Little Oskaloo - Part 14
Library

Part 14

Then he thrust the weapon into the hollow of a tree near by, and started into the forest.

He had another mystery to solve besides Kate Merriweather's abduction--Oscar Parton's whereabouts. He felt a.s.sured, however, that the settler's daughter had fallen into Darknight's hands, and it was known to him that the guide and James Girty were staunch friends.

It was toward the renegade's cabin, ten miles distant, that the scout hastened. He examined the ground over which he walked, and the light growing stronger, at last penetrated the forest.

The morning was not far advanced when a young man paused suddenly in a glen where the trees had felt the fury of a hurricane, and looked into the face of a person whose clothes were damp with still glistening dew.

The cold white face was upturned to the blue sky, and in the eyes was the ghastly stare of the dead. Beside the body lay a dark-stocked rifle clutched tightly by a rigid right hand. Under the left ear was a ma.s.s of clotted blood, which proclaimed the gateway of the bullet of death.

"John Darknight!" exclaimed Harvey Catlett, stooping down to examine the dead. "Little did I think that your trail would end so suddenly, and so fatally to you. Now a new mystery begins. Where is the girl?"

An examination of the glen told the trailer that several persons besides the unfortunate guide had been there, and he was examining a track so peculiar as to attract attention, when a noise greeted his ears.

Raising his head and looking over his shoulder, he saw standing not far away the person of all others whom he would meet at that hour--Little Moccasin.

There was a smile on her face as she came forward and submitted to the kiss which he imprinted on her cheek.

"They have been talking hard of you, girl, in the camp over the river,"

Harvey said. "They accuse you of deserting them."

"Areotha go to follow him!" she said, and her glance wandered to the dead man in the dewy gra.s.s. "But he eluded her, and for a long time she saw him not."

"And too late you have found him. He is there."

"Areotha saw him fall with his face to the stars. He lay so still, and never groaned in his throat."

The young scout looked into the fair face, flushed with triumph.

"Did you do it, girl?"

"Areotha shot him when he was taking the white girl through the forest."

Harvey Catlett started.

"Then you rescued Kate!" he cried.

The girl shook her head.

"White girl taken from Areotha," was her answer. "Will Fair Face listen?"

"I will."

In simple language Little Moccasin detailed her trailing of John Darknight and his captive through the forest, and how in the hurricane-swept glen she had put an end to his crimes with a bullet.

Then, of course, followed the account of James Girty's interference, and his subsequent flight with the settler's daughter.

The scout listened without interrupting her.

"The new trail begins here," he said, addressing the beautiful creature.

"There is a ball in my rifle that may rid the Northwest Territory of its incarnate curse."

"No, no!" cried Little Moccasin, and her hand fell on his arm. "If Fair Face kills the Whirlwind, he will never tell."

Catlett looked into the forest beauty's eyes as a puzzled expression settled upon his face.

"Never--never tell!" repeated the girl, mystifying him the more.

"Never tell what, Moccasin?" exclaimed the scout, as he put his arm about her and drew her near him.

"He knows Areotha's true father."

"No!"

"He said so last night in his own cabin door, and when he said he would not tell, Areotha raised her rifle; but he told her to shoot, and never, never know, and--she let the rifle fall. My father knows, for when the wound-fever was upon him he said strange things, and made me go away when I came near."

Catlett was silent, busy with his thoughts, and when he started he saw Areotha's eyes fixed upon him.

"The brute may know," he said. "I wish I could wrest the secret from him."

"Fair Face will not kill him, then?" said the girl, pleading for the life of the scourge of the settlements. "When the right time comes he will tell."

"That time, in his opinion, will never come. When Jim Girty hates, he hates forever."

"But will Fair Face spare him?"

"I would not spare the wolf that has trailed me for years, nor would I be lenient with the hound that has spilled the blood of women and their little ones. Wolf and hound is this very man whom you have called father these many years."

"He is very bad!" the girl said, dropping her eyes. "_But he knows!_"

"Then for your sake I will not slay him, save in self defense. Otherwise on sight would I shoot the human blood-hound."

Before Harvey Catlett had ceased to speak a pair of arms encircled his neck, and he felt hot kisses on his face.

Areotha had conquered him.

"We part here," he said, gently releasing himself.

"Does Fair Face go to trail the Whirlwind?"

"I go to wrench Kate Merriweather from his grasp. This is my sole mission; then back to Mad Anthony, to fight in the battle near at hand."

"And Areotha?"

"Go to the camp over the river, and tell Wolf Cap what I have done."

A pallor of fear and distrust came over the girl's face.

"He hates Areotha, and the young men do not like her."