When Wilderness Was King eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 323 pages of information about When Wilderness Was King.

When Wilderness Was King eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 323 pages of information about When Wilderness Was King.

Plunged into this whirlpool of thought, I moved steadily forward at Captain Heald’s shoulder, unconscious of what might be taking place about us, and for the moment indifferent to the result of our venture.  But this feeling was not for long.  Scarcely had our progress taken us across the front of the deserted agency building, and beyond the ken of the sentinels in the Fort, when a single warrior rose before us as from the ground, and blocked the path.  He was a short, sturdy savage, bare to the waist save for a chain of teeth which dangled with sinister gleam about his brawny throat, and, from the wide sweep of his shoulders, evidently possessed of prodigious strength.  He held a gun extended in front of him, and made a gesture of warning impossible to misapprehend.

“What seeks the White Chief?” he questioned bluntly.  “Does he come for peace or war?”

The query came with such grave abruptness that Heald hesitated in reply.

“Never since I have been at Dearborn have I sought war,” he replied at last.  “Little Sauk knows this well.  We travel now that we may have council of peace with the chiefs of the Pottawattomies.  See!” and he held up both empty hands before the Indian’s eyes, “we are both unarmed, because of our trust in the good faith of your people.”

Little Sauk uttered a low grunt of disapproval, and made no motion to lower his threatening rifle.

“Ugh!  You talk strong!  Did any Pottawattomie send to White Chief to come to council?”

“No,” admitted Heald.  “We come because it is the wish of the Great Father of the white men down by the sea that we talk together of the wrongs of the red men, and make proposals of peace between us.  There is no cause for these rumors of war, and the Great Father has heard that the Pottawattomies are dissatisfied, and it has made him sad.”

The Indian looked from one to the other of us in the growing darkness, and made a gesture of contempt.

“The real Great White Father wears a red coat, and is friend to the Pottawattomie,” he said with dignity.  “He no lie, no shut Indian out of Fort, no steal furs, no throw rum in river.  Who this man, White Chief?  He no soldier,—­he long-knife.”

“Yes, he is a frontiersman, and came to the Fort yesterday with Wau-me-nuk, bringing word of greeting from the Great Father to the Pottawattomies.  He goes now with me to council.  May we pass on to your camp?”

For a moment Little Sauk did not answer, stepping closer in order that he might better scan my features.  Apparently satisfied by the keen scrutiny, he turned his broad back upon us and strode off with contemptuous dignity.

“Come,” he said shortly; and without further word we followed across that dim plain and through the thickening darkness.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
When Wilderness Was King from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.