“All right, let her hide somewhar nigh with the guns,” said Solomon. “The oldest gal kin go back with the young ’uns. Don’t want no skirts in sight when they git here.”
Mrs. Irons hid in the shed with the loaded guns.
Ruth Irons and the children set out for the sugar bush. The steers were quickly led up and slaughtered. As a hide ripper, Solomon was a man of experience. The loins of one animal were cooking on turnspits and a big pot of beef, onions and potatoes boiling over the fire when Jack arrived with the Bones family.
“It smells good here,” said Jack.
“Ayes! The air be gittin’ the right scent on it,” said Solomon, as he was ripping the hide off the other steer. “I reckon it’ll start the sap in their mouths. You roll out the rum bar’l an’ stave it in. Mis’ Bones knows how to shoot. Put her in the shed with yer mother an’ the guns, an’ take her young ’uns to the sugar shanty ’cept Isr’el who’s big ’nough to help.”
A little later Solomon left the fire. Both his eye and his ear had caught “sign”—a clamor among the moose birds in the distant bush and a flock of pigeons flying from the west.
“Don’t none o’ ye stir till I come back,” he said, as he turned into the trail. A few rods away he lay down with his ear to the ground and could distinctly hear the tramp of many feet approaching in the distance. He went on a little farther and presently concealed himself in the bushes close to the trail. He had not long to wait, for soon a red scout came on ahead of the party. He was a young Huron brave, his face painted black and yellow. His head was encircled by a snake skin. A fox’s tail rose above his brow and dropped back on his crown. A birch-bark horn hung over his shoulder.
Solomon stepped out of the bushes after he had passed and said in the Huron tongue: “Welcome, my red brother, I hear that a large band o’ yer folks is comin’ and we have got a feast ready.”
The young brave had been startled by the sudden appearance of Solomon, but the friendly words had reassured him.
“We are on a long journey,” said the brave.
“And the flesh of a fat ox will help ye on yer way. Kin ye smell it?”
“Brother, it is like the smell of the great village in the Happy Hunting-Grounds,” said the brave. “We have traveled three sleeps from the land of the long waters and have had only two porcupines and a small deer to eat. We are hungry.”
“And we would smoke the calumet of peace with you,” said Solomon.
They walked on together and in a moment came in sight of the little farm-house. The brave looked at the house and the three men who stood by the fire.
“Come with me and you shall see that we are few,” Solomon remarked.
They entered the house and barn and walked around them, and this, in effect, is what Solomon said to him: