s somethin' about that 'Last Chance' store and
about this town I don't understand. There's a nigger in the wood-pile,
or an Injun in the blankets, somewhere. I hope it won't be long till
this thing is cleared up and we can know whether we do know anything, or
don't know it. I'm gettin' mystifieder daily." And Cam sat down
chuckling.
"Anyhow, we won't see that Redskin here for a spell, I reckon," broke in
Amos Judson, Whately's clerk. And with this grain of comfort, we forgot
him for a time.
One lazy Saturday afternoon in early August, O'mie and I went for a swim
on the sand-bar side of the Deep Hole under the Hermit's Cave. I had
something to tell O'mie. All the boys trusted him with their
confidences. We had slid quietly down the river; somehow, it was too hot
to be noisy, and we were lying on a broad, flat stone letting the warm
water ripple over us. A huge bowlder on the sand just beyond us threw a
sort of shadow over our brown faces as we rested our heads on the sand.
"O'mie," I began, "I saw something last night."
"Well, an' phwat did somethin' do to you?" He was blowing at the water,
which was sliding gently over his chest.
"That's what I want to tell you if you will shut up that red flannel
mouth a minute."
"The crimson fabric is now closed be order av the Coort," grinned
O'mie.
"O'mie, I waked up suddenly last night. It was clear moonlight, and I
looked out of the window. There right under it, on a black pony just
like Tell Mapleson's, was Jean Pahusca. He was staring up at the window.
He must have seen me move for he only stayed a minute and then away he
went. I watched him till he had passed Judson's place and was in the
shadows beyond the church. He had on a new red blanket with a circle of
white right in the middle, a good target for an arrow, only I'd never
sneak up behind him. If I fight him I'll do it like a white man, from
the front."
"Then ye'll be dead like a white man, from the front clear back,"
declared O'mie. "But hadn't ye heard? This mornin' ould Tell was showin'
Tell's own pony he said he brought back from down at Westport. He got
home late las' night. An' Tell, he pipes up an' says, 'There was a arrow
fastened in its mane when I see it this mornin', but his dad took no
notice whatsoever av the boy's sayin'; just went on that it was the one
Jean Pahusca had stole when he was drunk last. What does it mean, Phil?
Is Jean hidin' out round here again? I wish the cuss would go to Sa
|