No, no; I'm only a hunter, as yet,
though afore the peace is made, 'tis like enough there'll be
occasion to strike a blow at some of your people. Still, I wish it
to be done in fair fight, and not in a quarrel about the ownership
of a miserable canoe."
"Good! My brother very young ñ but he is very wise.
Little warrior ñ great talker. Chief, sometimes, in council."
"I don't know this, nor do I say it, Injin,"
returned Deerslayer, coloring a little at the ill-concealed sarcasm
of the other's manner; "I look forward to a life in the woods, and
I only hope it may be a peaceable one. All young men must go on the
war-path, when there's occasion, but war isn't needfully massacre.
I've seen enough of the last, this very night, to know that
Providence frowns on it; and I now invite you to go your own way,
while I go mine; and hope that we may part fri'nds."
"Good! My brother has two scalp ñ gray hair under
'other. Old wisdom ñ young tongue."
Here the savage advanced with confidence, his hand
extended, his face smiling, and his whole bearing denoting amity
and respect. Deerslayer met his offered friendship in a proper
spirit, and they shook hands cordially, each endeavoring to assure
the other of his sincerity and desire to be at peace.
"All have his own," said the Indian; "my canoe,
mine; your canoe, your'n. Go look; if your'n, you keep; if mine, I
keep."
"That's just, red-skin; thought you must be wrong in
thinking the canoe your property. Howsever, seein' is believin',
and we'll go down to the shore, where you may look with your own
eyes; for it's likely you'll object to trustin' altogether to
mine."
The Indian uttered his favorite exclamation of
"Good!" and then they walked side by side, towards the shore. There
was no apparent distrust in the manner of either, the Indian moving
in advance, as if he wished to show his companion that he did not
fear turning his back to him. As they reached the open ground, the
former pointed towards Deerslayer's boat, and said emphatically ñ
"No mine ñ pale-face canoe. This red man's. No want other man's
canoe ñ want his own."
"You're wrong, red-skin, you 're altogether wrong.
This canoe was left in old Hutter's keeping, and is his'n according
to law, red or white, till its owner comes to claim it. Here's the
seats and the stitching of the bark to speak for themselves. No man
ever know'd an Injin to turn off such work."
"Good! My brother little old ñ big wisdom. Injin no
make him. White man's work."
"I'm glad you think so, for holding out to the
contrary might have made ill blood atween us, every one having a
right to take possession of his own. I'll just shove the canoe out
of reach of dispute at once, as the quickest way of settling
difficulties."
While Deerslayer was speaking, he put a foot against
the end of the light boat, and giving a vigorous shove, he sent it
out into the lake a hundred feet or more, where, taking the true
current, it would necessarily float past the point, and be in no
further danger of coming ashore. The savage started at this ready
and decided expedient, and his companion saw that he cast a hurried
and fierce glance at his own canoe, or that which contained the
paddles. The change of manner, however, was but momentary, and then
the Iroquois resumed his air of friendliness, and a smile of
satisfaction.
"Good!" he repeated, with stronger emphasis than
ever. "Young head, old mind. Know how to settle quarrel. Farewell,
brother. He go to house in water-muskrat house ñ Injin go to camp;
tell chiefs no find canoe."
Deerslayer was not sorry to hear this proposal, for
he felt anxious to join the females, and he took the offered hand
of the Indian very willingly. The parting words were friendly, and
while the red man walked calmly towards the wood, with the rifle in
the hollow of his arm, without once looking back in uneasiness or
distrust, the white man moved towards the remaining canoe, carrying
his piece in the same pacific manner, it is true, but keeping his
eye fastened on the movements of the other. This distrust, however,
seemed to be altogether uncalled for, and as if ashamed to have
entertained it, the young man averted his look, and stepped
carelessly up to his boat. Here he began to push the canoe from the
shore, and to make his other preparations for departing. He might
have been thus employed a minute, when, happening to turn his face
towards the land, his quick and certain eye told him, at a glance,
the imminent jeopardy in which his life was placed. The black,
ferocious eyes of the savage were glancing on him, like those of
the crouching tiger, through a small opening in the bushes, and the
muzzle of his rifle seemed already to be opening in a line with his
own body.
Then, indeed, the long practice of Deerslayer, as a
hunter did him good service. Accustomed to fire with the deer on
the bound, and often when the precise position of the animal's body
had in a manner to be guessed at, he used the same expedients here.
To cock and poise his rifle were the acts of a single moment and a
single motion: then aiming almost without sighting, he fired into
the bushes where he knew a body ought to be, in order to sustain
the appalling countenance which alone was visible. There was not
time to raise the piece any higher, or to take a more deliberate
aim.
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