I do not +believe they know about us." + +"It is good," declared the Minneconjoux. + +"Yes, it is good," Sun Bird told them. "But we must watch out. Perhaps +we will run into those scouts. The Blackfeet are sharp. If they see us +it will be hard to get near the camp." + +"I will tell you something about that," Dancing Rabbit said, suddenly. +"The Blackfeet have moved their lodges. Yes, they have gone away from +the place where they were. They have gone over there in the shadow of +the big mountains." + +The Minneconjoux were astounded at the announcement. They looked +anxiously toward the northwest, where a long range of dim, shadowy peaks +showed against the sky. They had expected to find the Blackfeet camp on +the open plain, a number of days' journey toward the north. It had never +occurred to their minds that the Blackfeet might have decided to change +the location of the village. The words of Dancing Rabbit gave them +several reasons for concern. First, they knew that they had already gone +considerably out of their way. Again, they realized that to reach the +new Blackfeet camp they must go far to the westward, where they would be +in peril from their old enemies the Crows, as well as from the +Blackfeet. + +"It is bad," declared Sun Bird. + +"It is bad," agreed his companions. + +As there seemed to be a difference of opinion as to just which way they +should proceed, Sun Bird immediately called a council. Some of the +Minneconjoux believed it would be safer to continue directly toward the +north until they were about in line with the Blackfeet camp, and then +turn toward the west. Others thought that they should move directly +toward the new camp, and reach the mountains as soon as possible. There +was considerable discussion. + +"My brothers, I believe the best thing to do is to turn toward the +mountains," said Sun Bird. "Then if we see our enemies we can hide. If +we go to the mountains we can climb high up, and look for the Blackfeet +camp. It will be hard for the Blackfeet to see us. In the day we will +hide in the timber. When it grows dark we will send scouts to find out +about the ponies. Yes, my friends, I believe it is the best way to get +near the camp." + +"My brothers, Sun Bird has given us good words," declared Lean Wolf. "I +believe he has told us the best way to go to the Blackfeet camp. He is a +good war leader. We must listen to his words." + +"My friends, what Lean Wolf says is true," said Feather Dog. "I believe +it would be foolish to keep going ahead. I have told you about those +four Blackfeet scouts. I believe they are going to the Blackfeet camp. +Pretty soon they will turn this way. If we keep going straight ahead we +will meet them. We must turn toward the mountains." + +"White Otter, how do you feel about this thing?" inquired Sun Bird. + +"My brother, I believe you have told the best way to go to the Blackfeet +camp," White Otter replied, quietly. "I believe what Feather Dog says is +true. If we keep going ahead perhaps we will run into those Blackfeet +scouts." + +The opinion of the famous young Ogalala seemed to make a deep impression +upon the Minneconjoux. It was only a few moments before those warriors +who had suggested traveling toward the north changed their views, and +agreed that it would be safer to ride toward the west. + +"Well, my brothers, I see that we all feel the same about this thing," +Sun Bird said, when all had agreed. "It is good. Come, we will ride +toward those great mountains." + +Having made their decision, they rode boldly toward the west, ready and +eager to meet their foes. It was late in the day, however, before they +saw any evidence of them. Then they discovered a smoke signal some +distance to the northward. Three columns of yellow smoke were ascending +into the sky. The Sioux watched them with considerable uneasiness. They +wondered if the Blackfeet scouts had discovered the war party. + +"No, I do not believe it," Feather Dog declared. "That smoke is a long +ways off. Those scouts could not get so far ahead of us. It must be some +one different." + +"Perhaps the Blackfeet are calling the scouts to the camp," suggested +Proud Hawk. + +"No, the camp is not in that place," Dancing Rabbit told them. + +Convinced that the smoke signals did not concern them, the Sioux +continued on their way. Feather Dog said that there was a good camp site +with plenty of grass and water a short distance ahead of them, and as +the day was drawing to a close they determined to stop there for the +night. They had not ridden far, however, before they saw three more +columns of smoke rising a considerable distance to the westward of the +first signals. + +"It must be the Blackfeet," declared the Minneconjoux. "It is the danger +signal. They are telling their people about us." + +"Perhaps they have found the Crows," suggested Feather Dog. + +A few moments later a horseman swept into view, far to the westward. He +was riding at a furious pace, and seemed to be coming directly toward +them. They had little doubt that it was Running Dog, and they watched +him in great suspense. + +"Running Dog is coming to tell us about something big," they cried. + +As the Minneconjoux scout came nearer, he began to point excitedly +behind him. The Sioux looked anxiously toward the west, expecting to see +a company of their foes racing along on the trail of Running Dog. + +"Perhaps the Crows are coming, we must be ready," said Sun Bird. + +Roused by the possibility, the hot-tempered Minneconjoux immediately got +ready to fight. Then, as Running Dog finally came within shouting +distance, they began to cry out and question him. + +"Are the Crows coming?" they inquired eagerly. + +"No! no!" shouted Running Dog. + +Then he dashed up to them. As he threw the panting pony upon its +haunches, his companions gathered about him to learn what had sent him +racing across the plain. + +"Listen, my brothers, I will tell you about it," said Running Dog. "The +Crows and the Blackfeet are getting ready for a big fight over there +behind that ridge. I was watching them. Then I saw you coming that way. +Then I came over here to tell you to hold back. Do you see that smoke up +there? Well, the Blackfeet are calling the people to fight. You must +watch sharp. I saw many warriors over there behind that ridge." + +The words of Running Dog were received in silence. The Minneconjoux +looked gravely into each other's faces. They realized the peril to which +they were exposed, and they waited for the war leaders to speak. All +eyes were turned upon Sun Bird. + +"My friends, Running Dog has told you about those warriors over there +behind that ridge," said Sun Bird. "We are in great danger. Something +must be done. We must try to find a place to hide in until it grows +dark. Then perhaps we can get away from here. If we meet our enemies we +must fight them. We are Dacotahs. It is enough." + +"My brother, I will tell you about a place to hide in," said Dancing +Rabbit. "I found it when I was running away from the Blackfeet. It is a +place where water used to run. Now it is dry. It is deep. It goes a long +way across the plain. We can ride into it, and no one will see us." + +"Where is this place?" Sun Bird asked anxiously. + +"Over there," said Dancing Rabbit, pointing toward the north. + +"Come, my brothers, we will go to this place, and hide until it grows +dark," proposed Sun Bird. "I will ask three scouts to go over to that +ridge to watch those warriors. I will ask White Otter to be the leader." + +"I will go," White Otter volunteered, eagerly. + +Most of the war party desired to accompany the Ogalala on his perilous +reconnaissance. Having been appointed as leader, however, White Otter +was privileged to choose his companions. + +"I will ask Lean Wolf and Little Raven to go with me," said White Otter. + +"I will go with you," replied Lean Wolf. + +"I will go," Little Raven said, eagerly, as his eyes flashed with boyish +enthusiasm. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII + +A CLOSE CALL + + +A few moments afterward White Otter and his companions rode away on +their hazardous mission. Running Dog had told them that the rival war +parties were a considerable distance beyond the ridge, and the Sioux +hoped to come in sight of them without being discovered. White Otter +turned directly toward the south, as he believed that there was less +chance of encountering hostile scouts in that direction. He rode a +considerable distance before he finally turned toward the west, and +approached the ridge. + +"The Crows have passed this place--the Blackfeet came the other +way--they will not pass the Crows--the Crows will not come back +here--this is a good place--we will stay here and watch," White Otter +told his companions. + +"It is good," agreed Lean Wolf, the famous Minneconjoux scout. + +They approached the ridge with great caution. The sun had already set, +but they knew the long summer twilight would give them ample time to +discover their foes. As they finally came within bow range of the grassy +slope, they stopped and spent many moments watching for signs of lurking +foes. Then they suddenly heard the sounds of battle. + +"The Crows and the Blackfeet are fighting--it is good," White Otter +declared, grimly. + +Then, while Little Raven remained with the ponies, White Otter and Lean +Wolf crawled slowly up the ridge. When they reached the top they parted +the long grass and looked anxiously across the plain. The Crows and the +Blackfeet were preparing to fight. They were a long distance from the +ridge, however, and the Sioux felt in little danger. They watched with +keen interest while their foes began the preliminaries of battle. The +experienced Sioux scouts read the situation at a glance. It was evident +that the Crows had been overtaken and brought to a stand by the +Blackfeet war party. The Crows had dismounted and taken shelter behind +their ponies, and the Blackfeet were riding about them in a great +circle, but keeping safely beyond bow range. There was much yelling and +singing of war songs, but no real attempt at actual fighting. + +"The Blackfeet are cautious," White Otter said, scornfully. "They are +making a great noise, but I do not see them killing any Crows. If they +rushed in there and frightened those ponies the Crows would have a hard +time of it." + +"It is true," agreed Lean Wolf. + +The Crows, however, appeared to be considerably stronger in numbers, and +it was apparent that the Blackfeet were cautious about beginning the +attack. The Sioux were surprised at the small size of the Blackfeet war +party. They had expected to see a much larger force of those savage foes +engaged against the Crows. + +"I do not see many Blackfeet--it is bad," said White Otter. "They have +left many warriors to guard the camp." + +When Running Dog brought word of the impending battle, the Sioux had +hoped that the Blackfeet would send a sufficient force against the Crows +to weaken the defense of the Blackfeet camp considerably. White Otter +realized, however, that the hope was false. It was evident that the +crafty Blackfeet had left most of their fighting men at the village. + +"Perhaps they are waiting for our people to come for those ponies," said +Lean Wolf. + +"Yes, I believe it is true," agreed White Otter. + +He had barely ceased speaking when the Blackfeet suddenly began their +attack. Whooping fiercely, they rushed upon their foes and made +desperate attempts to frighten and stampede the Crow ponies. The Crows, +however, had prepared for just such a maneuver, and the alarmed ponies +were unable to break away. In the meantime the Crows sent a deadly +volley of arrows against the Blackfeet, and the latter recoiled before +the fierceness of the defense. A number of warriors had already toppled +from their ponies, and it was evident that the loss somewhat discouraged +their comrades. For a moment they wavered, and then a reckless war +leader on a pinto pony rallied them and led them against their foes. + +They rode close up to the Crows, and fought with great bravery. The +Crows, however, had the double advantage of numbers and shelter, and the +Blackfeet soon realized that they were fighting a losing fight. The +fearless war leader had already forfeited his life to his gallantry, and +a number of his followers were either killed or wounded. In return, the +Blackfeet had done little harm to the Crows, except for killing a few +ponies, and wounding one reckless young Crow who had rushed from behind +his horse to attack them. Thoroughly disheartened, they became +demoralized and raced away in bad disorder. + +"See, see, the fierce Blackfeet are running like rabbits!" laughed White +Otter. + +"The Crows are too strong for them," declared Lean Wolf. + +Encouraged by their success, many of the Crows leaped upon their ponies +and set out after the fleeing Blackfeet. The maneuver threw the +Blackfeet into a rage. They immediately wheeled about and raced back to +meet their pursuers. Their boldness confused the Crows, and before they +had recovered from their surprise the Blackfeet were upon them. As less +than half of the Crow force had joined in the pursuit, the advantage had +suddenly turned to the Blackfeet. Smarting with the humiliation of their +recent repulse, the Blackfeet determined to take full vengeance upon the +misguided company of Crows who had blundered into their power. + +"They have fooled the Crows," White Otter cried, excitedly. "They will +wipe out that war party before their friends can come to help them." + +"The Blackfeet are sharp," laughed Lean Wolf. + +The Sioux suddenly realized that the wild flight of the Blackfeet had +been a clever bit of stratagem to deceive their foes. It was apparent +that the trick had been entirely successful, as the Blackfeet seemed to +have the Crows entirely at their mercy. + +"See, those poor Crows are calling their brothers to help them," White +Otter told Lean Wolf. + +Finding themselves completely overwhelmed by the ferocity and strength +of their crafty foes, the Crows were thrown into a panic. They had lost +all sense of order and discipline, and each man was fighting for +himself. Their one idea appeared to be to escape from the relentless +Blackfeet, who seemed determined to annihilate them. Aware that they +were facing destruction, the Crows were making frantic appeals to their +comrades to come to their assistance. The latter abandoned the pack +ponies and the hard-earned supply of meat and rode wildly across the +plain to assist their tribesmen. + +"Now we will see a big fight," White Otter cried, enthusiastically. + +"Yes, yes," agreed Lean Wolf, as his eyes flashed with excitement. + +The Crows who had come to the aid of their tribesmen fought with great +courage, but the Blackfeet were thoroughly aroused and they seemed +invincible. The Sioux were amazed at the bravery and skill displayed by +those hardy warriors from the north. Having duped their foes and gained +the advantage, they appeared determined to follow it through to a +complete victory. + +Although the Crows still outnumbered them, the Blackfeet pressed the +attack with a reckless ferocity that completely demoralized their foes. +Time after time the Crows tried to rally from their confusion, but each +attempt was the signal for a still fiercer assault by the Blackfeet. + +"Hi, the Blackfeet know how to fight!" White Otter whispered, tensely. + +The fighting was at close range, and many riderless ponies gave evidence +of the result. The Sioux witnessed many deeds of heroism. They saw a +wounded Crow warrior on a white pony ride recklessly at three of his +enemies, and overcome all three of them before a company of Blackfeet +finally killed him. They saw a Blackfoot dash among a company of +astounded Crows and rescue his comrade who had been desperately wounded. +They saw many thrilling hand-to-hand encounters which were fought to the +death. They saw dismounted warriors running boldly into the thick of the +fight in the hope of killing an enemy and securing his horse. Most of +them were killed. A few achieved the exploit, and galloped from the +encounter in triumph. + +Then as the light began to fade from the plain the Crows made a final, +heroic effort, and broke through the circle of foes. They raced directly +toward the spot where the Sioux were watching, and behind them thundered +the Blackfeet. + +"Run to the ponies!" cried White Otter, as he realized the peril which +threatened them. + +They scrambled wildly down the ridge and called to Little Raven to bring +the ponies. He had already guessed that something was wrong, and he lost +little time in joining them. + +"The Crows and the Blackfeet are almost here!" White Otter told him, as +he sprang upon the piebald. + +As the plain offered no hiding place in the vicinity of the ridge, White +Otter realized that their only chance of escape lay in open flight. He +also knew that to turn toward the north would arouse the suspicions of +the crafty Blackfeet. He raced away toward the east. + +"Keep low on your ponies, and perhaps our enemies will not know who we +are," he advised his companions. + +Crouching low upon the necks of their ponies, the Sioux rode furiously +to gain a safe lead upon their foes. Night was almost at hand, and the +dusky twilight shadows made it difficult for their enemies to identify +them. When the Crows finally dashed recklessly over the top of the +ridge the Dacotahs were many arrow flights away. At sight of the three +racing ponies, however, the Crows apparently became suspicious, and +fearful of being led into another trap. They immediately swerved from +their course, and rode toward the north. + +"That is bad," cried White Otter, who had been risking his neck to +glance back at his foes. "If they go that way they may find our people." + +"I believe our friends will be watching sharp," Lean Wolf assured him. + +Then they heard the wild, ringing whoops of the Blackfeet, and White +Otter again turned his head to look back. The heavy shadows had almost +wiped out the ridge, and it was difficult to see the company of riders +who were racing recklessly down the steep grassy slope. He made them +out, however, and was relieved to see them turn sharply and follow the +Crows. The latter had entirely faded from sight in the dusk. + +"The Blackfeet did not see us," White Otter told his companions. "See, +it is almost dark! We will ride slower." + +They could barely see an arrow flight before them, and they believed +there was slight probability of being seen. In fact they had high hopes +that the Blackfeet had entirely failed to notice them. Feeling quite +safe, therefore, they reined in the ponies and rode at a slow canter. +They heard the Blackfeet yelling savagely farther toward the north and +had little doubt that they were still pursuing the demoralized Crows. + +"They are making a great noise--it is good," declared Lean Wolf. "Our +people will hear them." + +"Yes, it is----" began White Otter. + +"Listen!" interrupted Little Raven. + +They heard the sound of galloping ponies directly ahead of them, and +they barely had time to turn aside before the unknown riders passed them +in the darkness. Then the nervous little piebald whinnied, and the +strangers instantly stopped. + +"Come!" cried White Otter, as he turned toward the north, and raced away +at top speed. + +"I believe those riders are the Blackfeet scouts that Feather Dog told +us about," said Lean Wolf. "Little Raven, your ears are as sharp as the +ears of Tokala, the fox." + +They rode some distance before they finally stopped to listen for sounds +from their foes. Night had fallen, and the great plain was cloaked in +darkness. For a long time the stillness was unbroken. It seemed as if +the Blackfeet had at last yelled themselves into silence. The Sioux +wondered if the Crows had escaped. + +"I do not believe the Blackfeet came up with them," Lean Wolf said, +softly. "When it got dark I believe the Blackfeet turned back to round +up those ponies that the Crows left behind." + +"Then we must watch sharp," declared White Otter. "Perhaps they will +ride over here and find us." + +Then they heard the wail of a prairie wolf a short distance to the +westward. There was something about it that made them suspicious. As a +precaution against being betrayed to prowling foes, White Otter +dismounted and seized the nose of the little piebald. The other ponies +also showed signs of nervousness, and their riders quickly followed the +example of the cautious Ogalala. Then the three anxious Sioux scouts +stood beside their ponies and strained their ears to catch a warning of +danger. Three times the dreary call of the prairie wolf sounded from the +west, and each time the suspicions of the Sioux grew stronger. They felt +almost certain that it was a signal from their enemies. + +"That does not sound like Mayash, the prowler," White Otter declared +suspiciously. + +"It is different," agreed Lean Wolf. + +At that moment they heard the cry repeated in the north. They knew at +once that it was an answer to the signal from the west. It was evident +that foes were on two sides of them, and the Sioux realized that they +were in a serious predicament. + +"It is bad," whispered White Otter. "I believe Blackfeet scouts are out +there in the darkness. They are close. We must watch out." + +"Do you believe they know us?" Little Raven inquired, anxiously. + +"No," White Otter told him. "Lean Wolf, how do you feel about it?" + +"I believe it is the Blackfeet," said Lean Wolf. "We must wait here +until we see what they are going to do. If we hear them coming here then +we will ride away before they find us." + +"It is the best thing to do," White Otter told him. + +They listened anxiously to learn if their foes were actually +approaching. They heard nothing to give them a clew. The signals had +ceased, and the calm, brooding night hush had fallen upon the plain. The +ponies, however, were still uneasy, and their actions made the Sioux +suspicious. They feared that other horses were close at hand, and the +possibility kept them alert. + +"Listen, my brothers," White Otter whispered, anxiously. "Something is +moving over there." + +The sound had come from the westward, and whatever had made it seemed to +be well within bowshot. The piebald was shaking its head, and struggling +to free its nose from the grasp of the Ogalala. The other ponies also +showed signs of recognition, and the Sioux felt sure that a horse was +moving slowly through the darkness. They listened with bated breath, +ready to jump upon their ponies and flee into the protection of the +night at the first hint that they had been discovered. They waited in +trying suspense while the rider slowly passed them, and the short, quick +footfalls of his pony died away in the distance. + +"He has gone," whispered Little Raven. + +"Sh!" cautioned Lean Wolf. + +Another pony was approaching. Again the Sioux waited in breathless +suspense, while the unseen rider moved cautiously through the darkness +within bow range of them. This time, however, they were not so +fortunate. For some reason the rider stopped directly opposite them. Was +he suspicious? the Sioux wondered. The piebald tried to call, but White +Otter strangled the cry in its throat. Then the strange horse winded the +Sioux ponies, and whinnied its challenge. The next moment a voice +questioned cautiously from the night. The Sioux remained silent. Each +stood grasping the mane of his pony, ready to mount and race away on the +instant of discovery. Then the horse which had already passed answered +the challenge, and the suspicions of the second rider were allayed. A +moment later the Sioux heard him riding on his way. They remained +silent, however, listening anxiously to learn if a third rider was +following after those who had passed. + +"There are no more," Lean Wolf whispered, finally. + +"It is good," replied White Otter. + +They waited until they felt sure that their enemies had gone beyond +hearing, and then they mounted and rode carefully toward the east. As +the mysterious scouts had gone toward the north, the Sioux determined to +make a wide detour to avoid an encounter. They walked the ponies until +they had gone a safe distance, and then they urged them into a brisk +canter, and began to circle back toward the north to reach the +Minneconjoux war party. + + + + +CHAPTER IX + +ANXIOUS MOMENTS + + +After White Otter and his companions left them, the Minneconjoux war +party rode cautiously toward the north to find the hiding place of which +Dancing Rabbit had told. They realized the peril to which they were +exposing themselves, and Sun Bird took every precaution to guard against +blundering upon the Blackfeet. Running Dog and a companion scouted to +the westward, Feather Dog and Proud Hawk again reconnoitered toward the +east, and Sun Bird, Sitting Eagle and the lad, Dancing Rabbit, rode in +advance. + +"How far away is this place?" Sun Bird asked, anxiously. + +"It begins over there where you see those little trees," replied Dancing +Rabbit, as he pointed to a few stunted cottonwoods some distance ahead +of them. + +"Yes, I know about that place," declared Sitting Eagle. "I have been +there. It is a good place to hide in." + +Dancing Rabbit said that the shelter toward which they were moving was a +deep ravine which formerly had been the bed of a good-sized stream. It +extended directly across the plain from west to east, and went to the +very foothills of the great mountains. The young Minneconjoux declared +that, once in the bottom of that deep ravine, the war party would be +invisible to their foes, and it would be possible to remain hidden until +they reached the timbered ridges. + +"It is good," declared Sun Bird. "When we get to that place we will hide +in the day, and travel toward the mountains when it gets dark." + +Before they reached the ravine, however, they saw a horseman ride +cautiously over the ridge to the westward. When he reached the bottom of +the slope he rode rapidly to and fro, and appeared to be trying to +attract the attention of Sun Bird and his companions. It was the danger +signal, and the Minneconjoux watched him with grave attention. When he +saw that he had attracted their notice, he stopped and raised his right +hand above his head. Then he suddenly swept it downward and backward. It +was the signal to approach. Although he was a considerable distance +away, Sun Bird and Sitting Eagle agreed that it was Running Dog. + +"He wants to tell us about something," said Sun Bird. "Go, Dancing +Rabbit, and bring us his words." + +The lad immediately galloped away to meet the distant Minneconjoux +scout. Sun Bird and Sitting Eagle decided to wait where they were until +he returned. In a few moments they saw the war party riding toward them. +The Minneconjoux had discovered Running Dog, and were watching Dancing +Rabbit as he raced across the plain. When they reached Sun Bird, +however, they concealed their curiosity and waited for the youthful war +leader to tell them what had happened. + +"My friends, that scout over there is Running Dog," said Sun Bird. "He +has made the danger signal. Then he called us. Dancing Rabbit has gone +to bring us his words. We will wait here until he comes back." + +It was not long before they saw the eager lad racing toward them with +the message from Running Dog. He was urging his pony to top speed, and +the Sioux believed he brought word of great importance. Running Dog had +already disappeared into the dusk. + +"I have brought you the words of Running Dog," said Dancing Rabbit, as +he stopped beside Sun Bird. + +"Tell me what he says," replied Sun Bird. + +"Running Dog says that the Crows and the Blackfeet are fighting," +declared Dancing Rabbit. "He says it is a big fight. He says the Crows +are stronger than the Blackfeet. Running Dog says that is bad. He says +there must be many Blackfeet at the village. He believes that a big war +party may be coming this way. He says we must go to that gully and hide. +He says he will come there when it gets dark. Those are the words of +Running Dog." + +"Come, lead us to that place," said Sun Bird. + +The glow was fading from the western sky and the twilight shadows were +gathering upon the plain when the Sioux finally reached the dry stream +bed. It offered an ideal hiding place, and Sun Bird looked upon it with +delight. + +"See, my brothers, this great gully leads far over there toward the +mountains," he said. "If we follow it, I do not believe our enemies will +be able to find us." + +"It is good," declared the Minneconjoux. + +They picketed the ponies in the bottom of the ravine, and then most of +the war party crawled up the steep bank to watch the plain. It was +almost dark, and they wondered why Feather Dog and Proud Hawk had failed +to join them. They looked anxiously toward the east in the hope of +seeing the scouts. Then they suddenly heard a chorus of piercing yells +and whoops far across the plain and they looked toward the sounds. The +noise seemed to come from the vicinity of the ridge, and some distance +to the southward. + +"Perhaps our enemies have crossed the ridge; we must watch sharp," Sun +Bird cautioned them. + +The light was almost gone, and it was difficult to see far across the +plain. The wild commotion continued, however, and, guided by the sounds, +the Sioux strained their eyes in an attempt to learn the cause of the +disturbance. Then some of them discovered what appeared to be a company +of horsemen racing along parallel with the ridge. + +"It is the war party!" they cried. "It must be the Blackfeet. They are +riding this way!" + +"See, see, some one is chasing them!" said Sitting Eagle. + +They made out another company of riders who were apparently pursuing the +horsemen ahead of them. The discovery filled the Sioux with alarm. It +appeared as if both the Blackfeet and the Crows were racing toward the +ravine. In a few moments, however, darkness closed down and blotted them +from sight. Then the wild tumult suddenly ceased, and the Sioux were +left without a clew to the location of their foes. + +"It is bad," Sun Bird declared, uneasily. "Those riders were coming this +way. Now we do not know what has become of them. Perhaps they are in +this gully. Perhaps they will come here. We must watch and listen." + +The Minneconjoux heard him in silence. They were bewildered by the +sudden turn of fortune which shattered their fancied security and +threatened to expose them to their foes. The possibilities were +alarming. Thoroughly alive to their own peril, they were even more +concerned for the safety of their absent comrades. They wondered what +had happened to White Otter and his companions. Where were Feather Dog +and Proud Hawk? Why had Running Dog failed to warn them of the +approaching war parties? Had those brave scouts been trapped and +destroyed by their foes? The Sioux weakened at the thought. + +Sun Bird was particularly disturbed at the possibility of harm having +come to his friend, White Otter, and his brother, Little Raven. The hot +fighting blood surged to his brain as he pictured his tribesmen in the +hands of his foes. He soon dismissed that possibility, however, for he +knew that neither White Otter nor Lean Wolf would ever permit +themselves to be taken alive. The thought suggested the still more +alarming possibility that they had been killed. Sun Bird, however, +refused even to consider it. + +"No, my friends, I do not believe anything bad has happened to those +great scouts," he told his companions. "We will wait for them. They will +come." + +He had barely finished speaking when one of the Sioux ponies whinnied +softly, and a moment afterward they heard a pony scramble up the side of +the ravine a short distance to the eastward, and gallop off across the +plain. + +"Perhaps it is one of our friends," Sun Bird whispered, hopefully. + +He crawled to the plain, and imitated the bark of the little gray fox. +The Sioux listened anxiously. Many moments passed. There was no +response. Then Sun Bird again sounded the familiar signal. Still there +was no reply. The Sioux became suspicious. They feared that a hostile +scout had blundered upon their hiding place. Sun Bird, however, felt +more hopeful. He knew the wariness of the Dacotah scouts, and he still +hoped that the mysterious rider was one of his friends. He repeated the +sharp, quick bark of the little gray fox, and waited eagerly for a +reply. This time he got it. It came from the direction where he had +heard the hoofbeats of the retreating pony. + +"It is good," said Sun Bird. "That rider is a friend." + +A few moments later they heard ponies approaching the ravine. Determined +to be prepared for an emergency, the Sioux lay along the top of the +ravine, with arrows fitted to their bows, ready to repulse an attack. +The precaution proved to be unnecessary, however, as the riders were +Feather Dog and Proud Hawk. + +"My brothers, you have come--it is good," said Sun Bird. + +The scouts who had returned from the eastward said that they had seen +nothing of their foes, although they felt quite sure that they had heard +several ponies pass them in the darkness. They knew nothing of the +thrilling chase which their companions had witnessed from the ravine, +and were much interested in the recital. + +"Did you see anything of White Otter?" Sun Bird inquired, eagerly. + +"No, we did not see any one," replied Feather Dog. + +Sun Bird appeared serious. The continued absence of White Otter and his +companions worried him. He began to fear that they really had met with +some misfortune. The idea startled him. + +At that moment some of the Minneconjoux declared that they heard some +one approaching the ravine. Sun Bird held his breath to listen, and his +heart filled with hope. Perhaps White Otter and Little Raven had come. +The possibility thrilled him. He waited in trying suspense for the +signal which would verify his hopes. + +"Perhaps it is an enemy," suggested a warrior who was lying beside him. + +Sun Bird remained silent. For the moment the Blackfeet and the Crows had +been crowded from his mind by the hope of seeing White Otter and Little +Raven. He had entirely forgotten the peril which threatened the Sioux +war party. The warning of his tribesman aroused him to his +responsibility. He was the war leader. It was his duty to think first of +the welfare and safety of the men who had entrusted themselves to his +leadership. He at once dismissed White Otter and Little Raven from his +thoughts, and again became the stern, impassive war leader. + +"I do not hear anything," he told the man beside him. "What did you +hear?" + +"It sounded like ponies," replied the warrior. + +"Were they running?" inquired Sun Bird. + +"No, it sounded as if they were standing in one place, and stamping +their feet," declared the Minneconjoux. + +They listened a long time, but heard nothing. The warriors who had given +the warning, however, felt certain that they had not been mistaken. + +"Perhaps it was Tatanka, the buffalo, or Tatokadan, the antelope," said +Sitting Eagle. + +"No, no, it sounded like ponies," declared his friends. + +Then as they continued to listen they heard the cry of a prairie wolf, +far to the westward. The weird serenade lasted some moments, and then +all was still. The call had sounded entirely natural, but the Sioux +believed it was a clever imitation by their foes. They wondered if it +had any connection with the sounds which had been heard near the ravine. +They realized that Blackfeet scouts might have followed the stream bed +in search of their foes, and that the wolf call was a signal for them to +return to the war party. The Sioux listened anxiously for the sound of +hoof beats going toward the west. When they failed to hear them they +were completely baffled. Had the sharp-eared warriors who claimed to +have heard the ponies been deceived? It seemed unlikely. Then what had +become of the mysterious riders? The entire Minneconjoux war party was +listening breathlessly, and it seemed impossible for the horsemen to +steal away without being heard. Then a new possibility presented itself. + +"Perhaps they are Crows," the Sioux told one another. + +The thought threw them into a flurry of excitement. They realized that +if Crow scouts had come that far to the eastward, the entire Crow force +might follow them along the ravine. As a precaution against a sudden +attack, two Sioux scouts moved cautiously along the stream bed on foot +to watch for the approach of enemies. They had barely gone beyond +bowshot, when the Sioux heard the bark of the little gray fox directly +in front of them. It filled them with joy, and they lost little time in +replying. + +"Ho, my brothers, we have been waiting out here a long time," said +Running Dog, as he rode into the ravine with Big Crow, his fellow scout. + +"Did you see White Otter?" Sun Bird immediately inquired. + +"I do not know," replied Running Dog. "We saw three riders racing over +the ridge ahead of the Crows. They were far away. We could not tell +about them. Perhaps they were our brothers." + +"What became of them?" Sun Bird asked, eagerly. + +"They went that way," said Running Dog, as he pointed toward the east. +"The Crows did not follow them. They came this way. Then the Blackfeet +came after them." + +"Did you hear Mayash, the wolf?" inquired Sitting Eagle. + +"Yes, we heard his call, but he did not make it," Running Dog told him. +"It was the Blackfeet. I believe the Crows got away from them. Perhaps +they have turned this way. That is why we stayed out there in the +darkness. We did not know who was in this place." + +"Did you hear us?" Sun Bird asked, anxiously. + +"No, we did not hear you," said Running Dog. "Our ponies stopped and +tried to call, and we knew that some one was in this place." + +Running Dog told his tribesmen that he and Big Crow had seen the end of +the fight, and the desperate race between the Crows and the Blackfeet. +When the Crows turned toward the ravine the Sioux scouts had been +greatly alarmed for the safety of the Minneconjoux war party. However, +as they realized that they could not carry a warning to their friends, +they had determined to follow their enemies, and learn the result of +the wild chase across the plain. With the coming of darkness they had +lost sight of both the Crows and the Blackfeet, but they were sure that +both war parties had entered the ravine a considerable distance to the +westward. + +"Perhaps the Crows came this way--perhaps they crossed the gully and +went straight ahead," said Running Dog. "Anyway, I believe they fooled +the Blackfeet. We heard the Blackfeet scouts riding near us. I believe +they were trying to find the Crows." + +"If the Crows came this way they must be near us," said Sun Bird. + +"We did not hear anything----" + +Running Dog was interrupted by the sound of a familiar voice from the +darkness. + +"Ho, Dacotahs!" + +"It is White Otter!" cried Sun Bird. + +"Yes, my brother, I am here," replied White Otter, as he suddenly +appeared at the top of the ravine. + +The Ogalala was alone and on foot, and Sun Bird feared that he had met +with disaster. He was about to ask for Little Raven, and Lean Wolf, when +White Otter turned toward the plain and called softly. A moment +afterward his companions came forward with the ponies. Their appearance +filled Sun Bird with joy. He found it difficult to conceal the emotion +which welled up in his heart at the safe arrival of his beloved +companions. + +"My brothers, you have come--I feel good again," he said feelingly. + + + + +CHAPTER X + +REBELLIOUS PONIES + + +The Minneconjoux were eager to learn how White Otter had been able to +get so near them without being heard. They were equally curious to know +how he had located them. + +"I will tell you about it," said White Otter. "We were over there on +that ridge watching the fight. Then the Crows ran away. They came right +toward us. We rode away ahead of them. When it got dark we met some +riders. Then we turned this way. We heard some one riding past us. Then +we came on. We went over there near where the Blackfeet are, when we +heard Running Dog and Big Crow. We did not know them. They were coming +this way. We followed them. Then they stopped. We waited. Then we heard +the call of the little gray fox. That made us feel good. But we were not +sure about it. Then we heard those riders come into the gully. Then I +crawled up to find out about it. That is how we found you." + +"White Otter, you are a great warrior," Sun Bird declared, +enthusiastically. + +Then as the war party was complete he called a council of war to decide +what should be done. The Sioux were agreed that the wisest plan would be +to remain where they were until daylight. + +"It is the best thing to do," said Sun Bird. "We know that the Crows and +the Blackfeet are somewhere along this gully. It would be foolish to +move toward them. When it gets light we will try to find out where they +are." + +He posted scouts in and about the ravine to watch for the approach of +foes, while the war party lay down to sleep. There was no water, and +both the Sioux and their ponies suffered from thirst. The ponies were +particularly restless, and spent most of the night pawing the dry earth +in the bottom of the ravine. However, Dancing Rabbit assured his +companions that there was a good pool a half day's journey to the +westward, and Sitting Eagle confirmed his words. + +"Perhaps the Blackfeet are at that place," suggested Sun Bird. + +The night passed without incident, and at the first hint of dawn the +scouts hurried in from the plain. They said that they had neither seen +nor heard anything of their enemies. It seemed, therefore, that either +the Crows and the Blackfeet had continued their mad race through the +night, or else both had hidden themselves to wait for daylight. + +"Perhaps the Crows got away and the Blackfeet have gone back to their +village," suggested one of the Minneconjoux. + +His companions had serious doubts of it. As soon as it was light enough +to see across the plain, they crawled up the side of the ravine and +looked anxiously for signs of their foes. As they were nowhere in sight, +the Minneconjoux began to hope that the cheerful prophecy of their +comrade was correct. Still, they feared it would be dangerous to rely +upon it. + +"We must be cautious," said Lean Wolf. "There are some good hiding +places over there. Perhaps the Blackfeet are waiting for the Crows to +show themselves." + +There were a number of scattered stands of cottonwoods dotting the plain +to the westward, and the Sioux realized that one of them might shelter +their foes. They were particularly suspicious of the little grove which +Dancing Rabbit pointed out as the spot which sheltered the pool. + +"We must watch that place," declared White Otter. + +"Yes, we will stay here and watch," said Sun Bird. "If our enemies are +near us, pretty soon we will see their scouts." + +As time passed, and they saw nothing to indicate that either the Crows +or the Blackfeet were anywhere in the vicinity, the Sioux began to +discuss the advisability of moving cautiously along the bottom of the +ravine. The ponies were growing frantic from thirst and were raising +considerable dust by their wild pawing in the stream bed. Some were +beginning to snort and whinny, and the Sioux feared that the +unmanageable little beasts might betray them to their foes. Then, too, +their own throats were parched and aching, and they were eager to reach +the little pool as soon as possible. + +"We will go," Sun Bird said, finally. + +They believed that it would be folly to expose scouts upon the open +plain, and they determined to keep to the shelter of the ravine until +they were opposite the grove which sheltered the pool. The ponies +appeared to understand that they were moving toward water, and the Sioux +found it almost impossible to hold them in control. For some moments the +fractious little beasts created the wildest sort of disorder, and the +Minneconjoux looked anxiously upon the heavy dust cloud that rose above +the ravine. + +"It is bad," Sun Bird declared, uneasily, as he watched White Otter +struggling to subdue the hot-tempered piebald. + +When the ponies had finally been brought under subjection, several +warriors who rode quieter horses dismounted and crawled to the top of +the ravine to search the plain. A heavy pall of dust hung over them, and +they wondered if it had been seen by their foes. The latter, however, +were nowhere in sight, and the Sioux knew that unless they were watching +from one of the groves they must have ridden from the locality. + +"We saw no one," said the scouts when they overtook their companions. + +"It must be that our enemies went away while it was dark," said a young +warrior named Painted Bird. + +The Sioux, however, were suspicious. They determined to take nothing for +granted. As they approached the first of the little groves they sent +scouts along the ravine ahead of the war party to watch the plain and +guard against blundering into their foes. They were riding at a fast +pace, and they realized that they would arrive opposite the pool before +the day was half gone. + +"It is bad," said White Otter. "We cannot go to that place until it +grows dark. If we get near it, it will be hard to hold the ponies." + +"It is true," agreed Sun Bird. "I am thinking about it." + +He had planned to move along the ravine until he was opposite the pool, +and then wait until he could send scouts to reconnoiter the grove under +cover of the night. He, too, realized, however, that it might be +impossible to control the ponies once they got that near to the water. +The riders were already having considerable difficulty in restraining +them, and Sun Bird feared that at any moment they might stampede and +dash wildly up the side of the ravine. + +"We are raising a great dust," Lean Wolf said, soberly. "If our enemies +are watching they must see it." + +"Yes, yes, it is bad," Sun Bird replied, impatiently. "We must stop." + +He galloped to the head of the company and called upon the Minneconjoux +to halt. Many of them found difficulty in obeying the command. The +fiery, half-wild ponies had apparently scented the water and it seemed +to have driven them mad. In spite of their expert horsemanship the +Sioux were unable to control them. Although by sheer strength and skill +they finally brought them to a stop, they found it impossible to quiet +them. Crazed with their desire for water, the frantic beasts plunged and +reared and kicked and squealed and raised such a wild commotion that the +Sioux were thrown into a panic. They were certain that if enemies were +lurking at the pool they must surely have seen the dust and heard the +noise created by the unmanageable ponies. + +"It is useless to wait here," said some of the more impulsive warriors. +"We may as well go ahead and see what comes of it." + +"No, that would be foolish," declared Sun Bird. "If the Blackfeet are +hiding in that place they will see the dust. Perhaps they cannot hear +the noise. Anyway, if we stay in this gully they will not know who we +are. They must send scouts over here to find out about us. They will not +do that until it gets dark. Then it will be easy to fool them." + +"Those are good words," White Otter agreed, heartily. + +"Yes, that is the way I feel about it," declared Lean Wolf. + +"It is the only thing to do," Sitting Eagle cried, angrily. "Are we +like the women who are afraid of the war ponies! Are we like old men who +have no strength in their arms? Does a Dacotah run to his enemy for +water when he is thirsty? Come, my brothers, we are Dacotahs. We are +men. Hold those horses. Throw them down. Kill them if you cannot +overcome them. It is better to go against our enemies on foot than to +let those foolish ponies carry us to our deaths. Sun Bird is a good war +leader. You have heard his words. They are good. We will listen. We will +stay here until it is safe to go ahead." + +The words of the famous Minneconjoux scout created a deep impression +upon his comrades. He was a man whose daring achievements made him the +idol of his people, and his counsel was seldom disputed. His daring +challenge to their ability and manhood instantly roused the fighting +blood of the Sioux, and they immediately accepted the task of bringing +the fractious ponies under subjection. It was not easy, but the +Minneconjoux were on their mettle, and, as White Otter had already won +control over the piebald, they persevered until the ponies were finally +quieted. + +Order having been restored, many of the Sioux crept up the side of the +ravine to watch the distant stand of cottonwoods which they hoped to +reach at dark. They were suffering keenly from thirst, which had been +greatly aggravated by their desperate struggle with the ponies. Some of +them chewed mouthfuls of grass in an attempt to suck moisture into their +burning throats. Others placed small pebbles beneath their tongues to +increase the flow of saliva. All of them, however, bore their discomfort +without complaint. It was a common occurrence for a warrior to endure +both hunger and thirst, and they had been trained from infancy to suffer +in silence. + +"See, the day is passing," Sun Bird said, cheerfully, as the sun sank +slowly toward the west. "Pretty soon we will be under those trees, +drinking that water." + +"It is good," the Minneconjoux murmured, thickly. + +Although they watched closely until the grove finally faded from sight +in the evening shadows, they saw nothing of their foes. They were quite +convinced that the Crows had eluded the Blackfeet, and that the latter +had gone to their village to boast of their victory. + +"We will go," Sun Bird said, as darkness at last fell upon the plain. + +They moved eagerly along the ravine, and once more the parched ponies +tried to bolt from the control of their riders. The latter were still +smarting from the rebuke of Sitting Eagle, and they soon brought the +unruly little beasts under subjection. However, it was impossible to +quiet them. They snorted and squealed and whinnied, and the Sioux +realized that it was hopeless to try to reach the grove without being +heard. + +"Well, if our enemies are over there they know that we are coming," +Sitting Eagle declared, irritably. + +"It is true," agreed Sun Bird. "But they do not know who we are. If the +Blackfeet are over there they will take us for Crows. If the Crows are +over there they will take us for Blackfeet. It is good. When we get near +that place we will stop. Then we will send scouts over there to find out +about it. If our enemies are there we will find out who they are. Then +we will run away before they find out about us." + +"It is good," said Sitting Eagle. + +When they finally came opposite the grove which contained the pool they +again fought the desperate ponies into submission and made heroic +efforts to keep them quiet. Then Sun Bird selected White Otter and +Sitting Eagle to go forward on foot to reconnoiter the cottonwoods. + +"Those great scouts will find out about it," he boasted, as the two +famous Dacotahs slipped away as noiselessly as shadows. + +It seemed a long time to the anxious Sioux before White Otter finally +returned and said that the grove was free from foes. The announcement +filled them with joy. Throwing caution to the winds, they rode out of +the ravine and raced recklessly toward the cottonwoods. Once at the pool +it was impossible to restrain the ponies, and the riders were forced to +wait until the frenzied animals had satisfied their thirst. Then the +Sioux plunged their feverish faces into the roily water and drank as +eagerly as the ponies. + +"Ah," Sun Bird sighed, contentedly, as he finally rose to his feet. + +Having drunk their fill, the ponies became quiet and turned to graze +upon the scant growth of grass about the pool. The Sioux, however, +remained alert. Their noisy arrival at the pool had made them uneasy. +They had vague, disturbing premonitions of danger, and they feared to +linger in the grove. + +"If our enemies come and surround this place it will be hard to get +away," Sun Bird said, anxiously. "Come, we will go." + +At that moment one of the ponies whinnied, and the Sioux were astounded +to hear it answered from the plain. Then they heard a horse galloping +toward the west. They turned to one another in alarm. + +"Our enemies have caught us!" they cried. + +"Wait," White Otter counseled, calmly. "I believe that rider is a scout. +Perhaps he is alone. We will listen. If he is with a war party then we +will hear signals. If he keeps quiet there is nothing to fear." + +"It is good," agreed the Minneconjoux. + +They listened in tense silence. Then, as the moments passed and they +heard nothing to suggest the approach of their foes, they felt +considerably relieved. Still they were somewhat fearful about leaving +the timber. They realized that either the Crows or the Blackfeet might +have surrounded the grove and sent the scout forward as a decoy to lure +them upon the open plain. + +"Well, my brothers, that rider knows that some one is at this pool," +declared Sun Bird. "If he is a scout he will tell his people about it. I +believe if we wait here something bad will come of it. If we go away our +enemies will not know that the Dacotahs were here. If we expect to get +to the great Blackfeet camp we must not let our enemies know about us." + +The Sioux instantly saw the wisdom of his words and agreed that it +would be safer to abandon the grove and continue toward the mountains. +Dancing Rabbit told them that if they continued to ride through the +night, daylight would find them close upon the foothills. + +"It is good--we will go," said Sun Bird. + +They left the grove and moved slowly across the plain in the direction +of the ravine. The ponies were quiet and docile, and it seemed as if the +clever little beasts were attempting to make amends for the anxiety and +effort they had caused their riders a short time before. As the war +party drew near the ravine Sun Bird ordered a halt while he sent scouts +forward to reconnoiter. They soon returned and declared that the way was +clear. + + + + +CHAPTER XI + +AN UNUSUAL ADVENTURE + + +Upon reaching the ravine the Sioux turned toward the west and rode until +daylight. Then they found themselves almost within the shadows of the +great massive peaks which towered against the sky. The low timbered +ridges of the foothills were still nearer at hand, and the air was +scented with fragrance from the dense stand of pines. + +"It is good," declared Sun Bird. "Pretty soon we will come to those +great mountains. Then we can hide from our enemies until we find the +Blackfeet camp." + +Having failed to find any further evidence of their foes, they began to +feel more secure. They gave little thought to the horseman who had +blundered upon them at the pool, for it appeared certain that both the +Crows and the Blackfeet had withdrawn from the vicinity. Encouraged by +the thought, the Sioux determined to continue toward the mountains. + +When they reached the first ridge of foothills, Sitting Eagle, who was +familiar with the region, led the way along a game trail. It wound +upward from the plain, and brought them to a grassy meadow with a cold +bubbling spring in one corner of it. As it offered an attractive camp +site, the Sioux determined to stop. + +After the ponies had been picketed and the camp established, several +young warriors went into the woods with their bows to look for game. It +was not long before they returned with a fat, young, white-tail deer. + +As the camp site was a considerable height above the plain and well +hidden by the heavy stand of timber, the Sioux determined to risk making +a small fire. Then they broiled the deer meat and ate with keen +enjoyment. They had suddenly relaxed. For the moment the hardships and +perils of the war trail were forgotten. They talked and laughed and told +stories, and became as carefree and happy as boys. The merry feast +continued well into the night. When it finally ended, the sentinels took +their positions about the camp while their companions wrapped themselves +in their robes and lay down to sleep. + +Shortly after daylight the Sioux descended to the plain and rode +northward along the base of the ridge. They kept within bowshot of the +timber so that they might conceal themselves if they found signs of +their foes. Dancing Rabbit declared that the Blackfeet camp was a number +of days' travel farther to the northward, and for the present at least +the Sioux had little fear of blundering into those foes. However, they +believed that the Crows might be somewhere in the vicinity and they +determined to keep a sharp watch. + +"We will keep going ahead until we get near the Blackfeet camp," said +Sun Bird. "Then we will stop. Then some of us will climb those great +mountains and look for the Blackfeet lodges." + +For two days they traveled cautiously along the edge of the foothills +without seeing anything to arouse their suspicions. Game, however, was +abundant. They saw countless numbers of buffaloes, great herds of elk, +and many deer and antelope. + +"This is a good place to live in," declared White Otter. + +"Yes, there is plenty of game here," replied Sun Bird. + +Then they again saw Huya, the war bird. The eagle was soaring high up +near the snowclad peaks. The Sioux watched it with superstitious +premonitions. They believed it was an omen--a warning that foes were +near at hand. + +"See, Huya has come back to tell us about our enemies," said Sun Bird. +"I believe we are near the Blackfeet. We must watch out." + +Disturbed by the appearance of Huya, the war bird, and determined to run +no risk of betraying themselves to their foes, the Sioux decided to seek +shelter in the foothills while scouts climbed the ridges to look for the +Blackfeet camp. While the war party moved cautiously along the edge of +the plain, Sun Bird sent scouts into the timber to look for a suitable +camp site. At the end of the day they found a sheltered grassy park high +up near the summit of the ridge, and the Sioux determined to make it +their rendezvous until they were ready to advance upon the Blackfeet. + +The following day, at dawn, Sun Bird and White Otter left the war party +and set out along the summit of the ridge to look for traces of the +Blackfeet camp. Other scouts rode cautiously along the edge of the plain +to watch for signs of the Crows or scouting parties of Blackfeet. + +Although Sun Bird and White Otter had a splendid view of the plain they +failed to discover any evidence of the Blackfeet camp. When they finally +saw a large herd of buffaloes grazing contentedly a considerable +distance to the northward, they became convinced that the hostile camp +was far beyond their view. + +"It is useless to look any more," declared White Otter. "The Blackfeet +camp is a long ways off." + +"Yes, it must be so," said Sun Bird. "We will go back and tell our +friends about it." + +"Wait," White Otter cried, eagerly. "Here is the trail of great +Matohota." + +Sun Bird hastened to his side and saw the fresh tracks of a grizzly +bear. The trail led down into the timber. The footprints were of unusual +size, and the Sioux studied them with flashing eyes. The Dacotahs +considered killing great Matohota an exploit worthy of the bravest +warrior, and only second in importance to killing an enemy. A necklace +of bear claws was accepted as positive proof of the hunting ability and +courage of the wearer. Although both Sun Bird and White Otter had killed +several of those fierce beasts, they became enthusiastic at the idea of +securing the great claws of the bear which had recently passed. + +"If we kill Matohota we will have something to show our friends," said +White Otter. + +"He cannot be far away," Sun Bird declared, hopefully. "Come, we will +follow him." + +They followed the trail down through the timber, and about half way +down the ridge it brought them within sight of another open grassy park. +Aware that those places were favorite feeding places for elk and deer, +the expert young hunters realized that the grizzly might have gone there +to feast upon the carcass of one of those animals. + +"We must be careful," White Otter warned, softly. + +They approached the spot with great caution, peering anxiously between +the trees to discover the grizzly. As the wind favored them, they hoped +to get within bow range without alarming their game. However, when they +finally came in full view of the park the bear was nowhere in sight. +They were keenly disappointed. + +"Matohota has gone on," said Sun Bird. + +"We will see," replied White Otter. + +They stole to the edge of the timber and looked anxiously across the +grassy meadow. The trail of the bear was plainly visible through the +high grass. As they followed it with their eyes they suddenly discovered +something lying in the far corner of the park. One glance told them that +it was dead, but it was some time before they could make sure what it +was. Then they looked at each other in astonishment. They had suddenly +identified the object as a dead pony. The discovery made them cautious, +and they sank noiselessly into the bushes to watch. + +"It is mysterious," whispered Sun Bird. "How did that pony come here?" + +"We will try to find out about it, but first we must watch," replied +White Otter. + +They watched a long time, searching the borders of the meadow with great +care. It was difficult to learn much about the dead pony from where they +were, but they saw that the carcass had been partly eaten, and they +believed it had been there for some time. + +"It is good," said White Otter. "Matohota comes here to eat that pony. +If we wait here we will see him." + +"Perhaps he is sleeping over there in those bushes," suggested Sun Bird. + +They knew that after gorging itself with meat, a bear often would lie +down to sleep near the carcass, so that it would find a meal close at +hand when it again became hungry. It seemed probable, therefore, that +the great creature which they sought might be concealed somewhere within +bow range of them. They looked carefully along the edge of the woods, +hoping to discover a sign which would tell them where the bear had +entered the timber. The undergrowth appeared undisturbed, and, as the +trail faded out at the spot where the grass had been trampled down about +the carcass, there seemed little chance of learning what they wished to +know unless they made their way to the dead pony. + +"We must go over there and find out about it," Sun Bird proposed, +finally. + +"Come," said White Otter. + +They moved through the timber as stealthily as wolves, and when they +drew near the carcass they again stopped to watch and listen. Then they +circled to find the trail of the bear. They came upon a wide game trail +leading down from the park, and as they stooped to study it they +discovered many tracks. Among them were the footprints of the great gray +timber wolves, and the clumsy round paw-marks of a mountain lion. The +latter track was fresh, and it was evident that the great cat had passed +over the trail since daylight. The tracks of the bear, however, were +missing. + +"Matohota did not come this way," said Sun Bird. + +"Perhaps he is close by," White Otter said, cautiously. "We will try to +find out where he is. Then we will go and look at that pony. It came +along this trail. See, here is a track." + +He showed Sun Bird a faint and indistinct impression of a hoof at one +side of the trail. It was some days old, and offered them little +information. + +"Come, we will find out what has become of Matohota, and then we will +come back here and find out about this thing," said White Otter. + +They soon came upon the trail of the bear. As White Otter had guessed, +it circled around the edge of the park, and led back toward the top of +the ridge. It was plain, therefore, that the bear had its den somewhere +up there among the ledges, and came to the park to feed during the night +or at daylight. + +"Now we know what to do," declared White Otter. "First we will go and +look at that pony. Then we will go down that trail and try to find some +more tracks. Then we will come back to this place and wait for +Matohota." + +"It is good," said Sun Bird. + +When they reached the dead pony they were surprised to see the shaft of +an arrow protruding from behind its shoulder. For a moment or so they +studied it in silence. Then White Otter knelt, and drew his knife. + +"Perhaps we will find out what we want to know," he said. + +He extracted the arrow and examined it with great care, and then he +passed it to Sun Bird. The latter studied it a long time. He noted that +the shaft was of willow and feathered along the sides for almost a +hand-width. The arrow was considerably longer than those used by the +Dacotahs, and the point was made of an unusual red flint. It was the +deeply notched model of the war arrows. + +"Well, what do you make of it?" White Otter inquired, as Sun Bird +finished examining it. + +"It is not a Dacotah arrow," replied Sun Bird. "It is not a Crow arrow. +It was not made by the Blackfeet. I do not know who made it." + +"I cannot tell you about it," said White Otter, as Sun Bird returned the +mysterious arrow. "I do not know about the people who live in this +country. I know the Crow arrows. I have seen the Blackfeet arrows. I do +not know the others." + +"I will show it to Sitting Eagle and Lean Wolf," said Sun Bird. "Perhaps +they will know about it." + +As there seemed to be no other way of learning its identity, they +dismissed the arrow from their minds and turned their attention upon the +dead pony. It was a pinto, and appeared to have been dead a number of +days. They had little doubt that, having been wounded on the plain, it +had followed the game trail to the spot where it died. + +"Perhaps the man who owned that pony rode up here to get away from his +enemies," suggested Sun Bird. + +"Perhaps," said White Otter. + +Then, as the day had almost ended, they realized that if they intended +to remain and watch for Matohota it was time to find a hiding place. As +there was not sufficient breeze to stir the leaves, White Otter held a +moistened finger above his head to learn the direction of the air +current. What there was seemed to come from the north side of the park. +As the bear was expected to approach from the west, and the bait was on +the east side of the park, the Sioux decided to hide themselves to the +southward of the dead pony. Then if the uncertain breeze should suddenly +shift to another quarter they would still be to the leeward of the bear. + +"Matohota is strong," cautioned White Otter. "We must drive our arrows +deep into his body. We must not go too far away." + +They concealed themselves in the undergrowth within easy bowshot of the +bait and determined to watch until the bear appeared. The light was +already fading from the park, and the heavy evening shadows were forming +at the edge of the woods. Then, as darkness settled down, the moon +flooded the little park with its silvery light. + +"It is good," whispered Sun Bird. "Wakantunka has sent Hanyetuwi, the +night sun, to give us light." + +"It is good," replied White Otter. + +They had little hope that Matohota would appear before daylight, and +still they realized that he might come to feed under cover of the night. +It was not long, however, before they heard other prowlers approaching +the bait. The crackling of brush, and soft, stealthy footfalls caused +them to watch expectantly. A lithe, shadowy form moved swiftly into the +moonlight. It stopped a moment and raised a long pointed snout into the +air. Then it trotted gracefully to the bait. The Sioux recognized it as +Huhasapedan, the fox. They watched with great interest as the suspicious +creature circled warily about the carcass, stopping in alarm at the +slightest sound, and peering nervously into the shadows. It had barely +begun to eat, when a second woods prowler entered the park and moved +slowly toward the bait. The fox crouched behind the pony and watched +uneasily. + +"Wolf," whispered White Otter. + +The wolf had discovered the fox and was bristling and growling, as it +walked stiffly toward the pony. Awed by the threats of its formidable +rival, the fox slunk to the edge of the timber and sat upon its +haunches to watch until the wolf left the carcass. The wolf feasted +ravenously, tearing large pieces of flesh from the bait and growling +savagely as it ate. It was one of the great gaunt timber wolves, and the +Sioux longed to pierce it with their arrows. They resisted the +temptation, however, for they knew that Matohota might become suspicious +at the scent of fresh blood. + +"It would be foolish," said White Otter. + +The wolf refused to leave until it had gorged itself with meat, and then +it moved threateningly toward the fox. The latter immediately retreated +across the park and failed to show itself until the wolf had slunk into +the shadows. + +The fox had barely returned to the bait when it was again interrupted by +another nocturnal prowler. A short, catlike snarl sounded from the +direction of the game trail, and as the fox paused to listen, a long, +crouching form appeared at the edge of the moonlight. Two glowing eyes +blazed defiance, and the fox bounded into the woods. + +"It is fierce Imutanka," breathed Sun Bird. + +They had instantly recognized the stealthy prowler as a mountain lion. +They watched with bated breath as the great cat moved cautiously toward +the carcass. In spite of its size and strength it seemed as wary and +fearful as Huhasapedan, the fox. It would slink forward a few paces and +then stop and look furtively about the park. Once it sniffed +suspiciously, and parted its lips in a silent snarl. Had it caught the +wolf scent? Was great Matohota approaching? The Sioux grew tense at the +thought. As the lion drew nearer the pony it crouched close to the +ground, growling and nervously lashing its tail. It appeared to be +preparing to spring upon the carcass. It was an unusually large +specimen, and the Sioux were eager to secure so noble a trophy. + +"Come, we will kill Imutanka," suggested Sun Bird. + +"Wait," cautioned White Otter. + +A moment afterward a great bulky form appeared at the opposite side of +the park. The Sioux recognized it at once. It was great Matohota, the +grizzly. His sudden appearance caused their hearts to beat wildly +against their ribs, while their eyes flashed with the light of battle. +He was a foe worthy of the bravest warrior, and the young Dacotahs +longed for the chance to engage him in battle. + +A slight breeze was stirring from the eastward, and Matohota had +evidently caught the scent of the mountain lion. He had raised his head +and was staring across the park. The Sioux looked toward the lion. It, +too, had discovered the bear, and was crouching behind the pony, and +grumbling threateningly. + +"Imutanka will run away," whispered Sun Bird. + +"Watch!" cautioned White Otter. + +The bear had ambled clumsily into the open, and was following its trail +across the park. The Sioux turned their eyes upon the lion. They +expected to see it slinking away. Imutanka, however, showed no such +intention. His blazing eyes and ugly snarls made it plain that he had no +idea of running away. Still, the Sioux could not believe he would dare +to oppose the mighty Matohota. + +"Imutanka looks brave, but he will run away," insisted Sun Bird. + +"We will see," said White Otter. + +As the bear came closer the Sioux saw that it was even larger than they +had guessed it to be. Matohota looked more than a match for sinewy +Imutanka, but the latter still held his ground. It was apparent that +having secured possession of the carcass he had no thought of +surrendering it without a fight. The Sioux thrilled at the possibility. + +"If Imutanka stays there we will see something to talk about," Sun Bird +whispered, eagerly. + +"Yes, yes, it will be a great fight," replied White Otter. + +The bold defiance of the lion seemed to have made Matohota realize the +need of caution. He had stopped and was shaking his great head from side +to side and growling fiercely. Imutanka replied to his challenge with +short, throaty snarls. Then for some moments each gazed into the blazing +eyes of the other and appeared to be estimating the strength and courage +of its adversary. The Sioux were fascinated by the unusual spectacle. +For the moment their desire to kill was overcome by their curiosity to +learn the outcome of the fight. + +It was some time, however, before the huge Matohota made up his mind to +attack his rival. Then, having determined to gain possession of the +bait, he rushed furiously upon the lion. The great sinewy cat had little +difficulty in avoiding him. Then, as Matohota whirled about with amazing +agility, the lion made its spring. Matohota reared upon his hind legs +and struck the lion to earth with his huge paw. Imutanka uttered a sharp +whine of pain and sprang aside. It was evident that Matohota had drawn +first blood. He dropped to all fours and turned quickly about as the +lion circled him. The Sioux saw that Imutanka was bleeding freely from a +deep gash in the neck. However, the wound only seemed to rouse the lion +to greater fury. Spitting, snarling, and growling, it glided stealthily +about its adversary, watching for an opening. Matohota, however, was +equally alert, and in spite of his great bulk he was sufficiently quick +to baffle his foe. Each time Imutanka crouched to spring, Matohota rose +upon his hind legs and held his great forepaws ready to deal another +deadly blow. Then the lion would immediately relax and attempt to glide +behind him, and Matohota would drop down and whirl about in time to +prevent the attack. + +"Matohota is a great fighter," Sun Bird told White Otter. + +"Imutanka is quick, he will fool Matohota," replied White Otter. + +A moment later his prophecy was fulfilled. The lion had crouched to +spring, and Matohota reared to protect himself. Then Imutanka sprang far +to one side, and as Matohota dropped Imutanka was directly behind him. +Before Matohota could turn the lion was upon his back. Its great claws +tore down through the thick, shaggy coat, and ripped great gashes in his +flesh and its flashing fangs sank deep into the back of his neck. Quick +to understand his peril, Matohota threw himself and attempted to roll +over upon his back. Failing in his efforts to dislodge the lion, +Matohota rose upon his hind legs and fell over backward to crush the +lion beneath his great bulk. Imutanka was too cunning to be caught. +Releasing his hold he sprang away, and as Matohota crashed to the ground +the lion jumped for his throat. Matohota caught him in a crushing +embrace, and the fight became deadly. Rolling wildly over the ground the +ferocious beasts bit and tore each other until it seemed that neither +could survive the encounter. + +The Sioux looked on with glistening eyes. The savage duel had roused +their own hot fighting blood and they were eager to enter the fray. + +"Come, we will kill both of them," cried Sun Bird, as he fitted an arrow +to his bow. + +"Wait, wait," urged White Otter. "We will see who is the greatest +warrior." + +They watched, therefore, while the fight raged with unabated fury. At +last the superior strength of the great Matohota gave him the victory. +The lion broke free and sprang from the range of his deadly paws. It +crouched and faced him for a moment, and then as he reared to defend +himself, Imutanka weakened and turned to slink away into the night. + +"Come!" cried Sun Bird, as he rose to his feet. + +Two arrows pierced the heart of fierce Imutanka and he fell dead in his +tracks. Matohota whirled about at the sharp twang of the bowstrings, and +roared defiance at the two figures on the edge of the moonlight. Then as +he rushed forward to destroy them in his wrath, he, too, collapsed from +the shock of two burning arrows in his great hairy chest. The next +moment he rose to his feet and reared unsteadily to repeat the tactics +which had proved successful against fierce Imutanka. This time, however, +it was a fatal error, for the Sioux drove their arrows through his heart +and great Matohota crashed headlong into the grass and followed Imutanka +on the Long Trail. + +"Hi, we have done a big thing," Sun Bird cried, excitedly, as he rushed +into the park to examine the trophies. + +"We will have something to tell about," laughed White Otter. + + + + +CHAPTER XII + +AN ENCOUNTER WITH THE FLATHEADS + + +The elated young Sioux lost little time in removing the great claws from +Matohota and the cruel, sharp talons from fierce Imutanka. They longed +to take the pelts as well, but they realized that it would be folly to +burden themselves with them. They spent some time, however, examining +the wounds which the savage creatures had inflicted upon each other. The +lion had bitten deeply into the back of Matohota's neck and ripped +terrible gashes in his back. Matohota had taken full revenge. His great +claws had torn gaping wounds in the chest and shoulders of Imutanka and +it was evident that the lion would have expired from loss of blood if +the Sioux had not ended its agony with their arrows. They decided, +therefore, that great Matohota should be credited with victory. + +"Imutanka was very brave, but Matohota was too strong for him," declared +Sun Bird. + +"Yes, Matohota won the fight," agreed White Otter. + +As the night was far advanced they determined to wait until daylight +before setting out to rejoin their companions. They spent some time +dancing solemnly about their victims, and chanting their war songs. Then +they opened the carcasses of the bear and the lion and removed the +hearts. They cut them into two parts and ate them with superstitious +zeal. It was an ancient custom of the Dacotahs, who believed that by +consuming the heart of a particularly strong and courageous bear or lion +they would absorb the strength and courage of the animal itself. + +At dawn the Sioux determined to follow the game trail to the plain, in +the hope of encountering some of the war party. They had thoughtfully +cut the arrows from the bodies of Matohota and Imutanka so that if +either the Blackfeet or the Crows chanced to visit the spot they would +be unable to guess who had ventured upon their hunting grounds. + +"Perhaps we will find out something about that pony," suggested Sun +Bird, as they moved slowly down the game trail. + +"See, here are the tracks of Imutanka," said White Otter. + +The trail of the lion was plainly visible. The Sioux gave little +attention to it. Their interest in fierce Imutanka had ended with his +death. They were curious, however, to learn more about the unfortunate +pony. They watched closely to find its tracks. They were faint and far +apart, and although Sun Bird and White Otter were expert trailers they +could gain little information from the unsatisfactory trail. + +Then the game trail suddenly led them to an open plateau which offered +an extended view of the plain. They saw a small company of horsemen +riding toward the ridge. They studied them closely. There were eight. + +"Perhaps our friends are looking for us," said Sun Bird. + +White Otter remained silent. His whole attention was concentrated upon +the approaching horsemen. They were a considerable distance below him +and some distance from the base of the ridge. It was difficult to +identify them, but the Ogalala was straining his eyes in the attempt. He +was particularly noting the ponies, as he had become thoroughly familiar +with the color and type of every animal in the Minneconjoux war party. +He failed to recognize any of the ponies which were approaching the +timber. One was a buckskin, and there were two pintos. There were +several such animals in the Sioux war party, but they differed in type +from the ponies on the plain. White Otter was suspicious of the +approaching horsemen. Sun Bird, too, was becoming uneasy about them. + +"Who are they?" he asked, anxiously. + +"They are not our people," White Otter assured him. "I do not know who +they are. Do you know them?" + +"No," replied Sun Bird. + +They watched anxiously while the riders drew nearer the base of the +ridge. As they finally came within bow range of the timber, they stopped +and began to watch the ridge. For a moment the Sioux wondered if the +horsemen had discovered them. It seemed impossible, as they had hidden +themselves in the undergrowth the moment they discovered the riders. + +"No, they did not see us," White Otter declared, confidently. "I believe +they are scouts. Perhaps they are Blackfeet." + +"No, they are not Blackfeet," said Sun Bird. "I know those people a long +ways off." + +"Well, they do not look like Crows," White Otter told him. + +"No, they are not Crows," replied Sun Bird. + +"Who are they?" demanded White Otter. + +"I cannot tell you that until they come closer," Sun Bird told him. + +In the meantime one of the horsemen had left his companions and was +riding cautiously toward the ridge. His friends were watching him +closely and seemed ready to rush to his assistance at the first warning +of danger. As the scout drew steadily nearer, the Sioux studied him with +great care. Sun Bird was positive that he was not a Blackfoot, and both +of them were equally certain that he was not a Crow. The Crows allowed +their hair to grow to great length, and wore it in two massive braids +which often fell below their knees. The man who was approaching the +ridge, however, had a great abundance of rather short, unbraided hair, +which fell loosely about his shoulders. As Sun Bird noted it, and the +high, peculiar shape of the warrior's head he suddenly identified him. + +"Now I know about him," he told White Otter. "He is a Flathead. It is +bad. They are enemies of my people. We must watch out." + +"I have heard my grandfather tell about those people," said White Otter. + +He recalled the stories which old Wolf Robe had told about how the +Flatheads flattened the heads of their children by tightly binding the +skulls of the babies between stiff slabs of bark, and keeping them in +the vise until the skulls were pressed into the desired shape. Those +strange people considered a high, flat skull a great mark of beauty. As +they were a northern tribe, hovering about the mountains, it was the +first time White Otter had encountered them. He studied the approaching +rider with curious interest. + +"They are great hunters," Sun Bird told him. "I believe these riders are +coming to this ridge to hunt." + +"Perhaps they will follow this trail," suggested White Otter. "Perhaps +they will go up there where we killed Matohota, to watch for game." + +Sun Bird started at the suggestion. It appeared to have offered an +interesting possibility. He drew the mysterious arrow from his bowcase, +and smiled significantly at White Otter. + +"Now I know about this thing," he said. "This arrow came from the +Flatheads." + +White Otter nodded understandingly. + +In the meantime the Flathead scout had reached the base of the ridge and +disappeared from their sight. They turned their attention to the company +of horsemen who were waiting on the plain. They seemed to be watching +for the signal to advance. + +"Those people are very cautious," said White Otter. + +"Perhaps they are afraid of the Blackfeet," Sun Bird told him. + +Then they heard a shout from the base of the ridge, and the horsemen +cantered briskly toward the timber. The Sioux realized that it was time +to move from the plateau. They believed it would be easy to return to +the top of the ridge and escape from their enemies. Sun Bird, however, +showed a desire to linger. + +"Those look like good ponies," he told White Otter, as his eyes twinkled +mischievously. "The Flatheads are our enemies. They have killed some of +my people. I feel like taking away some of those ponies." + +"You are the leader, I will follow you," White Otter said, quietly. + +"It is good," Sun Bird declared, enthusiastically. + +Their first thought, however, was to conceal themselves sufficiently +near the game trail to see the Flatheads if they passed. It was a bold +resolve, and the eyes of the daring young Sioux flashed with excitement. +They had been taught from infancy that the noblest aim of a warrior was +to inflict punishment upon his enemies, and they determined to make the +most of their opportunity. They concealed themselves within easy bowshot +of the trail, and waited anxiously for the Flatheads to appear. It was +not long before the Sioux heard them approaching. + +"They are coming," whispered Sun Bird. + +They watched in breathless suspense, and in a few moments they saw the +first horseman appear at the edge of the plateau. His companions +followed closely behind him. The Sioux were greatly surprised when the +Flatheads stopped their ponies in the center of the open park and began +to dismount. Then the ponies were left with two warriors and the other +members of the company passed up the game trail on foot. The Sioux had a +splendid view of them at close range. They were tall, muscular men, +whose high, flattened skulls gave them a weird and sinister expression. +As they were not painted for war, the Sioux believed they were hunters. + +"Perhaps they will find our tracks," Sun Bird whispered, uneasily, after +they had passed. + +White Otter looked serious. The possibility had already flashed through +his mind, and he was troubled about it. He knew that even one indistinct +impression of a fresh moccasin track would arouse the suspicions of the +Flatheads, and send them hurrying to the plateau to investigate. Then it +would be impossible to capture the ponies, and difficult to get away. + +"The ground is hard," Sun Bird said, hopefully. "We did not make many +tracks." + +"The eyes of a hunter are sharp," White Otter cautioned him. + +Realizing that there was nothing to be gained by worrying over the +possibility of the Flatheads discovering their tracks, the Sioux +dismissed the thought from their minds and turned their attention upon +the warriors with the ponies. The latter had incautiously turned loose +the ponies to graze in the center of the park and had stationed +themselves on opposite sides of the plateau to watch them. The Sioux +instantly saw their opportunity. + +"Those warriors are very foolish," Sun Bird said, excitedly. "Now we can +creep up and get two of those ponies." + +"We must be quick," White Otter told him. "Those other warriors may come +back." + +"I will take that yellow pony, it looks fast," said Sun Bird. + +"I will take the spotted pony with the white tail," said White Otter. + +Having made their selection, the Sioux realized that they must attempt +their daring coup without a moment's delay. They moved through the +undergrowth with the alert, silent stealth of Huhasapedan, the fox. +When they were almost at the edge of the park they stopped to plan their +reckless dash upon the ponies. The animals which they hoped to secure +were grazing near the edge of the timber and the Flathead who guarded +them was picking berries a short distance away. The Sioux crawled a +bowlength nearer. Then as one of the ponies suddenly raised its head, +they stopped and waited with thumping hearts to learn if they had been +discovered. The unsuspecting animal resumed its feeding, however, and +the Sioux breathed more easily. Again they moved carefully toward the +border of the park. Their eyes were fixed upon the ponies, and their +ears were open to catch the first warning that the Flatheads had found +their tracks. + +When they finally reached the edge of the timber, the ponies which they +had selected were almost within reach of them. They were grazing +quietly, and the long rawhide lariats were trailing between their feet. +The Flathead had turned his back upon them and was stooped over +searching for berries in the long grass. The warrior on the opposite +side of the park was lying in the shade of a tree. The Sioux realized +that their opportunity was at hand. Each fastened his eyes upon the +animal he planned to capture and prepared to rush into the park. At +that moment, however, they heard a signal from the upper end of the game +trail. The truth instantly flashed through their minds. The Flathead +hunters had discovered their trail. + +"Come!" cried White Otter. + +They jumped to their feet and rushed recklessly into the park. Then as +the startled ponies turned in panic, the Sioux sprang forward and seized +the lariats. The next moment they had mounted and were riding furiously +down the game trail. They chuckled with boyish glee as they heard the +alarmed Flathead guards yelling frantically for their companions. + + + + +CHAPTER XIII + +A CLEVER STRATAGEM + + +At the time that Sun Bird and White Otter set out to climb the ridge to +search for the Blackfeet camp, Lean Wolf and Sitting Eagle rode +northward along the edge of the timber to look for signs of their +enemies. They were particularly anxious to locate the Crows, who, they +feared, were somewhere in the vicinity. They rode until the day was half +gone, and then, having seen nothing of their foes, determined to return +to their companions. As they were cantering slowly toward a deep ravine +which they had crossed earlier in the day, their ponies suddenly began +to raise their ears and whinny. The Sioux instantly stopped in alarm. + +"Watch out!" cautioned Lean Wolf. + +He had barely given the warning when a great company of horsemen rode +out of the ravine and raced toward the astounded Sioux. The latter +instantly recognized the riders as Crows. They were almost upon them and +the Sioux wheeled their ponies and rode madly across the plain. + +"This way! This way!" cried Sitting Eagle, as he turned toward the +north. + +The Crows were within bowshot and their arrows were falling all about +the crouching Sioux. The latter urged their ponies to a frantic burst of +speed to escape from the fierce attack. Stride by stride they distanced +their pursuers until they were beyond arrow range. Then the Crows +withheld their arrows and began to lash their ponies in an attempt to +again get within bow range. + +"Keep low on your pony," cautioned Lean Wolf. "Perhaps they do not know +who we are." + +"Yes, yes, we will try to fool them," replied Sitting Eagle. + +Then as the two ponies raced along side by side he told Lean Wolf about +a narrow, shut-in canyon which extended back into the foothills. He said +it was only a short distance ahead of them. + +"If we run into that place the Crows cannot get us," Sitting Eagle +declared, confidently. + +"It is good, we will go there," agreed Lean Wolf. + +The Crows were trying desperately to come within arrow range, but the +gallant Sioux ponies were holding their lead and their riders had little +fear of being overtaken. They believed that the Crow ponies had reached +the limit of their speed and that further urging would cause them to +collapse. + +The Sioux finally reached the canyon a safe distance ahead of their +pursuers. After they had ridden through the narrow entrance, they +dismounted and sought safety behind two great boulders which guarded the +pass. + +"Now we can hold off our enemies," Sitting Eagle said, with evident +relief. + +"Yes, it will be hard for them to come through here," declared Lean +Wolf. + +The Crows, however, showed no disposition to make the attempt. They +seemed to realize the strength of the Sioux position and appeared +reluctant to make an attack. They gathered in a compact group well +beyond arrow range, and held a council of war. + +"They will wait until it gets dark," declared Sitting Eagle. "Then they +will try to get into this place." + +"We will be ready," Lean Wolf said, doggedly. "But perhaps the Crows +will keep us here a long time. We have no water. It is bad." + +"There is a little pool a short ways behind us, and there is plenty of +grass for the ponies," Sitting Eagle assured him. + +"It is good," Lean Wolf declared, heartily. "We can stay here until the +Crows get tired and go away." + +When the day finally ended and twilight fell upon the plain, the Sioux +became more alert. They feared that the crafty Crows would make an +attempt to creep into the canyon under cover of the darkness, and they +determined to be prepared. Crouching behind the bowlders, they peered +anxiously into the night, listening for the sound of stealthy footfalls +at the entrance to the canyon. Then, as time passed and the stillness was +unbroken, they began to wonder. Had the Crows suddenly departed? The +Sioux had grave doubts. + +"No, they have not gone away," Lean Wolf told Sitting Eagle. "I believe +they took us for Blackfeet. They are very mad at those people. I believe +they will try hard to kill us." + +"Listen!" cautioned Sitting Eagle. + +They heard something moving cautiously near the entrance to the pass. +Fearing that the Crows were about to make an attack, the Sioux fitted +arrows to their bows and prepared to offer desperate resistance. Then +they again heard some one creeping stealthily toward them through the +night. + +"It is a scout," whispered Lean Wolf. + +Sitting Eagle rose to his knees, and shot his arrow toward the sounds. +There was a noisy scramble from the pass, and they knew that the +invaders had been driven off. Then for a long time they heard nothing +further from their foes. Shortly before daylight, however, a small +company of reckless young warriors rushed boldly into the narrow defile +and made a valiant attempt to overcome the Sioux. The latter fought +furiously, and the Crows were forced to withdraw. Their foolhardy +display of bravery had cost the lives of several of them. + +The Sioux were greatly encouraged by their success in holding the pass. +They believed that the Crows would be slow to renew the attack. They had +withdrawn beyond arrow range, and as dawn lighted the plain the Sioux +saw them gathered in earnest discussion some distance from the canyon. + +"Perhaps they will go away," Sitting Eagle said, hopefully. + +"No, I do not believe it," replied Lean Wolf. "Listen, they are singing +their war songs. We must be ready." + +A few moments afterward the entire Crow war party galloped toward the +canyon. As they came within arrow range, however, they dropped behind +their ponies and raced past yelling fiercely. + +"Save your arrows!" shouted Lean Wolf. + +"Yes, yes, I see what they are trying to do," Sitting Eagle told him. + +They realized at once that their wily foes were attempting to make them +waste their arrows. When the Crows saw that the trick had failed, they +immediately withdrew beyond arrow range. This time, however, they +disappeared from sight over a rise of the plain. The Sioux looked at one +another in surprise. The unexpected maneuver made them suspicious. + +"They are trying to fool us," said Sitting Eagle. + +"Yes, they are trying to make us come out so that they can catch us," +declared Lean Wolf. + +Then their suspicions were confirmed as they saw several warriors +peeping over the crest of the rise. The Sioux laughed and jeered at +them, and the Crows instantly withdrew from sight. They remained hidden +for the rest of the day, but the Sioux had little doubt that sharp-eyed +scouts were constantly watching the pass. + +"If they do not come when it gets dark, we will know that they have gone +away," said Sitting Eagle. + +They watched in weary suspense as the long day finally drew to a close. +The Crows, however, failed to appear. It seemed as if they really had +abandoned the siege, and still the Sioux feared to believe it. +Experience had taught them that the Crows were crafty and treacherous +foes, and they feared that they were planning some clever ruse to gain +admission to the canyon. + +"We must keep watching," Lean Wolf said, suspiciously. + +The night was well advanced before they heard anything to arouse their +fears. Then they again caught the sound of some one moving toward the +canyon. + +"Watch out, they have come!" whispered Sitting Eagle. + +"I hear them," Lean Wolf replied. + +The next moment a wild chorus of yells warned them that the entire Crow +force was crowding into the narrow pass. The Sioux knew that the +critical moment was at hand. The Crows had left their ponies out on the +plain and had crept toward the canyon on foot. It was evident that they +were determined to kill their foes at any cost, and the Sioux realized +that unless they could stop the first fierce rush there was no hope for +them. + +"Come, we are Dacotahs, we will show these people how to fight!" Lean +Wolf cried, savagely. + +They rose behind the bowlders and delivered a deadly volley of arrows +that threw the Crows into confusion. For a moment they hesitated, and +the Sioux took hope. Then the Crows rallied and rushed recklessly upon +their foes. The Sioux took shelter behind the bowlders and fought with +the fury of despair. They realized that it was only a matter of moments +before they would be overcome, and they determined to make the Crows pay +dearly for the victory. + +At that instant, however, the great war cry of the Dacotahs echoed +through the night, and a moment afterward the thunderous hoof beats of +running ponies reverberated across the plain. The Sioux could scarcely +believe their ears. The Crows turned in panic. + +"The Blackfeet! The Blackfeet!" they cried hysterically. "They have run +off our ponies!" + +They believed that they had been led into a trap by the treacherous +Blackfeet, and the thought demoralized them. Their one thought was to +escape from the canyon before their foes barred the way. They scrambled +wildly through the narrow pass and fled into the darkness. + +"Come!" cried Lean Wolf, as he sprang upon his pony. + +The Sioux galloped from the pass, and raced across the plain to join the +Minneconjoux war party. They heard the Sioux war cry directly ahead of +them, and they raised their voices in reply. Several riderless ponies +crossed their path, but they made no attempt to capture them. Their one +thought was to join their comrades in an attack upon the bewildered +Crows. Then they heard some one galloping toward them and shouting their +names. A moment later White Otter raced the fiery piebald beside them. + +"You are alive--it is good," he said. "Come, we will run away before the +Crows find out about it." + +"Where are our brothers?" Lean Wolf inquired, anxiously. + +"Little Raven and Running Dog are waiting over there," White Otter told +him. + +"Yes, yes, but where are the others?" inquired Lean Wolf. + +"They did not come," laughed White Otter. "We made all that noise to +frighten the Crow ponies and bring the Crows out on the plain. I did it +a long time ago. Now I have done it again. The Crows are very foolish." + +"White Otter, you are a great chief!" Lean Wolf said, warmly. "You have +given us our lives. We will tell our people about it." + + + + +CHAPTER XIV + +THE BLACKFEET CAMP + + +They soon found Little Raven and Running Dog, and then they set out to +join the war party. As they rode swiftly through the night Lean Wolf +asked White Otter to tell about his daring stratagem against the Crows. + +"How did you come to find us?" Lean Wolf asked him. + +"When we came back from the ridge, Sun Bird asked our friends about +you," said White Otter. "They told us that you went away and did not +come back. We felt bad about it. Sun Bird sent us to look for you. +Pretty soon we found the tracks of your ponies. We followed them to that +gully. Then we saw what had happened. We thought the Blackfeet had +caught you. It was easy to follow all those pony tracks. Then we came in +sight of the place where you were hiding. We lay down behind a ridge to +watch. We saw a war party of Crows. Then I told Running Dog and Little +Raven how I fooled those people. I said, 'I will fool them again.' Then +we frightened away the ponies and made the Crows run out. That is all I +have to say about it." + +Soon afterward they encountered the Minneconjoux war party advancing +carefully along the edge of the timber. However, when Sun Bird learned +that the Crows were only a short distance ahead of him, he immediately +ordered a halt. + +"If we keep going ahead we will run into those people," he told his +companions. "That would be foolish. We have set out to fight the +Blackfeet. We must keep ourselves strong until we meet them." + +"Yes, it would be foolish to risk our lives until we have done what we +set out to do," the Minneconjoux told one another. + +They made a wide detour, therefore, and circled far out on the plain to +avoid meeting their enemies. Daylight was close at hand when they +finally returned to the foothills. Having passed safely by the canyon +without hearing anything of the Crows, the Sioux believed that there was +little further danger of again encountering those hated foes. + +"We are getting close to the Blackfeet camp, the Crows will not come +this way," said Sun Bird. + +"They have gone to tell their people how the Blackfeet fooled them," +Lean Wolf said, jokingly. + +"White Otter can tell them about it," laughed the Minneconjoux. + +As the last lingering night shadows lifted from the plain, the Sioux +entered the timber to avoid being seen by prowling companies of +Blackfeet. Although the danger of meeting the Crows appeared to have +passed, they knew that they would be in constant peril from the +Blackfeet. Dancing Rabbit said that they were within a day's journey of +the great camp, and the announcement roused them to their danger. They +moved carefully along the base of the ridge until they found a sheltered +hiding place. + +"Now, my friends, I will tell you what I propose to do," said Sun Bird. +"You have heard the words of Dancing Rabbit. He says that we are getting +near the great Blackfeet camp. It is good. That is what we set out to +do. But we must be cautious. We must not let the Blackfeet see us until +we run off those ponies. We must hide in the timber until we are ready +to fight. But first we must find the Blackfeet camp. I believe we can +see it from the top of this ridge. Pretty soon I am going to climb up +there and look around. You must wait here until I come back. Then when +it grows dark we will go ahead. I have finished." + +Soon afterward he set out with White Otter and Dancing Rabbit. They +climbed to the top of the ridge and looked anxiously toward the north. +It was some time before Dancing Rabbit spoke. Then he pointed eagerly +toward a low, sage-grown ridge. + +"Do you see that long hill?" he asked excitedly. + +"Yes, I see it," replied Sun Bird. + +"Well, there is a river on the other side of it," Dancing Rabbit told +them. "Many trees grow along that river. The Blackfeet camp is between +that river and that long hill. I hid on top of that hill when I ran away +from the camp." + +Sun Bird and White Otter heard him in silence. Now that the goal was +almost in sight they showed little emotion. Only the sudden flash of +their eyes betokened their interest. They were intently studying the +low, sage-grown sweep of the plain which Dancing Rabbit declared +concealed the Blackfeet camp. + +"See, see, there is the smoke from the village!" cried Dancing Rabbit, +as he pointed to a thin column of smoke which was rising above the +ridge. + +"I have been watching it a long time," Sun Bird told him. + +"Yes, I saw it," said White Otter, as Sun Bird looked inquiringly at +him. + +"See, there is a high place over there," said Sun Bird, as he pointed +toward a great ledge some distance to the northward. "If we climb up on +those rocks we can see the Blackfeet lodges." + +"Yes, I believe you can see the camp from that place," Dancing Rabbit +declared, eagerly. + +They made their way slowly along the ridge until they reached the base +of the great ledge. It rose many bow lengths above them and was so bare +and conspicuous that the Sioux were somewhat fearful of being seen if +they climbed it. They knew that when enemies were expected, every great +camp was protected by sentinels posted on elevations of the plain to +watch for the approach of their foes. As the Blackfeet had every reason +to expect an attack from both the Minneconjoux and the Crows, the Sioux +felt quite certain that they had taken the usual precautions to guard +their village. Still, the possibility of seeing the great Blackfeet camp +was a strong temptation, and the Sioux finally decided to climb the +ledge. + +They had barely made the decision, however, when they saw something +which instantly changed their plans. A small company of horsemen had +suddenly appeared on the summit of the ridge which hid the camp. The +Sioux knew at once that they were Blackfeet, and they watched anxiously +to see which way they would go. They were considerably relieved when the +riders reached the foot of the slope and turned toward the east. They +rode off at a smart canter and soon disappeared into a dip of the plain. + +"I believe they are hunters," said White Otter. + +"Well, they have gone away," Sun Bird told him. "Come, we will climb up +there and look around." + +"No, it would be foolish," White Otter declared. "I see some one down +there watching this place." + +Sun Bird and Dancing Rabbit started in amazement. Both had unusually +sharp vision, and they had kept their eyes steadily on the ridge, but +neither of them had seen any one except the horsemen. + +"Where is that person?" Sun Bird inquired, curiously. + +"Look sharp at that twisted tree, near the top of the ridge," said White +Otter. + +His companions looked in vain. They could find no evidence of any one +either in or about the tree which White Otter had designated. They +feared that he had been mistaken. + +"I do not see any one," declared Sun Bird. + +"Well, there is a warrior sitting up there among the branches," White +Otter told him. "If you look sharp along that crooked limb you will see +him. He is far away, but my eyes tell me that he is looking this way. We +must be cautious." + +"Yes, yes, I see him!" Sun Bird said, excitedly. + +"He must be a scout. Perhaps those riders left him there to watch for +enemies. Perhaps it is a war party." + +"We will wait and see what he is going to do," said White Otter. + +As they were high up, and well sheltered in the timber, the Sioux had +little fear of being discovered. They were curious to know what the +warrior in the tree was watching for, and they determined to wait until +they learned. Then they suddenly discovered a horseman near the spot +where the Blackfeet had disappeared. The Sioux felt sure that he was one +of the company. He was facing toward the ridge where the warrior was +watching from the tree. Apparently aware that the latter had seen him, +he dismounted and began to signal with his robe. First he held it +directly in front of him between his outstretched arms. The Sioux +recognized the signal as the sign for buffaloes. Then he waved the robe +up and down several times before his body. It was the signal for many. + +"Those men are Blackfeet hunters," declared White Otter. "They have +found some buffaloes. That man is telling about it." + +In the meantime the warrior had descended from the tree and hurried to +the top of the ridge. Then he stooped and raised his robe from the +ground. He faced toward the north, and repeated the signals which he had +just received. Then both warriors disappeared. + +"That man has told the people in the village about the buffaloes," said +White Otter. "I do not believe it is a big hunt. Perhaps some buffaloes +came near the camp and some young men went out to kill them." + +"Well, we must not show ourselves," Sun Bird said, with a tinge of +disappointment. "I would like to look at that camp, but I believe it +would be foolish to climb up there." + +"Yes, my brother, it would be foolish," White Otter warned him. "The +Blackfeet are moving around. Their eyes are sharp. We must watch out." + +"I will tell you how I feel about it," said Sun Bird. + +"I am listening," replied White Otter. + +"I am going to ask Dancing Rabbit to go back to our brothers," explained +Sun Bird. "I am going to ask him to tell them to come ahead when it +grows dark. Sitting Eagle knows this place. He must be the leader. When +it gets light they must hide in the timber and wait for us. Dancing +Rabbit, you must come back here and tell us where they are. Then we will +go to them and tell them what we saw. White Otter, I will ask you to +stay here with me. When it gets dark we will climb up on that high place +and hide. When the light comes we will see the Blackfeet camp." + +"It is the best thing to do," White Otter told him. + +Shortly after Dancing Rabbit left them, they saw a great company of +Blackfeet riding slowly over the ridge. There were both men and women, +and many of the ponies were dragging the pole _travois_ upon which +burdens were transported across the plains. + +"Those hunters have killed some buffaloes," said White Otter. "These +people are going to bring in the meat." + +They watched the interesting cavalcade move slowly across the plain and +disappear on the trail of the hunters. The Blackfeet were sending their +women to bring in the meat. It was apparent, therefore, that they had +little fear of either the Minneconjoux or the Crows retaliating for the +recent attacks which they had made upon them. The reckless boldness of +their arrogant foes caused the eyes of the Sioux to flash with anger. + +"We will fool those boastful people," Sun Bird said, fiercely. + +"They feel safe--it is good," White Otter replied, quietly. + +They saw nothing more of the Blackfeet until the end of the day and then +the hunters returned. A short way behind them came the women and a few +men, leading the pack ponies laden with meat. After the Blackfeet had +passed over the ridge, the Sioux listened anxiously for sounds from the +camp. When they failed to hear anything they began to wonder if the camp +was farther away than they supposed. + +"I do not believe it is far beyond that ridge," declared White Otter. +"The wind has carried away the noise." + +"Yes, that may be true," agreed Sun Bird. + +They waited impatiently for darkness, and when it finally came they +immediately began to climb the ledge. It was hard, perilous work, as the +night was unusually black, and the ledge was high and steep. There were +places where a false step would have meant severe injury, or even +death, and the Sioux realized the necessity for caution. + +"Well, we have had a hard time," Sun Bird panted, as they finally +reached the top. + +"Yes, it is a hard place to get to," agreed White Otter. + +They went as far as possible along the top of the ledge, hoping at +daylight to be able to see over the ridge which hid the camp. Then they +concealed themselves behind two high pinnacles of rock which rose some +distance above the ledge and waited anxiously for the night to pass. + +"See, the light is coming," Sun Bird said, eagerly, as the first faint +trace of dawn appeared in the east. "Pretty soon we will see the great +Blackfeet camp." + +"It is good," replied White Otter. + +They waited impatiently for darkness to leave the plain. Dawn seemed a +long time coming. However, the pale narrow streak across the eastern sky +gradually widened, the stars grew dim, and a bird note sounded from the +timber. Day was close at hand. The Sioux stirred restlessly. Their long +vigil was almost over. Would they see the Blackfeet camp? they wondered. +They longed to sweep aside the heavy black mantle which hid the plain. +Then, after some moments of trying suspense, they saw the night shadows +slowly retreating. The stars had disappeared. A soft gray twilight was +creeping out of the east. Like a great hand, it spread slowly over the +plain and wiped away the darkness. Dim, shadowy shapes appeared in its +wake. It passed over the ridge and drove the shadows into the north. The +Sioux followed it with eager eyes. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, it +extended across the plain and laid bare the secrets of the night. + +"Look, look, there are the lodges!" Sun Bird cried, eagerly. + +They seemed suddenly to have sprung from the plain--like pale, ghostly +phantoms on the trail of dawn. One after the other, they appeared from +the gloom in great sweeping circles that extended far out on the plain +until the entire camp was exposed before the fascinated eyes of the +Sioux. It was ideally situated beside the waters of a wide, willow-lined +stream. The Sioux marveled at its size. For a long time they studied it +in silence. Trained from infancy in the art of observation, they noted +every detail. They counted the lodges, estimated the number of persons +each would accommodate, determined the nearest and easiest approach to +the camp, noted the distance from the ridge, the distance from the +water, and many other details which skillful scouts were expected to +know. + +Then they turned their attention to the ponies. There was a great herd +of them grazing some distance to the eastward of the lodges. The Sioux +watched them with covetous eyes. They knew that many of those animals +had come from the Minneconjoux camp. They intended to take them back, +and many Blackfeet ponies besides. Near the edge of the camp was a +smaller herd of ponies confined in a strong pole corral. The Sioux knew +that those were the more valuable animals, the fleet-footed war and +hunting ponies. White Otter studied them with great interest. He was +trying to identify the famous black war pony of Many Buffaloes, the +Blackfeet chief. However, he was unable to convince himself that any of +the ponies in the corral was that animal. He had little doubt that it +was securely guarded somewhere near the lodge of the chief. + +"There are many lodges," Sun Bird said, finally. + +"Yes, it is a great camp," replied White Otter. + +The Blackfeet were beginning to stir. The Sioux saw them moving about +between the lodges. They looked like dwarfs at the distance. Then smoke +began to rise above the camp. Some people were running toward the river. +The Sioux believed they were boys. The splashes were distinctly visible +as they threw themselves into the water. The faint, far-away sound of +their voices came up from the plain. Then a shadow swept across the +ledge. The Sioux looked into the sky. Huya, the great war bird, was +soaring out over the Blackfeet camp. + +"Hi, there is our brother, Huya!" said Sun Bird. "He has come to bring +our people to the Blackfeet camp." + +"It is a good sign," declared White Otter. + +They watched until the day was well advanced, and then they crept +carefully over the top of the ledge and descended to the summit of the +ridge. They found Dancing Rabbit waiting for them. + +"Well, my brother, have you brought our friends here?" inquired Sun +Bird. + +"They are hiding down there in the timber," replied Dancing Rabbit. + +"Come, we will go to them," said Sun Bird. + + + + +CHAPTER XV + +A PERILOUS RECONNAISSANCE + + +They found the war party camped in a secluded ravine which led far back +into the foothills. Having ridden throughout the night, most of the +Minneconjoux were sleeping when Sun Bird and White Otter arrived at the +rendezvous. The spot was strongly guarded by sentinels, however, who +took turns at keeping watch. Sun Bird and White Otter immediately asked +for water, and Dancing Rabbit led them to a splendid spring on the side +of the ravine. Then they supplied themselves with generous rations of +dried meat and ate heartily. In the meantime their arrival had awakened +most of the war party, and they gathered about the famous young scouts +and waited anxiously for them to speak. + +"Well, my friends, I have something good to tell you," Sun Bird said, at +last. "We saw the Blackfeet camp. It is close by. There are many +lodges. There must be many people to live in them. We saw many ponies. +Some belong to our people. We have come to take them away. We will take +them. Then we saw the fast ponies. They are near the lodges. We will try +to take some of those. But, my friends, I must tell you that it will be +a hard thing to do. There are many warriors in that camp. They are +brave. Perhaps we will have to fight hard to get those ponies." + +"My brothers, I have listened to your words," said Sitting Eagle. "You +say that the Blackfeet are brave. It is true. I have fought many battles +against them. They are braver than the Pawnees. They are braver than the +Kiowas. They are braver than the Crows. Now you know that they are very +brave. Well, my friends, the Dacotahs are braver than the Blackfeet. +Yes, the Dacotahs are the bravest of all. We will go to that great camp, +and take away those ponies. Sun Bird is a good leader. Our brother, +White Otter, is a great chief. I see many brave warriors sitting here. +We are very strong. Yes, my brothers, we will take away those ponies." + +The boastful assurance of Sitting Eagle roused the Minneconjoux to a +great pitch of enthusiasm. For the moment their ardor overcame their +caution, and they began to talk loudly and utter wild threats against +their foes. + +"Come! come!" Lean Wolf cried, impatiently. "We are making too much +noise. Are we like old women who cackle like foolish Magasapa, the +goose?" + +The Minneconjoux instantly subsided into silence. They knew that it was +not the part of warriors to give way to their emotions, and they felt +guilty and ashamed. As Sun Bird showed no inclination to tell them +anything more about the Blackfeet camp, most of them threw themselves +upon the ground and resumed their slumbers. The three young scouts who +had just returned from the top of the ridge followed their example, and +it was not long before all except the vigilant sentinels about the edge +of the camp were sleeping soundly. + +The day had ended and twilight had fallen upon the plain when Sun Bird +and White Otter finally awakened. They felt rested and refreshed, and +were eager to begin the great adventure which lay before them. As the +entire company was awake, Sun Bird prepared to carry out his plans for +advancing upon the Blackfeet camp. He called the sentinels who had +watched through the night, and asked if they had seen or heard anything +of their foes. They assured him that the night had passed without +alarm. + +"It is good," said Sun Bird. "Now, my friends, I will tell you what I +propose to do. See! the light has almost gone. When it gets dark I am +going away to find out about that great camp. I am going to creep up +close. Then I will find out what we want to know. Then we will know how +to get those ponies. Now I am going to ask White Otter to go with me. He +is a great scout. He has been to the Pawnee camp. He has been to the +Crow camp. He has crawled up to the lodges of the Kiowas. Now I will ask +this great scout to go to the Blackfeet camp with me." + +"I will go," White Otter told him. + +There were many others who were anxious to risk their lives for a peep +into the great Blackfeet camp, but Sun Bird refused them. He knew that +numbers increased the chances of discovery, and he determined to run no +unnecessary risks. Besides, there were few, if any, warriors among the +Minneconjoux who could match the scouting abilities of the Ogalala. As +Sun Bird realized that the success of the undertaking might depend upon +the thoroughness of the reconnaissance which he planned to make, he +determined to rely solely upon White Otter and himself to carry it +through. + +It was barely dark when they left the war party and set out for the +Blackfeet camp. Their companions watched them depart, in silence, for +they knew the danger to which they were about to expose themselves, and +many alarming possibilities flashed through their minds. + +"They are very brave," said Sitting Eagle, as Sun Bird and White Otter +disappeared into the shadows. + +Believing that it would be easier to accomplish their purpose if they +traveled on foot, they left their ponies with their companions. Once at +the edge of the plain, they hurried away in the direction of the low +sage-grown ridge. When they finally saw it looming up before them, they +realized that they must advance with more caution. If the Blackfeet +expected an attack it was probable that they had posted sentinels at +that spot, and the Sioux determined to take every precaution. The +discovery of the warrior in the tree led them to believe that the ridge +was a favorite watching place of their foes. + +Once at the base of the slope, the Sioux stopped and spent some time +listening for the sound of voices. Then as they heard nothing to rouse +their fears, they moved cautiously up the side of the ridge. When they +reached the top they instantly located the camp by the glow from the +fires. For a moment or so they watched silently. Then they descended +through the sage, and moved out across the grim, black plain. + +"Now we must watch out," warned Sun Bird. + +Side by side, they sped through the night as swiftly and noiselessly as +wolves on the trail of their prey. Their eyes were fixed on the alluring +glow from the Blackfeet fires, they relied upon their ears to warn them +of danger. The plain, however, was steeped in silence. They heard +nothing but their own soft footfalls, and the gentle rustling of the +grass against their buckskin leggings. + +"It is good," whispered Sun Bird. "The Blackfeet are in the camp eating +buffalo meat. There is no one to stop us." + +"We must not be too sure about it," White Otter cautioned him. + +Then they heard something which brought them to a sudden stop. The dogs +were barking furiously in the Blackfeet camp. The Sioux listened +uneasily. Several disturbing possibilities entered their minds. Had the +dogs caught their scent? It seemed impossible. White Otter raised a +moistened finger to test the breeze. It blew from the camp. They felt +relieved. Then another thought presented itself. Perhaps the Crows had +moved against the Blackfeet camp. The Sioux listened for sounds of an +attack. They heard only the savage baying of the dogs. + +"I believe the dogs are fighting for meat," said Sun Bird. + +"It is bad," White Otter replied, seriously. "If those dogs keep moving +around, it will be hard to get near the camp." + +The thought troubled them. They knew that if one of those gaunt, +wolf-like creatures caught their scent it would instantly skulk out upon +the plain to investigate. Once it found them it would set up a racket +that would soon draw the rest of the pack upon them, and the Blackfeet +would be quick to realize the significance of the commotion. + +"There is only one thing to do," said White Otter. "We will wait here +until the dogs quiet down. Then we will wait until they lie down to +sleep. Then we will creep up to the camp. If we go ahead now, those dogs +will find out about us." + +"Yes, I see that it is the only thing to do," agreed Sun Bird. + +It seemed a very long time to the impatient Sioux before the dogs +finally became silent. However, as they had heard nothing to indicate +alarm in the Blackfeet camp, they decided that the uproar had been +caused by the dogs fighting over the scraps of buffalo meat which the +Blackfeet had thrown them from their feast. In spite of the stillness, +however, the Sioux feared to approach the camp until they had allowed +the dogs time to gorge themselves and settle down to sleep. They waited, +therefore, watching the twinkle of the camp fires, and listening for +sounds from their foes. + +"Come," Sun Bird said, suddenly. "Everything is still. I believe the +dogs have gone to sleep. We will creep up to the camp." + +"I am ready," White Otter assured him. + +Again they moved cautiously through the night until they were actually +within bowshot of the lodges. Then they suddenly heard the solemn +booming of the war drums, and the sound of singing. For a moment they +turned to one another in alarm. Were the Blackfeet preparing for war? +Then they guessed the truth. + +"It is the hunters," whispered White Otter, "They are dancing the +Buffalo Dance." + +"It is good," Sun Bird told him. "All the people will be around the +dancers. We can get close to the lodges." + +"Watch out for the dogs," cautioned White Otter. + +They advanced within half a bowshot of the camp, and then they dropped +to the plain to watch. The camp was brightly illuminated by the light +from the fires, and the Blackfeet were clearly visible as they passed +between the lodges. The booming of the war drums and the singing +continued, and the Sioux could hear even the short, sharp exclamations +of the dancers as they kept time with the music. Still they were unable +to see into the camp, and they determined to advance still closer. + +Slowly, a bow length at a time, they crept toward the nearest lodges. +They moved with great caution, and stopped many times to make sure that +the way was clear. They were in constant fear of the dogs. Although they +had seen nothing of them, they realized that at any moment they might +encounter them prowling about the borders of the camp. + +The Sioux had almost reached the lodges when they suddenly heard +something moving directly behind them. They turned in alarm. Had a dog +circled about them, and caught their scent? Their hearts beat wildly at +the thought. Each moment they expected to hear the first savage yelp +which would announce their approach to the Blackfeet. Then, as they +listened, they heard footsteps. Some one was walking directly toward +them. They were seized with panic. Discovery seemed certain. There was +not a moment to spare. Pressing themselves close against the ground, +they prepared to drive their arrows through their foe before he could +utter an outcry. At that moment he turned from his course and passed +without seeing them. His bent form, and slow, faltering gait convinced +the Sioux that he was an old man. As he emerged into the firelight at +the edge of the camp they saw that their guess was correct. A moment +afterward he disappeared behind a lodge. + +"I believe he is a Medicine Man," whispered Sun Bird. "Perhaps he was +out there making Medicine." + +"Perhaps," replied White Otter. + +Having recovered from their alarm, they crawled to the edge of the camp, +and hid in the shadow of a lodge. Then they looked upon their enemies. +The Blackfeet were gathered in the center of the camp. They were +watching the wild antics of a company of dancers who were circling about +the fire. The Sioux studied the assemblage with great care. White Otter +was particularly curious, as it was the first time he had seen those +people. + +The Blackfeet presented an interesting spectacle, as they celebrated +the success of their hunters. The latter were especially picturesque. +They had painted their faces and bodies and decorated themselves in a +most weird and grotesque manner. Many wore the entire skin of a buffalo +bull, including the head and horns. Others had fastened buffalo feet to +their ankles so that they rattled and clacked at each stride of the +dancer. Thus arrayed, they cavorted wildly about the fire, imitating the +antics of the buffaloes. They pranced, and reared, and kicked, and +roared. Some pawed the ground, and then lay down and wallowed as the +buffaloes would do to rid themselves of flies. Others imitated the +fierce encounter between two great rival bulls, pushing and jostling +each other, and butting their heads together until the spectators +shrieked with delight. It was a clever exhibition of mimicry, and more +than once the Sioux were forced to smile. + +Then they turned their attention upon the spectators. Men, women and +children had assembled in a great circle about the dancers. The Sioux +made special note of the men. They were dark and tall, and powerful, +with deep, broad chests, and wide sloping shoulders. They compared +favorably in physique and bearing with the gallant Dacotah fighting men, +and the two young scouts realized that they had come upon worthy foes. +Closer to the dancers were the musicians, six old men, who thumped the +war drums and sang the Buffalo Song in high, cracked tones. The Sioux +gave little attention to them. Their eyes were focused on a small group +of men who stood together some distance to the right of the singers. +Their dress and manner proclaimed them men of importance, and the Sioux +knew that they were the chiefs and counselors of the tribe. + +"That warrior who wears the bear robe is Many Buffaloes," Sun Bird +whispered, excitedly. + +White Otter nodded understandingly, as he concentrated his attention +upon the man whom Sun Bird had designated. The great Blackfeet war chief +was a man slightly past the prime of life, whose massive frame, and +bold, fearless features well confirmed the stories of his marvelous +exploits on the war trail. He wore a great trailing war bonnet of eagle +plumes, and carried a long coupstick decorated with the trophies which +he had taken from his enemies. He carried himself with the dignity and +hauteur of a great leader, and the Ogalala looked upon him with respect. + +"He looks like a warrior," White Otter told Sun Bird. + +"He is a great chief," declared Sun Bird. + +Many Buffaloes took no part in the ceremony. He stood apart with several +of his associates and showed little interest in the wild capers of the +dancers. His keen eyes, however, noted every action, and it was evident +that his apparent indifference was largely assumed. He appeared to +consider it beneath the dignity of a great war chief to show emotion +upon so trivial an occasion. + +"Where is his black pony?" White Otter asked, eagerly. + +"I cannot tell you," said Sun Bird. + +"Come, we will try to find it," White Otter told him. + +Sun Bird looked uneasily into the eyes of his friend. White Otter's bold +resolve filled him with alarm. A disturbing possibility swept through us +mind. Did the daring Ogalala plan to enter the Blackfeet camp in search +of the famous war pony? Sun Bird feared that it would be a fatal blunder +to make the attempt at that time. Even if White Otter should succeed in +leading away the pony without being seen, the loss would rouse the +entire Blackfeet nation. They would immediately send strong war parties +to search the plain, and the long, perilous journey of the Minneconjoux +would have been in vain. Sun Bird appeared reluctant to agree to the +proposal. White Otter instantly guessed the reason. + +"I see that you do not feel good about it," White Otter said, quietly. +"I am a war leader. I am not going to do anything foolish. I am not +going to try to take away that pony. I am going to find out where it is. +Then I will wait until our brothers have run off the other ponies. Then +perhaps I will try to take away that black pony." + +"It is good," Sun Bird said, with evident relief. + +They began to circle cautiously about the camp. It was perilous work. +Bow in hand, they crept stealthily along in the shadows from the lodges, +stopping every bow length to watch and listen. Where were the dogs? They +would have given much to know. They knew that at any moment they might +stumble upon them. They had gone about an arrow flight when they +suddenly discovered one of the dogs lying beside a lodge. Was it asleep? +they wondered. It was lying with its back toward them, and was only five +or six bow lengths away. The Sioux watched it with bated breath. They +realized that the slightest sound might rouse it. They feared to move. +Still, it seemed equally perilous to loiter. + +"Come," breathed White Otter. + +For an instant Sun Bird hesitated. It was caution, not fear which held +him back. It seemed folly to risk discovery when they had already +learned so much about their foes. White Otter, however, was already +creeping noiselessly into the shadows, and Sun Bird determined to follow +him. Inch by inch they dragged themselves forward until they were +opposite the dog. Then for a moment they hesitated. It had every +appearance of being asleep, and the Sioux passed on. + +Then they discovered what they were risking their lives to see. Beside a +great decorated lodge was a strongly made log corral, and above it +appeared the long slender head and graceful neck of the famous black war +pony. It was watching the glow in the center of the camp, and nervously +twitching its ears at the noise. White Otter gazed upon it with eager, +fascinated eyes. It was a noble trophy, and he longed to possess it. The +opportunity seemed before him. Impulse urged him to act. He paused to +consider. Loyalty held him back. He realized that his own ambition must +be sacrificed to insure the success of the Minneconjoux. They had +suffered a great loss at the hands of the Blackfeet. They had made a +long and perilous journey to recover the stolen ponies. Their success +depended upon keeping the Blackfeet in ignorance of their approach +until they were at the camp. White Otter made a quick, and final +decision. + +"Come," he whispered. "I have found out what I wanted to know. We will +go." + +"It is good," said Sun Bird. + +They crept slowly from the edge of the camp. Then when they were a safe +distance from the lodges they rose to their feet and sped away into the +night. + + + + +CHAPTER XVI + +OFF WITH THE PONIES + + +The following night the Minneconjoux set out to make their attack upon +the Blackfeet. Long before it was dark Sitting Eagle and Lean Wolf and +Running Dog left the ravine and rode away to watch from the ridge to the +southward of the camp. Then as the twilight faded from the plain the war +party followed swiftly on the trail of the scouts. Riding in pairs, the +Sioux passed on their way in grim silence. When they finally saw the low +ridge directly before them, they stopped and listened anxiously for word +from the scouts. + +"Ho, my brothers, the way is clear, but the fires are still burning in +the Blackfeet camp," said Lean Wolf, as he suddenly rode out of the +night. + +"We must wait," Sun Bird told him. + +In a few moments they heard the sharp bark of the little gray fox, a +short distance to the eastward. Sun Bird waited until he heard it three +times, and then he replied. Soon afterward Running Dog appeared. + +"I have been a long ways over there," he said, indicating the east. "I +saw nothing of our enemies. Their fires are burning. We must wait." + +"Yes, my brother, we will wait," Sun Bird assured him. + +It was some time before Sitting Eagle finally arrived. Then he too +suddenly rode out of the darkness. + +"I have been close to the Blackfeet camp," said the famous scout. "I saw +the light of many fires. It is bad. We must wait." + +"We will wait," said Sun Bird. + +Then, as the stern Minneconjoux fighting men gathered about the youthful +war leader, Sun Bird announced his plans for running off the ponies. + +"My brothers, we are in sight of the great Blackfeet camp," he said, +softly. "It is not far beyond this ridge. We have come a long ways. We +have come to do a big thing. We must go through with it. We will wait +here until the fires die down. Then we will know that the Blackfeet have +gone to the lodges. Then we will ride over there and run off the ponies. +Now I will tell you how to do it. There are many ponies out there on the +plain. There are other ponies near the lodges. When we cross over this +ridge I will show you where to find the ponies. When we get near the +camp we must separate. Some must go out on the plain to get those +ponies, and some must go to get the ponies that are near the camp. White +Otter is a great war chief. I will ask him to be the leader of those who +go to get the ponies that are near the camp. Sitting Eagle is a great +war leader. I will ask him to be the leader of those who go to run off +the ponies on the plain. Many of us must wait near the camp to fight +back the Blackfeet. I will be the leader. Now I have told you the way to +do this thing." + +"It is good," agreed the Minneconjoux. + +While they waited impatiently for the Blackfeet fires to die down, many +of the war party left their ponies with their friends and crawled to the +top of the ridge to watch the camp. Others dismounted and threw +themselves upon the plain to rest. There was little talking. The Sioux +realized that they were about to match themselves against a strong and +wily foe who greatly outnumbered them, and the thought made them +serious. They knew that the time for boasting had passed, and the time +for action was at hand. There was not one of the company, however, who +had the slightest fear. They believed that Dacotah courage would more +than offset the superior strength of the Blackfeet, and they felt +confident of success. + +The night was more than half gone when the watchers returned from the +ridge and reported that the last flickering glow had faded from the +Blackfeet camp. The announcement roused the Sioux to action. Springing +upon their ponies, they waited eagerly for the word to advance. + +"My brothers, the Blackfeet have gone to their lodges," said Sun Bird. +"Pretty soon they will be asleep. It is good. They will not know about +us until they hear us running off the ponies. Come, Dacotahs, we will +go." + +The summons stirred their fighting blood. They longed to send the +Dacotah war cry ringing across the plain as a challenge to their foes. +They stifled the temptation, however, and crossed the ridge in silence. +All evidence of the Blackfeet camp had vanished into the night, and Sun +Bird chose the north star to guide him on his way. + +The preliminary reconnaissance which Sun Bird and White Otter had made +the previous night proved of great value. At that time they had +carefully noted the contour of the plain between the ridge and the camp, +and had estimated distances between certain prominent landmarks which +they had retained in their memory. Now, as they found them, they were +able to guess how closely they were approaching the Blackfeet camp. When +he believed that they had gone half way, Sun Bird ordered a halt, and +proceeded to divide the war party. The younger, less experienced +warriors were assigned to the companies who were to run off the ponies, +while the renowned fighters and famous scouts were chosen as a rear +guard to fight back the Blackfeet. Then Sun Bird carefully explained the +location of the ponies. + +"Now we are ready to go ahead with this thing," he said. "But before we +begin I will tell you something. When you are ready to ride off the +ponies that are on the plain you must make many quick barks of the +little gray fox. Then you must wait. When White Otter and his brothers +hear it they will know that you are ready. Then when they are ready they +must make that signal. When it stops you must go ahead to run off the +ponies. Then if the Blackfeet hear you we will be ready to hold them +back. Keep these words. Do not go ahead until you hear the signal. I +have finished." + +A short distance farther on the Sioux separated to make their raid +against the Blackfeet. Sitting Eagle and his companions turned aside to +approach the spot where the loose ponies were pastured. White Otter and +his company continued toward the camp, and Sun Bird and the fighting men +followed close behind him. + +When they were within several bowshots of the camp they stopped, and +White Otter and three companions went forward. He had asked Little Raven +to accompany him, and the young Minneconjoux rode at his side. + +"If the ponies begin to call we must make the signal, and be ready to +rush ahead," said the Ogalala. + +When they finally saw the black, indistinct outlines of the corral, they +stopped to listen. They knew that the lodges at the end of the camp were +less than half a bowshot away. The slightest sound, therefore, might +arouse the Blackfeet. White Otter turned to Little Raven. + +"Get down from your pony," he whispered. + +They dismounted and left their ponies with the two warriors who +accompanied them. Then they moved swiftly toward the corral. They were +within bow length of it when they heard the quick barks of the little +gray fox some distance toward the east. Their hearts bounded at the +sound. Sitting Eagle and his companions were ready to run off the +ponies. White Otter rushed to the corral. He turned in dismay. The +corral was empty. + +At that instant a horse whinnied in the Blackfeet camp. The Sioux ponies +replied. A dog barked. Voices sounded close at hand. The Blackfeet were +alarmed. Realizing that further caution was useless, White Otter sounded +the signal. + +"Run to the ponies!" he cried to Little Raven. + +They heard their comrades riding forward to meet them. They also heard +the thunder of many hoofs, and the wild yells of the Blackfeet. +Springing upon his pony, White Otter raced recklessly toward the camp. +Little Raven followed him. They found the village in wild disorder. The +Blackfeet had been completely surprised. + +Out on the plain Sitting Eagle and his companions were driving away the +captured ponies. The raid had been entirely successful, and the elated +Sioux were already many arrow flights beyond the camp. Behind them Sun +Bird and his force of fighting men were loitering within bowshot of the +village, watching for White Otter with the other bunch of ponies. When +he failed to appear, Sun Bird rode toward the corral to find him. He +encountered the two warriors who had accompanied the Ogalala on his +perilous mission. + +"Where are the ponies? Where is White Otter? Where is Little Raven?" Sun +Bird asked, excitedly. + +"That place was empty," they told him. "White Otter and Little Raven +rode away toward the Blackfeet camp." + +Sun Bird stared wildly into the face of the speaker. He could scarcely +believe him. Then the truth suddenly flashed across his mind. He +understood why White Otter had risked himself. + +"Yes, yes, I know about it," he said. + +He called the two riders to follow him and galloped away to lead his +valiant company against the Blackfeet. The latter had rallied from their +confusion and were riding from the camp. + +In the meantime White Otter and Little Raven had ridden boldly along the +edge of the camp until they reached the spot where the famous black war +pony was kept. Then White Otter dismounted, and left his pony with +Little Raven. Taking advantage of the darkness and the confusion in the +Blackfeet camp, the daring Ogalala moved swiftly between the lodges. It +was only a moment or so before he encountered his foes. A frightened old +woman took him for one of her people and ran to him for protection. He +grumbled fiercely at her and sprang away before she recognized him. The +next instant two excited warriors dashed past within bow length, and +called him to follow them. Then the way seemed clear, and he hurried +toward the corral. His heart beat wildly as he suddenly saw the log +inclosure before him. When he reached it, however, he saw that it, too, +was empty. The famous black pony had been taken away. + +For some moments the disappointed young Sioux lingered beside the +corral. He was blaming himself for having refused the opportunity which +had presented itself the night before. At that time the great trophy had +been almost within his grasp. Now he believed it was forever beyond his +reach. He told himself that he had been foolish to surrender his chance. +Then he suddenly thrilled with the pride of sacrifice. He was a Dacotah, +and the Dacotahs had relied upon him to help them against their foes. He +had nobly performed his duty to the tribesmen who had given him their +confidence. His act had brought success to the Minneconjoux. The thought +roused him. His own loss was forgotten as he rejoiced in the victory of +his people. + +"I have done a good thing," he said, joyfully. + +Then as he saw fires beginning to gleam in various parts of the camp, he +realized that it was time to go. As he ran toward the edge of the camp a +dog suddenly appeared before him. It faced him with bared fangs and +flashing eyes, and its deep, ugly growls gave warning of an intention to +fight. + +"Hi, you foolish Blackfeet dog," cried White Otter, as he drove his +arrow through it. "Now your people will know that I have been in their +village." + +He bounded past the struggling dog, and ran from the camp. Little Raven +was waiting with the ponies. + +"Come," cried White Otter, as he sprang upon the piebald. "The Blackfeet +have ridden away on the war ponies. Some one took away that black pony. +Now we must go to help our brothers. Listen! I hear them making a big +fight." + +Sounds of battle came from directly ahead of them, and White Otter knew +that Sun Bird and his companions were fighting back the Blackfeet. +Calling Little Raven to follow him, the daring young war chief raised +his voice in the war cry, and raced away to engage in the fight. + + + + +CHAPTER XVII + +HOTLY PURSUED + + +Once aware of what had happened, the enraged Blackfeet rushed from the +camp like a swarm of angry bees. Led by their great war chief, Many +Buffaloes, they rode recklessly out upon the plain to overtake the +daring foes who had run off their ponies. They had not gone an arrow +flight, however, before they collided with the Sioux. + +"Come, my brothers, it is time to fight!" cried Sun Bird. + +The resolute band of Sioux fighting men charged furiously upon their +foes. They were outnumbered three to one, but the fierceness of their +attack deceived the Blackfeet and threw them into confusion. Having +recognized the Dacotahs, the Blackfeet knew from experience what sort of +resistance to expect from those powerful and courageous foes. + +"The Sioux! The Sioux!" they cried, fiercely. + +Then, as Sitting Eagle and his companions raced the captured ponies +through the night, Sun Bird and his company of warriors fought +desperately to hold back the Blackfeet. The latter, however, soon became +aware of their superiority in numbers, and the discovery gave them +confidence. Recovering from their momentary disorder, they made a +desperate attempt to break through their enemies. + +The Sioux, however, held their ground, and the fighting was at close +quarters. There were many thrilling encounters. Lean Wolf fought three +Blackfeet warriors and overcame all of them. Sun Bird had his pony +killed beneath him, and then killed his foe and took his horse. Feather +Dog became separated from his companions and was compelled to fight off +an entire company of Blackfeet until some of his friends discovered his +plight and rushed to his assistance. + +In spite of their bravery, however, the Sioux were unable to overcome +the odds against them. It was not long before they realized that it +would be folly to sacrifice themselves in attempting to match strength +with their foes. The Blackfeet were too strong to be held back. The +Sioux saw that their only chance of success was in making a running +fight. + +"We must follow after the ponies," said Sun Bird. + +The moment they gave way the Blackfeet interpreted it as a sign of +defeat. Feeling sure of victory, they charged recklessly forward, and +attempted to throw the Sioux into a rout. Instantly alert to his peril, +Sun Bird brought his company to a stand, and fought with a grim ferocity +that soon convinced the Blackfeet of their mistake. They realized that +victory was far from being won, and they became somewhat more cautious. +After several costly and futile attempts to make the Sioux give ground, +they suddenly divided their forces, and a strong company swept around +the Sioux flank. + +"They are passing! They are passing!" the Minneconjoux cried in alarm. + +At that moment White Otter and Little Raven joined the war party. They +had fought their way through the very midst of their foes, and reached +their companions in safety. The presence of the famous young war chief +greatly encouraged the Minneconjoux. + +"There is only one thing to do," White Otter said, hurriedly, as Sun +Bird turned to consult him. "We must keep ahead of those Blackfeet." + +Acting upon his advice, the Sioux suddenly gave way and raced across +the plain in pursuit of Sitting Eagle and the band of ponies. Behind +them thundered the main force of Blackfeet, and at their right rode the +company that had succeeded in getting past them. + +"When we come to the ponies we must make a big fight," White Otter +declared, grimly, as he rode beside Sun Bird. + +"Yes, yes," agreed Sun Bird. + +The Blackfeet kept close behind them, and the Sioux were in constant +peril from their arrows. Whenever the Blackfeet came too near, however, +the Sioux turned upon them and fought them off. Thus they made their way +across the plain until they overtook Sitting Eagle and his companions. +The latter had heard them approaching, and had rounded up the ponies and +prepared to fight. + +"Keep going! Keep going!" shouted Sun Bird. "We will hold back the +Blackfeet." + +"Yes, keep going!" cried White Otter. "Run the ponies until you come to +that big gully. Then wait for us." + +Sitting Eagle and his company barely got the ponies under way before the +Blackfeet were upon them. Sun Bird and the war party fought savagely to +hold them off, but the company of Blackfeet who had ridden along the +Sioux flank circled under cover of the darkness and reached the herd. + +"Hold the ponies! Hold the ponies!" shouted Sitting Eagle, as the wily +Blackfeet attempted to stampede them. + +Yelling fiercely, they charged close up to the alarmed ponies, and threw +them into wild disorder. Frightened into a panic by the noisy tumult, +the bewildered animals tried to break from their captors and flee across +the plain. Sitting Eagle and his companions made valiant efforts to hold +them under control, but the Blackfeet were riding furiously about the +herd, and making desperate efforts to kill the men who guarded it. + +In the meantime Sun Bird and the Minneconjoux war party were fighting a +thrilling battle with the main force of their foes. The latter had again +rushed to close quarters, and the Sioux were in desperate straits. +Greatly outnumbered, they fought with a reckless courage that astounded +their enemies. Try as they might, the Blackfeet were unable to break +through the heroic company that confronted them. Led by Many Buffaloes +himself, the bravest warriors in the Blackfeet nation hurled themselves +against the Sioux with a daring abandon that would have speedily routed +less valiant foes. The Sioux, however, repulsed each savage attack with +a dogged ferocity that gradually shattered the confidence of their +foes. + +Sitting Eagle and his gallant band were less successful. They found it +impossible to keep the ponies under control, and at the same time defend +themselves against the Blackfeet. They were threatened with disaster and +began to lose heart. + +"Come, Dacotahs, show these people how to fight!" cried Sitting Eagle. + +At that moment White Otter led a company of Minneconjoux against the +Blackfeet who had attacked the herd. Roused by the courage of the young +Ogalala war chief, the Minneconjoux warriors charged furiously upon the +surprised Blackfeet and completely overwhelmed them with the fierceness +of their attack. For a moment only the Blackfeet opposed them, and then +as White Otter drove his arrow through the leader of the company the +others lost courage and retreated into the night. + +"Come," shouted the Ogalala. "Drive away the ponies!" + +Sitting Eagle and his comrades instantly got the ponies in motion. Then +the determined Blackfeet again charged forward to gain possession of the +herd. This time, however, they were met by White Otter and his gallant +band of fighters. They fought with a fiery zeal that soon threw fear +into the hearts of their foes. Riding boldly at the head of his +companions, White Otter dashed recklessly among the Blackfeet, and threw +them into confusion. Then as they wavered he raised the piercing Dacotah +war cry, and led his tribesmen in a furious assault that caused the +astounded Blackfeet to flee wildly before him. He followed them a long +distance across the plain, and exacted heavy toll from the laggards. +Then he suddenly heard Sun Bird and the rest of the war party riding +toward the south. + +"Come," he cried. "Our brothers are running ahead of the Blackfeet. We +must find out about it." + +Having subdued his foes, he turned and led his comrades to join the +Minneconjoux. When he finally overtook them he found Sun Bird in high +spirits. The skillful young war leader had completely defeated his foes. + +"The Blackfeet are getting cautious," said Sun Bird. "See, they are +keeping far behind. I believe they are afraid of us." + +The Blackfeet appeared to have lost much of their confidence. Having +lost heavily in the desperate fighting with the Sioux, they seemed +unwilling to risk coming again to close quarters with those indomitable +foes. Although they still continued to follow them, they were content to +remain safely beyond arrow range. The Sioux hoped that they would soon +abandon the pursuit. + +"Pretty soon they will turn back," declared Sun Bird. "Then they will go +to the village, and tell their people what a great fight they made." + +"Well, they will not bring back those ponies," laughed Little Raven. + +Daylight was breaking when the Sioux again overtook their comrades with +the captured ponies. Sitting Eagle had stopped in the bottom of a deep +ravine through which trickled a tiny stream. The Sioux saw at once that +it offered them splendid protection against their foes. + +"It is good," Sun Bird said, heartily. "Now we will see what the +Blackfeet will do." + +The latter had already stopped, and were apparently discussing the +advisability of attempting to drive the Sioux from their shelter. For a +long time they seemed unwilling to make the effort. The Sioux had left +the ponies in the bottom of the ravine, and were lying along the top of +the bank watching their foes with great interest. They had no intention +of leaving the ravine until the Blackfeet had either made an attack or +withdrawn from the vicinity. + +"Perhaps they will wait until it gets dark," suggested Little Raven. + +"No, I do not believe it," Sun Bird told him. "I believe they will do +something pretty soon." + +"Yes, my brother, that is how I feel about it," said White Otter. + +The three young warriors were lying beside one another at the top of the +ravine. On each side of them were the other members of the war party, +except a few young warriors who had been left in charge of the ponies. +White Otter noted, however, that some of the Minneconjoux were missing. +Among them were Proud Hawk and Painted Bird, the two young warriors who +had served as scouts for the war party. The eyes of the Ogalala flashed +threateningly as he realized that they and their absent companions had +been killed by the Blackfeet. + +"It is bad," Sun Bird said, solemnly. "Those brave warriors were my +friends. I saw Proud Hawk fall from his pony. I was close beside him. I +tried to carry him off, but the Blackfeet killed him. I saw Painted Bird +making a great fight. The Blackfeet were all around him. They must have +killed him. I tried to get near him, but some Blackfeet rushed upon me +and killed my horse. I had a hard time to get away." + +"Well, we must not think about it," said White Otter. "A warrior must +always be ready to die. Those men were very brave. It is enough. We will +tell our people about them." + +"Yes, we will call out their names when we ride through the camp," +replied Sun Bird. "We will tell our people that we sent many Blackfeet +to walk behind our brothers on the Long Trail." + +Then their thoughts were diverted by the sudden activity of the +Blackfeet. They were advancing slowly across the plain, singing their +war songs, and shouting boastful threats against the Sioux. The latter +watched them with little fear. They realized that the possession of the +ravine had turned the odds in their favor. Besides, they strongly +doubted that the Blackfeet would actually venture within bowshot. + +"They will keep away," Sun Bird said, confidently. + +It was not many moments before his words were verified. The Blackfeet +had suddenly stopped beyond arrow range. They were still chanting the +war songs, and shouting threateningly, but they showed no inclination to +approach nearer the ravine. The Sioux, however, watched them closely. +They knew that at any moment their wily foes might throw aside their +caution and sweep forward in a furious attack. + +"See, that great chief, Many Buffaloes, is giving them strong words," +Sun Bird said, eagerly, as he seized White Otter by the arm. + +The Ogalala made no reply. His eyes were following every move of the +famous Blackfeet war chief. The latter had ridden out in front of his +tribesmen and was making a fiery address. Several times he wheeled his +pony and swept his arm toward the Sioux. They felt certain that he was +rousing his warriors for a final attempt to recapture the ponies. It was +evident that his words were accomplishing the desired effect. The +Blackfeet were becoming greatly excited. The Sioux grew serious. They +had great respect for the courage and ability of the renowned Blackfeet +leader, and they feared that he was preparing to carry through some bold +stroke which might still bring victory to the Blackfeet. + +"Many Buffaloes is going to do something big," Sun Bird told White +Otter. "He is very brave. We must watch out." + +White Otter took little notice of the warning. His entire attention was +concentrated upon the spirited black pony, and its famous rider. +Everything else had passed from his mind. Even the great company of +jeering Blackfeet had suddenly faded from his vision. He saw nothing but +the Blackfeet war chief, and his prancing black pony. He watched them +with flashing, fascinated eyes. Then Many Buffaloes dramatically passed +his bow, quiver and arrows to one of his tribesmen, and turned toward +the Sioux with his war club raised. White Otter uttered a short, fierce +exclamation of satisfaction. He had instantly interpreted the maneuver, +and his heart bounded with hope. + +As the Blackfeet chief rode slowly toward the ravine, singing his war +song and flourishing his war club, White Otter passed his bow and +arrow-case to Sun Bird and scrambled wildly down the steep side of the +ravine. + +"That man is very brave," he cried, excitedly. "Tell your people that +they must not try to kill him when he comes close. I am going to ride +out there to meet him." + +"No, no, that would be foolish!" Sun Bird shouted in alarm. "He is +riding that great Medicine Horse. You cannot catch him. He will lead you +over there to the Blackfeet, and they will kill you." + +"We will see," White Otter replied, lightly, as he ran to the piebald. + +In the meantime the Blackfeet chief was fearlessly approaching the +ravine. He was already well within bow range, but the Sioux withheld +their arrows. There were two reasons. In the first place Sun Bird had +called out and warned them against killing Many Buffaloes, and in the +second place his bold defiance insured his safety. The Sioux understood +his reckless maneuver as a challenge to their manhood, an invitation for +one of their leaders to come out and meet him in personal combat. To +have killed him from shelter, under those circumstances, would have made +them weaklings and cowards in the eyes of their foes. The Sioux felt +compelled to respect the code of honor which prevailed even between the +most bitter enemies. They realized, therefore, that one of their number +must accept the defiant challenge of the Blackfeet chief, or else the +latter must be permitted to return to his tribesmen in safety. +Nevertheless, the Minneconjoux knew that if any one went forth to meet +him the wily war leader would rely upon the phenomenal speed of his pony +to carry him to safety, and decoy his enemy within bow shot of his +warriors. For that reason they made great efforts to dissuade White +Otter from his purpose. + +"Many Buffaloes has done this thing many times, but we have no ponies +that can come up with him," the Minneconjoux told White Otter. "If you +follow him the Blackfeet will surely kill you." + +"I am going," White Otter replied, firmly. + +A moment afterward he rode out upon the plain. The Blackfeet greeted his +appearance with savage yells of derision. The Sioux raised the great +Dacotah war cry to give him courage. Many Buffaloes stopped and waited +for him to approach. + +"White Otter is a great warrior; he is very brave; that pony is very +fast, but I believe he will be killed," Sun Bird said, fearfully. + +The solemn faces of the Minneconjoux gave endorsement to his fears. +They, too, believed that the reckless Ogalala was going to his death. +Having witnessed the speed of the famous black war pony, they felt +certain that White Otter would never get within striking distance of the +Blackfeet chief. Their only hope was that the Ogalala would discover his +peril in time to turn back and save himself from the treacherous +Blackfeet. + +"Then we must be ready to rush out and help him," said Sun Bird. + +At that instant White Otter raised the war cry, and raced toward the +Blackfeet chief. The latter waited until the Ogalala was almost upon +him, and then he turned his pony and rode furiously toward his yelling +tribesmen. A moment afterward he twisted about and laughed shrilly, as +he shook his war club at the Sioux. Enraged by the taunt, White Otter +struck his pony with the heavy rawhide quirt. The piebald bounded +forward at a speed which caused the Minneconjoux and the Blackfeet to +stare in silent amazement. With each stroke of the lash the wonderful +little beast ran faster. The famous Blackfeet pony was a full length in +the lead, but the piebald was actually gaining. The Minneconjoux could +not believe it possible. + +"Many Buffaloes is holding back," they told one another. "He is trying +to draw White Otter near his people." + +"No, no, it is not so!" Sun Bird shouted, excitedly. "See, the Dacotah +pony is running faster!" + +It was true. Sioux and Blackfeet both realized it. Many Buffaloes looked +over his shoulder and was equally astounded. The piebald had cut his +lead in half and was still gaining. Alarmed at the discovery, Many +Buffaloes lashed the black pony to its best speed. It ran as no other +horse in the great Blackfeet nation had ever run before, but the piebald +ran even faster. White Otter was within less than half a pony-length of +the Blackfeet chief. The latter, however, was almost within bow shot of +his tribesmen. The Minneconjoux realized that unless White Otter +overtook the black pony within the next few strides he would be at the +mercy of his foes. The thought drove them into a frenzy of excitement. + +"See, see, he has caught Many Buffaloes!" Sun Bird shouted, wildly. + +The piebald had closed the gap, and was drawing abreast of the Blackfeet +pony. Enraged by the glorious achievement of the Sioux pony, the +Blackfeet raced forward to save their chief from defeat. At that moment, +however, White Otter drew even with his foe. Yelling defiantly, Many +Buffaloes swung his war club at the head of the Ogalala. White Otter +crouched and barely escaped the deadly blow. Then before the Blackfeet +chief could regain his balance the agile young Sioux swung his own +weapon and knocked Many Buffaloes from his horse. The next moment he +secured control of the famous black war pony. Turning the ponies in +their tracks, he raced toward the ravine with the entire company of +Blackfeet close behind him. + +Leaving a few warriors in the ravine to guard the ponies, the Sioux +galloped madly across the plain to rescue White Otter. Once he got the +ponies under way, however, there was slight chance of the Blackfeet +overtaking him. Stride by stride he drew away from his pursuers, who +were too busily engaged lashing their ponies to think of shooting their +arrows. When they finally did make use of their bows they found +themselves already within range of the Minneconjoux. The latter shot +their arrows with deadly effect, and the disheartened Blackfeet wavered +before the attack. Then, as White Otter dashed among them, the Sioux +flashed about and raced back to the ravine without losing a man. + +"Well, my brothers, I have showed you that the Dacotah ponies can run," +White Otter said, quietly as he dismounted in the midst of his +enthusiastic tribesmen. + +"White Otter, I believe the pony that Curly Horse gave you is a Medicine +Pony," Sun Bird declared, seriously. "Perhaps that is why it was so +fierce when you began to ride it. I believe my father had something to +do with it. He is a great Medicine Person." + +"It may be true," White Otter told him, as he stroked the neck of the +little piebald. + +"Yes, yes, Rain Crow must have had something to do with it," declared +the superstitious Minneconjoux. + + + + +CHAPTER XVIII + +THE STAMPEDE + + +The Blackfeet made no attempt to follow the Sioux to the ravine. +Instead, they turned about, and rode far from arrow range. They carried +off their chief and several warriors who had fallen in the skirmish, and +the Sioux were in doubt whether the famous war leader had been killed, +or only wounded, by the blow from White Otter. It was plain, however, +that the Blackfeet had finished the fight. They stopped for a few +moments to shout idle threats against the Sioux and then rode slowly +toward the north. + +"Well, my brothers, the Blackfeet have gone," said Sun Bird. "It is +good. We have done what we came here to do. We have taken away these +ponies. We have made a big fight. We have sent the boastful Blackfeet +back to their lodges. My friends, those are big things to talk about. +Well, I will tell you that White Otter has done the biggest thing of +all. You all know about it. Look at that black pony. You all know how +it came here. It is something to tell about. Now, my brothers, I must +tell you something different. We must not feel too big about these +things. We are a long ways from our people. We have many ponies. We +cannot travel fast. The Crows and the Flatheads are still ahead of us. +Perhaps we shall meet them. We must keep thinking about it. Yes, my +brothers, we must be cautious." + +"My friends, those are good words," declared Lean Wolf. "What Sun Bird +says is true. We have fought back the Blackfeet, but other enemies may +be waiting for us. We have many good ponies. We must take them to our +village. Perhaps it will be a hard thing to do. The Crows would like to +get those ponies. Yes, I believe the Flatheads would like to get them. +We would feel foolish if we lost them. We must be cautious." + +The Minneconjoux found it difficult to restrain their enthusiasm. The +younger warriors, especially, were eager to celebrate their victory over +the Blackfeet. They rushed to the bottom of the ravine, and crowded +forward to count coup upon the Blackfeet pony by striking it with their +hands. The act was a substitute for striking an enemy, and gave them the +privilege of reciting the details of some daring exploit which they had +performed in the fight with their foes. Besides, the Minneconjoux still +looked upon the black war pony as something mysterious, a strange +Medicine Creature possessing superior powers of speed and endurance. +They hoped that in laying their hands upon it they might in some way +absorb some of its mystical powers. + +In the meantime Sun Bird had sent scouts to follow the Blackfeet, to +make sure that they were actually going to their village. Other riders +had crossed the plain to the southward to learn if it would be safe to +travel in that direction with the ponies. The day was well advanced when +the scouts returned to the war party. The Minneconjoux gathered eagerly +about them to learn what they had seen. + +"The Blackfeet are still going ahead," said Running Dog, who had +followed them. "I believe they are going to their village." + +"Did you see anything of Many Buffaloes?" Sun Bird asked, anxiously. + +"Yes, I saw him sitting on a pony," declared Running Dog. "He was +between two riders. I believe they were holding him up. I saw some other +warriors lying across the backs of ponies. I believe they were tied +there. Perhaps they were dead. The Blackfeet are traveling slow." + +"Well, we know that Many Buffaloes is alive," said Sun Bird. "No one can +harm him. He must be very strong. Perhaps he is a Medicine Person." + +"My brother, I will tell you something different," said Sitting Eagle. +"Perhaps the Blackfeet expected us to follow them. Perhaps they were +holding Many Buffaloes on that horse to fool us. Perhaps he was dead." + +"Yes, that may be true," declared the Minneconjoux. + +Still, as they could not be sure, they were unable to reach a definite +conclusion regarding the fate of the Blackfeet chief. While they were +discussing it the scouts from the southward returned. They declared that +the plain was free from foes. + +"It is good," said Sun Bird. "Now we will go ahead." + +The cautious young war leader planned his advance with the care and +skill of a veteran. He realized that one blunder might undo all that had +been accomplished, and turn the splendid victory into a staggering +defeat. The Minneconjoux were fatigued, and their ponies were jaded, and +Sun Bird knew that it might be difficult to overcome a strong force of +foes if they were fresh and eager for battle. He determined, therefore, +to use every safeguard against encountering his enemies. + +When the Sioux were ready to leave the ravine, scouts moved across the +plain in advance and on both sides of them, and a small detail of +warriors were left behind to make certain that the Blackfeet did not +return. Then the war party was divided. White Otter and half of the +force rode ahead. Behind them followed Sitting Eagle and the warriors in +charge of the ponies. Sun Bird and the balance of the company brought up +the rear. + +The day was far spent, and the Sioux hoped to reach water by the time +night came upon them. Sun Bird planned to stop when it grew dark, and +allow the ponies to rest until daylight. Then he decided to travel in +the early morning and after nightfall, and to stop in some suitable +shelter during the heated hours of the day. + +"We must keep the ponies fresh," he told his companions. + +Shortly before dark they came upon a large shallow pool on the open +plain. As there was a heavy stand of grass for the ponies, Sun Bird +determined to stop there for the night. The ponies were immediately +turned loose to feed, and guards were appointed to watch them until +daylight. + +It was not long, however, before the Sioux heard something which caused +them considerable uneasiness. Low, rumbling peals of thunder sounded +from the west. The Sioux looked anxiously into the heavens. The stars +shone brightly overhead, but the distant sky appeared black and +threatening. As they watched, a quick, darting flash of light zigzagged +across the western sky. A dull, thudding crash of thunder boomed in the +distance. + +"The Thunder Birds are talking--it is bad," Sun Bird said soberly, as he +seated himself beside White Otter. + +"Yes, my brother, it is bad," agreed White Otter. + +Then for some time they sat in gloomy silence, watching the sky. A great +mass of ominous black clouds rose steadily out of the west and blotted +out the stars. Sharp, jagged streaks of lightning cut through the night. +A fresh breeze stirred across the plain. The thunder sounded louder. It +was evident that the storm was approaching. + +The possibility filled the Sioux with alarm. They looked anxiously +toward the herd of ponies. They knew that it would be difficult to hold +them under control when the storm broke upon them. Once thoroughly +alarmed they might stampede, and race wildly across the plain. Then it +would be necessary for the Sioux to ride recklessly through the night +in an attempt to keep possession of the herd. It was a perilous task, in +which many brave riders might lose their lives. + +"My brothers, the Thunder Birds are coming--it is bad," cried Sitting +Eagle, as he came to find Sun Bird. "The ponies are sniffing the wind. +They are uneasy. Some of them are running around." + +"We must hold them," said Sun Bird. "Every one must go out there and +keep riding around them." + +"It is good," replied Sitting Eagle, as he galloped away. + +The war ponies had been either picketed or hobbled and left to feed, +while the riders threw themselves upon the plain to rest from their +exertions. Now, as the storm approached, there was great confusion as +each warrior rushed to find his pony. Those who had picketed their +ponies had little difficulty, but the hobbled animals had wandered some +distance away, and their owners spent many anxious moments searching for +them. White Otter and Sun Bird had picketed their ponies and they found +them at once. + +"White Otter, you have done some big things--it is enough," said Sun +Bird. "You must stay out of this. You have taken away the great black +war pony. You must not lose it. When the Thunder Birds fly over us you +must hold fast to that pony. Do not try to do anything else. I am your +brother. Listen to my words." + +"I will do as you tell me to do," agreed White Otter. + +"It is good," cried Sun Bird, as he galloped toward the ponies. + +The riders had already stationed themselves about the herd and Sitting +Eagle was racing about shouting instructions. The Sioux were in a high +tension of excitement. The great storms which swept across the plains +always filled them with superstitious awe. They believed that they were +caused by the Thunder Birds, which they imagined to be two giant +birdlike monsters that lived high up in the most inaccessible peaks of +the loftiest mountains. The Sioux believed that these weird creatures +possessed all sorts of mysterious powers and that at certain intervals +they flew across the country to destroy those unfortunate people who had +incurred their displeasure. + +"Some one has made the Thunder Birds mad--they are coming to drive away +the ponies," the Minneconjoux told one another, in alarmed whispers. + +Their hearts filled with gloomy premonitions of impending disaster, as +the storm rushed upon them. The breeze had freshened to a gale, the +stars above them had vanished, the plain was smothered in darkness. +Vivid flashes of light flickered across the sky. Loud, crashing peals of +thunder rolled through the night. The ponies showed signs of terror. +They crowded nervously together, with heads raised, snorting and +whinnying. The Sioux rode anxiously around them, fearful that each +startling flash would cause them to run. + +Then the storm suddenly broke upon them. A dazzling flare of light was +followed by a terrifying crash of thunder and the ponies leaped forward +in blind panic. The Sioux made desperate efforts to hold them in the +herd, but the panic had spread to the riding ponies, and they were +rearing and plunging in a manner that demanded the entire attention of +the riders. Some of the more fiery animals bolted from control and raced +wildly through the night. A moment afterward the herd broke through the +gap in the circle and thundered across the plain. The fears of the Sioux +were realized--the stampede had begun. + +Having witnessed the first break of the startled ponies, Sun Bird rode +recklessly after the leaders in the hope of guiding them across the +plain. Beside him rode Little Raven. Allowing their ponies to run at +will, the Minneconjoux soon found themselves at the front of the herd. +Then they suddenly realized their peril. Their lives depended upon the +agility of their ponies. A fall meant instant destruction beneath the +hoofs of the panic-stricken beasts behind them. However, there was +little time to think of the danger. The foremost ponies had swerved +toward the west and Sun Bird and Little Raven tried to turn them back. + +"We must not let them go that way!" Sun Bird shouted, anxiously. "The +Crows and the Flatheads are over there." + +Lashing vigorously with their heavy riding quirts, they forced the +ponies from their course and kept them running toward the south. Thus +they rode through the height of the storm, risking their lives to redeem +their pledge to return the ponies which the Blackfeet had driven away. + +Then, as the storm finally spent its fury, and passed across the plain, +the wild stampede suddenly came to an end. Having run themselves into +exhaustion, the ponies were glad to stop. A third of the herd, however, +were missing. Sun Bird was dismayed by the discovery. + +"Come, my brothers, tell me how those ponies got away from you," he +said, sharply. + +"We could not hold them all together," said Sitting Eagle. "I saw some +ponies breaking away and when I rode after them some more ponies got +away." + +"Yes, that is how it happened," declared Lean Wolf. "I saw two ponies +turning away, and I chased them. When I was driving them back, I saw a +big bunch of ponies turning around. Then I rode after them and brought +some of them back. Then I stayed close by the herd. I saw it was the +best thing to do." + +"Well, my friends, it is bad, but I see that you did the best you +could," Sun Bird told them. "We had a hard time getting those ponies. We +must not leave them for our enemies. There is only one thing to do. +Sitting Eagle, you must keep going ahead with these ponies. When you get +near our village you must stop and wait for us. Do not let our people +see you until we come. My brothers, most of you must go with Sitting +Eagle to help him fight our enemies. Some of us must stay here until it +gets light. Then we will go out and look for the ponies that got away. I +believe we will find them close by. Now I will call out the names of the +men who must go with me to find the ponies. Listen, my brothers, I am +going to call those names: Lean Wolf, Little Raven, Feather Dog, +Running Dog, Falling Eagle, Brave Bear, Two Elks. These men will go with +me. The rest of you must go with Sitting Eagle." + +As he finished speaking they heard two ponies galloping toward them. A +few moments afterward White Otter appeared. The piebald and the +Blackfeet pony were lathered with sweat. Neither, however, showed the +slightest trace of exhaustion. + +"I have been a long ways," said the Ogalala. "These foolish ponies ran +the wrong way. It was a long time before I could turn them around. Then +I came very fast." + +"Now White Otter is here," said Sun Bird. "It is good. I am going to ask +him to be the leader of the men who go with Sitting Eagle." + +Then the Sioux separated. Sitting Eagle and his escort of warriors rode +away toward the south with the ponies while Sun Bird and his company of +scouts remained behind to search for the missing horses. + + + + +CHAPTER XIX + +TRAILING THE RUNAWAYS + + +Sun Bird and his companions were greatly encouraged when they looked +across the plain at daylight and saw several of the stray ponies feeding +a short distance to the northward. They hoped that others might be +concealed behind some of the low hummocks which broke the level of the +plain. + +"See, there are some of the ponies!" said Sun Bird. "We will go and get +them. Then we will ride up on those little hills and look around. I +believe we will see some more ponies." + +They cantered slowly toward the grazing ponies. There were five and they +were feeding close together. They raised their heads and watched +curiously as the horsemen approached, but they showed little fear. The +Sioux, however, determined to take no chance of frightening them into +another exhausting dash across the plain. As they rode within bow range +they separated and circled carefully about the ponies. Then they +gradually closed the net, and the ponies made little effort to escape. + +"Now I will tell you what to do," said Sun Bird, when they had secured +the horses. "Some of you must keep these ponies. The rest of us will +ride up on those high places and look around. I will ask Falling Eagle +and Brave Bear and Two Elks to keep these ponies. Leave them where they +are until we come back. Then we will drive them away." + +The three warriors who had been selected stationed themselves about the +ponies and their comrades turned toward a low grassy slope to the +westward. They had gone less than an arrow flight when their ponies +suddenly raised their heads and looked toward the north. A moment +afterward one of the ponies behind them whinnied. "There is something +over there behind that hill," said Sun Bird as he turned about. + +At that instant a horseman appeared. They recognized him as Many +Feathers, one of the warriors who had been left in the ravine to watch +for the return of the Blackfeet. Having recognized his friends, Many +Feathers returned their signal, and then disappeared behind the ridge. + +"Where has he gone?" Little Raven asked, anxiously. + +"We must watch," Sun Bird told him. + +Then Many Feathers and two comrades rode over the rise of the plain, +driving four of the stray ponies before them. They came directly toward +Sun Bird and his companions. + +"It is good," said Lean Wolf. "Our brothers are bringing some more +ponies. Pretty soon we will find all that got away." + +"Well, my brothers, I see that you found some ponies," said Sun Bird, as +Many Feathers and his comrades rode up. + +"Yes, we found them back there on the plain," said Many Feathers. + +The young warrior appeared to know about the stampede. He said that he +and his companions had read the story from the tracks which they had +followed from the pool. + +"Did you see anything of the Blackfeet?" inquired Sun Bird. + +"No," replied Many Feathers. "We waited a long time but they did not +come back." + +"Did you see any more ponies?" Lean Wolf asked him. + +"No, we did not see any more," said Many Feathers. + +"My brothers, it is good you came here," Sun Bird told them. "Now I am +going to ask you to take these ponies over there where you see Falling +Eagle and Brave Bear and Two Elks. You must stay with them and help them +watch the ponies until we come back." + +"We will go," said Many Feathers. + +Then Sun Bird and his companions rode to the top of the low ridge to the +westward. They saw the rest of the ponies gathered in a small herd some +distance out on the open plain. The sight filled them with joy. As they +were about to go after them, however, they suddenly discovered two +riders watching from a ridge beyond the ponies. + +"Hi, hi," Sun Bird cried, excitedly. "Someone has found the ponies. Now +they are watching us." + +"It is bad," said Lean Wolf. + +Feeling certain that they had already been seen, the Sioux made no +attempt to hide. They remained in open sight and tried to identify the +distant horsemen. The latter were too far away to be recognized. The +Sioux took hope at the thought. They knew that if they could not +identify their foes, the latter would find it impossible to recognize +them. + +"They must be Crows or Flatheads," said Sun Bird. "Anyway, I believe +they are scouts." + +"It is bad," said Running Dog. "They will bring their people here to get +those ponies." + +The Sioux were greatly disturbed by the possibility. As their little +company numbered only eleven, they knew that they would be powerless +before a strong force of their enemies. Aware that the unexpected +emergency demanded quick action, they held a hurried council to decide +what should be done. They saw many difficulties. In the first place they +realized that if they rode directly toward the ponies they might drive +them toward their foes. Still, to circle around behind the herd it would +be necessary to approach close to their enemies. Then, too, the Sioux +knew that if they succeeded in running off the ponies they would +probably be followed by a strong force of their foes. As the ponies were +already fatigued from their strenuous exertions, another long race might +cause them to collapse. + +"It will be hard to get them away if our enemies try to stop us," +Running Dog said, gloomily. + +As he spoke the horsemen suddenly disappeared from the ridge. The Sioux +looked at one another in alarm. They felt certain that one of the scouts +had gone to warn his people, while the other concealed himself to watch. +Sun Bird realized that it was time to act. Delay might prove fatal. + +"Come, my brothers, we must do something," cried the bold young war +leader. "I am going to circle around behind those ponies. I will ask +Lean Wolf to go with me. The rest of you must hide behind this hill +until we drive the ponies to you. If our enemies come after us do not +wait to help us. Go to our brothers and help them drive away those +ponies. Send some one ahead of you to bring back the war party. Come, +Lean Wolf, we will go." + +They were gone before their friends found time to reply. Moving boldly +down the ridge, the daring scouts turned sharply toward the north and +rode away at top speed. Their companions concealed themselves below the +crest of the slope and watched them with anxious eyes. They believed +that they were rushing into great peril and they had grave fears for +their safety. + +"I do not feel good about this thing," Little Raven said, uneasily. +"Perhaps those people over there are trying to fool us. Perhaps they are +waiting until our brothers come close. Then they will come over the top +of that hill and kill them." + +"Sun Bird is a good war leader. Lean Wolf is a great scout. They are +sharp. Their ponies are fast. I do not believe they will let those +people catch them," Feather Dog replied, reassuringly. + +Sun Bird and Lean Wolf rode many arrow flights toward the north before +they finally swerved to the west. Some of the ponies were watching them, +but as yet showed no inclination to run. The Sioux felt much relieved. +They had feared that the nervous beasts might take fright at sight of +them and flee toward the distant ridge. + +"If they keep still we will soon get behind them," Sun Bird said, +hopefully. + +"Watch that hill," Lean Wolf cautioned him. + +"Do you see any one up there?" Sun Bird asked him. + +"No, I do not see any one, but we must be cautious," replied Lean Wolf. + +When they had passed the ponies they began to circle to come up on the +other side of them. They were almost within arrow range of the ridge and +they kept a sharp watch for foes. Then, as they turned to approach the +ponies they heard a shout behind them. Glancing back they saw four Crow +warriors racing down the slope at breakneck speed. + +"Come, get the ponies running!" shouted Sun Bird as he lashed his pony +into a furious sprint. + +They rode madly toward the startled ponies, shouting and waving their +arms to get the animals in motion. Once started, the ponies needed +little urging. They had not entirely recovered from their wild panic of +the previous night and the fierce shouts behind them sent them racing +across the plain at their best speed. + +"Keep after the ponies, I will fight the Crows," Sun Bird cried, +impulsively. + +"No, no, you must keep going ahead!" Lean Wolf shouted, fiercely. "If +the Crows come close we will fight them back. Pretty soon we will reach +our brothers. Then these warriors will turn back." + +He had barely ceased speaking before Little Raven and Feather Dog and +Many Feathers and Running Dog swept over the ridge some distance to the +northward of the ponies. Yelling savagely, they raced to the assistance +of their tribesmen and at sight of them the Crows stopped in confusion. +The odds had suddenly turned against them and they lost courage. They +turned and raced away before the Sioux got within bowshot of them. The +Sioux made no attempt to overtake them. Their one thought was to get +away with the ponies before a stronger force of their foes came upon +them. + +"We have driven away our enemies, now we must run off the ponies," cried +Sun Bird. + +"Yes, we must keep going," said Lean Wolf. + +They drove the ponies over the ridges and ran them toward Falling Eagle +and the warriors who were waiting with the other horses. Then Little +Raven and Many Feathers hid below the top of the ridge to watch for the +Crows. + +The Sioux knew that the Crow village was somewhere in the vicinity and +they had little doubt that a strong force of those foes would soon set +out in pursuit of them. However, they hoped to gain a sufficient lead to +make it impossible for the Crows to overtake them before nightfall. Then +they believed the Crows would abandon the chase. + +When they reached Falling Eagle and his companions the Sioux turned +directly toward the south and drove the ponies across the plain at top +speed. They hoped to reach the deep ravine in which they had hidden from +the Crows and the Blackfeet. + +"Perhaps the Crows took us for Blackfeet," suggested Running Dog. +"Perhaps they will go the other way to find us." + +"No, I do not believe it," said Lean Wolf. "Those warriors came close. I +believe they know we are Dacotahs." + +For some time they kept the ponies running at their best speed and then +as they saw nothing of their foes they gradually slackened the pace. For +the balance of the day they rode over the plain at an easy canter and +shortly before dark they came in sight of the abandoned stream bed. +Their spirits revived at sight of it. They believed that even if the +Crows should overtake them it would be possible to hold them off until +scouts found White Otter and the war party and brought them to the +ravine. + +"I do not believe the Crows can catch us now," said Sun Bird, as they +drove the tired ponies into the ravine. + +"We can make a big fight in this place," Lean Wolf told him. + +As night fell Feather Dog followed the ravine toward the west to listen +for the approach of the Crows. Soon after he had gone Little Raven and +Many Feathers arrived. Their ponies showed the effects of fast riding. + +"Tell us what you have seen," said Sun Bird. + +"The Crows are coming," declared Little Raven. "It is a big war party. +Those scouts tried to follow you, but we drove them back. We did that +many times. Then the war party came and we ran away. The Crows are +coming straight ahead. We rode fast to keep ahead of them. Pretty soon +they will be here." + +"Well, there will be many against us, but we must get ready to fight," +Lean Wolf said, fearlessly. + +"No, my brother, I believe that would be foolish," Sun Bird told him. +"The Crows are too strong for us. I am going to fool them. I will tell +you how to do it. I am going to ask Running Dog and Falling Eagle and +Brave Bear and Two Elks and Many Feathers and Broken Hand and Mad Bull +to ride away with the ponies. I will make Running Dog the leader. At +first you must turn toward the-place-where-day-begins. Then you must +circle back and go toward our village. Pretty soon you will find our +brothers. Then you must stop. When you go away the rest of us will stay +here to fool the Crows. When they come close we will ride out and make a +great noise. Then we will ride toward the mountains. We will keep +shouting as if we are driving ponies. The Crows will follow us. Then we +will circle around and fool them. I will ask Lean Wolf and Little Raven +and Feather Dog to help me do this thing. Come, my brothers, drive away +the ponies." + +"Hi, that is a great thing to do," Lean Wolf said enthusiastically. +"Yes, I believe we will fool the Crows." + +As there was little time to spare, Running Dog and his companions +immediately drove the ponies from the ravine and disappeared into the +night. Sun Bird listened anxiously until the sounds of the hoofbeats +had died away and then he turned to his comrades. + +"Well, my brothers, pretty soon the Crows will come, we must be ready," +he said. + +A moment later Feather Dog appeared. He said that he had heard the sound +of galloping ponies and had come to investigate. + +"It was our brothers taking away the ponies," explained Sun Bird. + +Then he acquainted Feather Dog with the details of the wily trick to +fool the Crows. The famous Minneconjoux scout immediately endorsed the +plan. + +"It is good," he said, as his eyes twinkled merrily. + +"Listen," cried Little Raven. + +The Sioux immediately became silent. The hoofbeats of many ponies echoed +across the plain. The Crows were galloping boldly toward the ravine. The +thought filled Sun Bird with anxiety. He realized that if the bold +stratagem failed, the warriors with the ponies were doomed. Once +overtaken on the open plain, he felt sure they would be speedily +surrounded and annihilated by the great Crow war party. He grew weak at +the possibility. Then his pony called and his thoughts were diverted. +The hoofbeats suddenly ceased. Having located their enemies the Crows +had become cautious. The Sioux pony called again and Sun Bird made no +attempt to stop it. + +"It is good," he said. "The Crows will think the ponies are here. Come, +ride around and make a noise." + +They rode rapidly to and fro to make it appear that there were a number +of ponies in the ravine. Then they suddenly swept up the side of the +gully and raced across the plain. As they rode they snapped their riding +quirts and yelled excitedly at imaginary ponies. Then they listened +anxiously for sounds from the Crows. When they failed to hear them they +gave way to despair. Sun Bird grew sick at heart. He feared that he had +sent his comrades to their death. + +"Perhaps the Crows are keeping quiet until they get across that gully," +suggested Lean Wolf. "Perhaps they believe that some of us are waiting +there to fight them back." + +At that instant a shrill yell of triumph rang through the night, and a +moment afterward the Sioux heard the quick, sharp hoofbeats of galloping +ponies directly behind them. The Crows had been deceived. They were +following blindly on the false trail. The Sioux were wild with joy. +Unmindful of their own peril, they were satisfied to know that their +comrades and the ponies were safe. + +"It is good! It is good!" Sun Bird cried, joyfully. "We have fooled the +Crows. Now our brothers will get away with the ponies." + +They continued to make a great noise, lest the Crows should suddenly +discover their blunder. They rode furiously toward the west, and +rejoiced in the thought that each stride of the ponies was luring their +foes farther from those whom they wished to overtake. It was not long, +however, before the Sioux realized that the Crows were gaining upon +them. The discovery aroused them to their peril. They knew that if the +Crows came up with them there would be little chance of escape. + +"Come, we must ride faster," Sun Bird cried, anxiously. + +They lashed the ponies into a terrific burst of speed and slowly drew +away from their enemies. They knew, however, that it would be impossible +to maintain the pace. They also realized that each moment was taking +them farther from their course. + +"Now we must try to circle around," Sun Bird told them. "Do not make any +more noise." + +They suddenly subsided into silence and turned sharply toward the south. +Then their hearts bounded with joy as they heard the Crows blunder from +the trail and continue toward the west. Having once lost them in the +night, it seemed doubtful if the Crows would be able to find them before +daylight. + +"We have got away," Sun Bird said, confidently. "The Crows cannot find +us. Pretty soon they will go back." + +"Yes, I believe we are safe," replied Lean Wolf. + +"Sun Bird, you have done a big thing," declared Feather Dog. "You are a +great war leader. I will tell our people about it." + +The Sioux laughed gleefully as they heard the Crows signaling far away +toward the west. Then they turned toward the east to find their +tribesmen. They rode steadily through the night and at daylight came +upon the entire Minneconjoux war party at the waterhole which marked the +boundary of the Minneconjoux hunting grounds. They were within a short +day's travel of the great Sioux camp. The long war journey was almost at +an end. Success seemed assured. The Sioux were elated. + +"My brothers, we have come together again," said Sun Bird. "I see you +have kept the ponies. Now we are close to our village. Pretty soon we +will be with our people. It is good." + + + + +CHAPTER XX + +SAFE AT LAST + + +The Sioux waited until the ponies had recovered somewhat from their +fatigue and then they set out for the Minneconjoux camp. They rode gayly +across the plain, talking and laughing and singing their war songs. +Their task had been accomplished. Their fears had vanished. The wearying +suspense was at an end. They were eager to reach their people, for they +knew that a royal welcome awaited them. The day had almost ended, +however, when they finally came in sight of the Minneconjoux village. + +"See, there are the lodges of our people," said Sun Bird. "Pretty soon +some one will see us. We must get ready to ride into the camp." + +"You are the leader, you must go ahead," said Feather Dog. + +"Yes, Sun Bird must go ahead," cried the others. + +"Well, I will ask Dancing Rabbit to ride with me; it will make old +Spotted Face feel good to see him," Sun Bird told them. "Then White +Otter must follow close behind me. He has done the biggest thing of +all." + +"It is good," cried the Minneconjoux. + +They advanced slowly toward the camp. Sun Bird and Dancing Rabbit rode +in front. White Otter followed, leading the famous black war pony, and +Little Raven rode beside him. Then came Lean Wolf and Feather Dog and +Sitting Eagle and Running Dog and all the famous scouts. Behind them +followed the great herd of ponies, surrounded by the balance of the war +party. + +The Minneconjoux soon discovered the approaching horsemen and rushed +from the camp in great excitement. As they recognized the riders and saw +the great herd of ponies they were thrown into an ecstasy of joy. They +gathered at the edge of the camp, singing and dancing and calling out +the names of the warriors who had gone to fight the Blackfeet. + +"See, see, the great war party is coming!" they cried. "They are +bringing many ponies." + +The war party raised their voices in the piercing Dacotah war cry. It +echoed triumphantly across the plain and threw the camp into a tumult. +Then the Minneconjoux suddenly recognized Dancing Rabbit. Men, women +and children began to call his name. + +"Our brothers have brought back Dancing Rabbit!" they shouted. "See, +Dancing Rabbit has come back to us! Look, Spotted Face, your grandson is +alive! He is coming to your lodge." + +The aged warrior shaded his eyes with his hand and looked eagerly across +the plain. He was trembling with anxiety. The Minneconjoux waited for +him to speak. + +"Yes, my friends, it is Dancing Rabbit," he said, finally. "Wakantunka, +the Great Mystery, has sent him back to me. It is good." + +A moment afterward the Minneconjoux discovered the black war pony. The +sight of it astonished them into silence. They looked upon it with wild, +inquiring eyes. Had they been mistaken? Could it really be the famous +war pony of the great chief Many Buffaloes? + +"Yes, yes, it is the great black war pony!" Rain Crow cried, excitedly. +"White Otter, my son, has brought it to our camp." + +When the war party came within bow range they stopped and waited while a +delegation of noted warriors rode out to escort them to the camp. At the +same time a company of youths raced eagerly across the plain to take +charge of the ponies. + +Then the war party rode triumphantly into the village, singing their war +songs and calling the names of the warriors who had been killed by the +Blackfeet. As each missing warrior was mentioned his people began to +mourn and cry out dismally in their grief. However, as his companions +extolled his bravery the mourners stifled their sobs and thrilled with +pride at his noble sacrifice. + +"A warrior must be ready to die," said Pretty Star, the mother of Proud +Hawk. "My son was very brave. They are calling his name. He did a great +thing for his people. It is enough." + +As the victorious warriors paraded through the village the people +gathered eagerly about White Otter and the famous black war pony. Many +of the old men and boys ran forward and struck the Blackfeet pony with +their hands to count a coup against their foes. When he reached the +center of the camp White Otter stopped and tied the Blackfeet pony +before the lodge of Curly Horse, the Minneconjoux war chief. + +"See, White Otter has given the black war pony to Curly Horse," said the +Minneconjoux. "It is a great thing to do." + +Curly Horse and the great men of the tribe had assembled before the +medicine lodge to greet the war party. When the warriors lined up before +him the famous chief stepped forward to address them. + +"I will call Sun Bird and White Otter to come and stand before me," said +Curly Horse. "My brothers, both of you are young men, but you have done +big things. Sun Bird, you are the leader of this war party. You have +done what you set out to do. You have brought back the ponies that the +Blackfeet took away. It was a hard thing to do. White Otter, you are a +great chief. You have done many big things. Now you have done the +biggest thing of all. I see that you have tied that great pony in front +of my lodge. It makes me feel good. But I will not take it. You must +take it to your people. Now I will speak to those brave warriors who +went with you. My brothers, you have done a big thing. You were very +brave. Now I will ask Rain Crow to give you some words." + +"My friends, you have done a great thing for your people," said Rain +Crow, the Medicine Man. "Now we have many ponies. Some of them were +Blackfeet ponies. It is good. Sun Bird, you are my son. Little Raven, +you are my son. White Otter, I have called you my son. All three of you +were very brave. It makes me feel big. White Otter, you have done the +biggest thing of all. Our people will talk about it a long time. I have +finished." + +When Rain Crow ceased speaking the Minneconjoux cried out for Sun Bird +to talk to them. + +"Well, my people, you have asked me to give you some words," said Sun +Bird. "First I will tell you about White Otter. He was very brave. He +went into the Blackfeet camp. He fought back many Blackfeet. He rode +after the great chief Many Buffaloes and caught up with him. Then he +knocked him on the head and ran off with his pony. He has brought it +here. Now I will tell you about Little Raven. He was very brave. He went +with White Otter to the Blackfeet camp. He fought many Blackfeet. Now I +will tell you about all these great warriors that you see standing here. +They were very brave. Lean Wolf fought four Blackfeet warriors and +killed all of them. Sitting Eagle ran off the ponies. Feather Dog did +some great things. Running Dog found our enemies. All of these brave +warriors fought hard to bring the ponies here. Now I have told you about +it." + +"White Otter! White Otter!" shouted the Minneconjoux. "Come, White +Otter, give us some words." + +The Ogalala received a stirring ovation. It was some time before he was +able to speak. + +"My brothers, I have not many words to give you," he said, modestly. "I +will tell you that Sun Bird is a great war leader. He told us what to +do. I will tell you that the Minneconjoux are very brave. I will tell my +people about them. I will tell you that the Dacotah ponies can run. +Curly Horse gave me that great pony that I rode to the Blackfeet camp. +It is very fast. That is how I caught Many Buffaloes. I believe Rain +Crow must have had something to do with it. He is a great Medicine +Person. I believe he helped me to do this thing. Now I will speak to +your great chief Curly Horse. Curly Horse, I have tied that black pony +in front of your lodge. It must stay there. You gave me a great pony to +ride to the Blackfeet camp. I will keep it. Now I will give you that +great Blackfeet pony. You must keep it. Rain Crow, you have called me +your son. Well, my father, I have brought you a fast spotted pony. I +took it from the Flatheads. Now I will not talk anymore." + +"White Otter, I see that you have a good heart," said Curly Horse. "I +will listen to your words, I will keep that great war pony. I feel big +to own that pony." + +When it grew dark the Minneconjoux lighted a great fire and assembled +about it to celebrate the success of the war party. They spent the +entire night dancing and singing and telling of the great exploits +performed by the men who had gone to the Blackfeet camp. + + THE END + + + + +-----------------------------------------------+ + | Transcriber's Note: | + | | + | Inconsistent hyphenation and spelling in the | + | original document have been preserved. | + | | + | Typographical errors corrected in the text: | + | | + | TOC Runways changed to Runaways + | Page 27 murmered changed to murmured | + | Page 33 murmered changed to murmured | + | Page 59 susspense changed to suspense | + | Page 96 unkown changed to unknown | + | Page 164 Siting changed to Sitting | + | Page 211 desperated changed to desperate | + | Page 253 Wakantanka changed to Wakantunka | + +-----------------------------------------------+ + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The War Trail, by Elmer Russell Gregor + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE WAR TRAIL *** + +***** This file should be named 36888.txt or 36888.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + https://www.gutenberg.org/3/6/8/8/36888/ + +Produced by Chris Curnow, Barbara Kosker, Michael and the +Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net + + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions +will be renamed. + +Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no +one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation +(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without +permission and without paying copyright royalties. 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