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Blazing Arrow: A Tale of the Frontier

Page 28

by Edward Sylvester Ellis


  CHAPTER XXVIII.

  GOOD NEWS.

  Wharton Edwards could not keep back the question any longer.

  "Kenton, why was it you were in such a hurry to get along the trail whenyou left the block-house?"

  "I wanted to catch up with your father and mother, that left beforesun-up this mornin'."

  The poor lad staggered back, and, had he not caught hold of a sapling,would have fallen to the earth.

  "There is no hope for them."

  "Who said there wasn't, younker?" demanded Kenton, sharply.

  "I can see none; do you?"

  "It looks putty bad, I'll own, but Brigham Edwards and his wife are nofools, onless they've become so since they left the block-house."

  The words of the great ranger lifted part of the weight from theshoulders of the boys (for the grief of Larry was almost as deep as thatof the son), though they were still in anguish of spirit.

  "What led you to follow them in such haste? How did you know they werein such great danger?"

  "I got in late last night to the block-house; I had been out on a scoutfor Colonel Quimby and was gone more than a week. The Shawanoes andWyandots are raising the dickens, and I knowed thar war lots of 'emhanging round the settlement. I told your father, bein' that war so, hehad better wait whar he war for a few days, or until we could spareseveral of the boys to go with him.

  "Howsumever, instead of that leadin' him to do as I wanted, it made himand your mother twice as determined to be off. They wouldn't wait at theblock-house for you younkers to come in, as they orter done, and made upthar minds to start the fust thing in the mornin'. I talked so hardwith your father that I war sure he would change his mind, and so, bein'powerful tired, I went to sleep. I slept so late that when I woke upthey'd been gone an hour. I swallered two or three mouthfuls and startedafter them."

  Wharton explained what he had seen for himself, all of which indicatedthat Blazing Arrow and his two warriors had laid an ambush for the boys.

  "Thar ain't no doubt of that after what you tell me. They larned thatyou war goin' to make a start for the block-house, so they went a goodlong way along the trail and waited for you to walk into thar openjaws."

  "Which we might have done had we gone farther; but, that being so, howwas it father and mother rode this way without harm when they must havepassed the very spot where Blazing Arrow and the rest were waiting forus?"

  "I came by 'em," said Kenton, with another smile.

  "You could go by any number of them, for you know how. You were on footand were prepared for them, but they were on horseback."

  "Which leads me to say agin that Brigham Edwards and his wife ain'tfools, onless they've become so powerful sudden. Your father knowed tharwar three places whar, if thar war any ambush laid, it war sartin to bein one of 'em. Countin' from the settlement, the fust was whar the pathgoes close to them falls, for the lay of the land jes' invites it; thesecond are at the ravine down thar, only a little way beyond whar youare standin' this minute; and the third are ten miles this side of theblock-house, whar the trail goes through that swampy spot, and thebranches are so thick over it that they almost sweep you off the back ofyour hoss. If he could pass them there three places without runnin' aginthe varmints, he would be safe."

  "And where were Blazing Arrow and the rest in waiting?"

  "At the swampy place I war speakin' of; the varmints made up thar mindsthat they would be sure of you by goin' close to the block-house."

  "And how came father and mother to miss them?"

  "Jes' before reachin' the spot they turned out of the trail and wentround it. It war powerful hard work pickin' thar way with thar horsesamong the trees and round the rocks, but they managed to do it, and didnot come back to the trail till they war a half mile this side the spotwhar the varmints war waitin' for 'em."

  "And ye mustn't forgit," said Larry, "that the spalpeens warn't lookingfor thim, but for us."

  Wharton's eyes kindled with pride at this proof of the wisdom of hisparents. It made clear that which had been mystifying to him.

  "Bein' as your folks had done that," continued Kenton, "why, I thoughtit only perlite to do the same."

  "Why didn't Blazing Arrow and the others wait for us to come?" askedWharton.

  "They got tired, though an Injun has more patience than a white man; butthey begun to think that mebbe they war too late after all, and they setout to meet you."

  "But you say that we are close to the second place, that is to theravine where I got my rifle back from Blazing Arrow."

  This was the first reference the fleet-limbed youth had made to hisgreat race with the Champion of the Shawanoes, though he had told almosteverything else. Remarking that the parents were safe for the present,Kenton demanded an account of the contest, and expressed the greatestdelight, declaring that he would have swapped his favorite rifle for apowder-horn could he have stood where he might have witnessed thewonderful burst of speed on the part of the youthful runner.

  But Wharton was impatient. All his thoughts were with the folks; andthough quite certain, from the words and manner of the scout, that therewas no cause for immediate alarm, he could not be denied fullerinformation.

  "We are near the second place that you say would be used by theShawanoes for ambush. Have the folks passed that yet?"

  "No, they ain't two hundred yards off from you this blessed minute."

  Wharton bounced from the ground and could hardly repress a cheer in theexcess of his delight.

  "Why, Kenton, didn't you tell me this before?"

  "What war the hurry? They'll keep."

  "Where did you overtake them?"

  "Some distance back along the trail; I give a signal to your father andhe waited for me to come up. I told him the varmints had sot the trapclose to the swampy spot that he had sarcumvented, for I had seen theirtracks along the trail, and, onless they came trottin' after us, we mustlook out for that ravine next. It's purty hard work sarcumventin' that,but, leavin' them to do it, I sneaked back hyar to keep a lookout forthe varmints."

  "Where does father intend to return to the main trail?"

  "A little way beyond the clearin'; but the varmints will find out thathe are ahead of 'em, and, havin' slipped up once already, they may trysome trick; they'll be powerful careful, now that they know your folksain't alone."

 

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