The Spirit of the Border eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about The Spirit of the Border.

The Spirit of the Border eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 334 pages of information about The Spirit of the Border.

His arm dropped; he stepped past the tree, and, bounding lightly as a deer, cleared the creek and disappeared in the bushes.

Mr. Wells carried Nell to his cabin where she lay for hours with wan face and listless languor.  She swallowed the nourishing drink an old Indian nurse forced between her teeth; she even smiled weakly when the missionaries spoke to her; but she said nothing nor seemed to rally from her terrible shock.  A dark shadow lay always before her, conscious of nothing present, living over again her frightful experience.  Again she seemed sunk in dull apathy.

“Dave, we’re going to loose Nell.  She’s fading slowly,” said George, one evening, several days after the girl’s return.  “Wetzel said she was unharmed, yet she seems to have received a hurt more fatal than a physical one.  It’s her mind—­her mind.  If we cannot brighten her up to make her forget, she’ll die.”

“We’ve done all within our power.  If she could only be brought out of this trance!  She lies there all day long with those staring eyes.  I can’t look into them.  They are the eyes of a child who has seen murder.”

“We must try in some way to get her out of this stupor, and I have an idea.  Have you noticed that Mr. Wells has failed very much in the last few weeks?”

“Indeed I have, and I’m afraid he’s breaking down.  He has grown so thin, eats very little, and doesn’t sleep.  He is old, you know, and, despite his zeal, this border life is telling on him.”

“Dave, I believe he knows it.  Poor, earnest old man!  He never says a word about himself, yet he must know he is going down hill.  Well, we all begin, sooner or later, that descent which ends in the grave.  I believe we might stir Nellie by telling her Mr. Wells’ health is breaking.”

“Let us try.”

A hurried knock on the door interrupted their conversation.

“Come in,” said Edwards.

The door opened to admit a man, who entered eagerly.

“Jim!  Jim!” exclaimed both missionaries, throwing themselves upon the newcomer.

It was, indeed, Jim, but no answering smile lighted his worn, distressed face while he wrung his friends’ hands.

“You’re not hurt?” asked Dave.

“No, I’m uninjured.”

“Tell us all.  Did you escape?  Did you see your brother?  Did you know Wetzel rescued Nell?”

“Wingenund set me free in spite of many demands for my death.  He kept Joe a prisoner, and intends to kill him, for the lad was Wetzel’s companion.  I saw the hunter come into the glade where we camped, break through the line of fighting Indians and carry Nell off.”

“Kate?” faltered Young, with ashen face.

“George, I wish to God I could tell you she is dead,” answered Jim, nervously pacing the room.  “But she was well when I last saw her.  She endured the hard journey better than either Nell or I. Girty did not carry her into the encampment, as Silvertip did Joe and me, but the renegade left us on the outskirts of the Delaware town.  There was a rocky ravine with dense undergrowth where he disappeared with his captive.  I suppose he has his den somewhere in that ravine.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Spirit of the Border from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.