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Authors: Frederic Remington

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He was apostrophized by a soldier: “Ah, me innocent-lukin’ child of the divil—wait till ye git thim hoop-shnake dawgs afther yez.”

Major Searles rode in through the gate and sang out: “The Colonel has a few papers to sign, after which he says we will chase the wolf; so you can get ready, gentlemen, those who care to
run.” And then to Ermine, who stood near: “Miss Searles thinks that will be a proper disposition of your valuable present. Can you manage to turn him loose?”

“Why, yes, I suppose we can. Putting the ropes on him is easier than taking them off. I won’t take him out until you are all ready; every dog in the camp will fly at him. Can I have
four or five soldiers to drive them off? Wolf-Voice and myself will be on horseback, and can’t protect him.”

“Certainly, certainly!” And under the Major’s directions various soldiers armed themselves with whips, and undertook to make a rear-guard fight with the garrison pups.

Horses were saddled, and went clattering to all points of the post. The certainty of a run drew every one out. Shockley aided Miss Searles to mount, saying, “I am on duty today; my
thoughts will fly where my pony should. You cannot doubt where he would go.”

“Poor man, do not look so woebegone; it does not become you. I like you better when you sing than when you cry.”

“If you didn’t make me cry, I should sing all the time.”

“Oh, that would be bad for your voice, my dear Mr. Shockley, as we say on a letter head.” And she mocked him beyond her rapier point, as she rode along, followed by the rapidly
receding words:

Don’t forget me, Molly darling;

Put your little hand in mine.

Tell me truly that you love me,

And—

The rest died behind her.

“He is such a nice fellow,” she mused, “but there’s more music in his soul than in his throat. I shall miss him today, but not so much as I shall Mr. Butler; and there is
my knight of the yellow hair. Oh! I must be careful of him. He is such a direct person, there is no parrying his assault. His presence has a strange effect on me; I do not understand it; he is
queer. What a pity he is not an officer, with short hair; but pshaw! I might not like him then; how absurd, I do not like him now.” And thus the girlish emotions swayed her pretty head, not
stopping to clarify, man fashion. They flitted about on every little wind, and alighted nowhere for more than a few seconds.

Other women joined her, and a few men, all making for the quartermaster’s.

“Your mother finds herself past riding, Miss Katherine,” spoke one merry matron, to whom age had been generous, and who was past it herself, did she but know it.

“Yes, mother takes that view. I am afraid I cannot sustain the reputation of the Searles outfit, as the phrase goes here. My horse is a Dobbin—papa is so absurdly careful. There is
no fun in being careful.”

“Oh, the Major is right. He knows the value of that little nose of yours, and doesn’t want it ploughed in the dirt. Noses which point upward, just ever so little, lack the severity
of those that point down, in women; that is what the men tell me, Katherine.”

The girl glanced at her companion, and doubted not that the men had said that to her.

“I don’t care to go through life thinking of my nose,” she added.

“No, indeed; never think of your nose; think of what men think of it.”

“I can go home and do that, Mrs. Gooding; out here my horse seems more to the point than my nose.” At this juncture some men opened the corral gate, and the women passed in.

Seeing the wolf flattened out like an unoratorical man at a banquet, who knows he is next on the toast-list, Miss Searles exclaimed, “Poor creature! It seems such a shame.”

And the others added, “Now that I see him I feel like a butcher.”

“Let him go, Major; we will not have his murder on our conscience,” continued a third.

“I should as soon think of killing a canary in a cage.” And thus did the gentler sex fail at this stage; but when the Colonel rode out of the enclosure, they all followed.

The wolf rose to its feet with a snap as the half-breed and Ermine approached, curling their lariats. A few deft turns, and the ropes drew around the captive’s throat. A man undid the
chain, the horse started, and the wild beast drew after, a whizzing blur of gray hair.

There was some difficulty in passing the gate, but that was managed. The remembrance of yesterday’s experience in the rawhide coils came back to the wolf. It slunk along, tail down, and
with head turning in scared anxious glances. Behind followed the rearguard, waving their whips at various feeble-minded ki-yis which were emboldened by their own yelling.

“Colonel, give me a good start; this is a female wolf. I will raise my hat and drop it on the ground when it is time to let the dogs go! We may have trouble clearing away these
ropes,” talked Ermine, loudly.

“Sacre—mi-ka-tic-eh muck-a-muck—dees dam wolf he have already bite de hole in my rope ver near,” and Wolf-Voice gave a severe jerk. To be sure, the animal was already
playing havoc with his lariat by savage side-snaps which bade fair shortly to shred it.

“Watch my hat, Colonel; she may get away from us before we are ready.”

Well outside of the post the Colonel halted his field and waited; all eyes bent on the two wild men, with their dangerous bait, going up the road. The nimble ponies darted about in response to
the riders’ swayings, while at intervals the wolf gave an imitation of a pin-wheel.

When well out, Wolf-Voice yelled, “Ah, dare go my rope!”

The wolf had cut it, and turning, fixed its eyes on Ermine, who stopped and shook his lariat carefully, rolling it in friendly circles toward the wolf. Wolf-Voice drew his gun, and for an
appreciable time the situation had limitless possibilities. By the exercise of an intelligence not at all rare in wild creatures, the wolf lay down and clawed at the rope. In an instant it was free
and galloping off, turning its head to study the strategy of the field.

“Wait for the people; she’s going for the timber, and will get away,” shouted Ermine, casting his big sombrero into the air.

The dogs held in leash never lost sight of the gray fellow, and when let go were soon whippeting along. The horses sank on their quarters and heaved themselves forward until the dusty plain
groaned under their feet.

“Ki-yi-yi-yi,” called the soldiers, imitating the Indians who had so often swept in front of their guns.

The wolf fled, a gray shadow borne on the wind, making for the timber in the river-bottom. It had a long start and a fair hope. If it had understood how vain the noses of greyhounds are, it
might have cut its angle to cover a little; for once out of sight it might soon take itself safely off; but no wild animal can afford to angle much before the spider dogs.

The field was bunched at the start and kicked up a vast choking dust, causing many slow riders to deploy out on the sides, where they could at least see the chase and the going in front of them.
Wolf-Voice and Ermine had gone to opposite sides and were lost in the rush.

Ermine’s interest in the wolf departed with it. He now swung his active pony through the dirt clouds, seeking the girl, and at last found her, well in the rear as usual, and unescorted,
after the usual luck she encountered when she played her charms against a wolf. She was trying to escape from the pall by edging off toward the riverbank. Well behind strode the swift war-pony, and
Ermine devoured her with his eyes. The impulse to seize and bear her away to the inaccessible fastnesses of which he knew was overcome by a fear of her—a fear so great that his blood turned
to water when his passion was greatest.

Time did not improve Ermine’s logistics concerning this girl; he wanted her, and he did not know in the least how to get her. The tigers of his imagination bit and clawed each other in
ferocious combat when he looked at her back as she rode or at her pensive photograph in the quiet of his tent. When, however, she turned the battery of her eyes on him, the fever left him in a
dull, chilly lethargy—a realization of the hopelessness of his yearning; and plot and plan and assuage his fears as he might, he was always left in a mustache-biting perplexity. He could not
at will make the easy reconnaissance of her fortresses which the young officers did, and this thought maddened him. It poisoned his mind and left his soul like a dead fish cast up on a
riverbank.

Ermine had known the easy familiarity of the Indian squaws, but none of them had ever stirred him. The vast silence of his mountain life had rarely been broken by the presence of men, and never
by women. The prophet had utterly neglected the boy’s emotions in the interest of his intellect. The intense poverty of his experience left him without any understanding of the most ordinary
conventions or casual affairs of white men’s lives. All he knew was gathered from his observation of the rude relations of frontier soldiers on campaign. The visions of angels never exalted a
fasting mediæval monk in his cell as did the advent of this white woman to Ermine, and they were quite as nebulous.

The powerful appeal which Katherine Searles made to his imagination was beyond the power of his analysis; the word Love was unknown to his vocabulary. He wanted her body, he wanted her mind, and
he wanted her soul merged with his, but as he looked at her now, his mouth grew dry, like a man in mortal fear or mortal agony.

And thinking thus, he saw her horse stop dead—sink—and go heels up and over in a complete somersault. The girl fluttered through the air and struck, raising a dust which almost
concealed her. A savage slap of his quirt made his pony tear the ground in his frantic rush to her aid. No one noticed the accident, and the chase swept around the bluffs and left him kneeling
beside her. She showed no sign of life; the peach-blow left her cheeks an ivory white, set with pearls when the high lights showed, but there was no blood or wound which he could see.

Her mount struggled to extract his poor broken foreleg from a gopher-hole, where it was sunk to the elbow. He raised his head, with its eyes rolling, and groaned in agony.

If this had been a man, or even any other woman, Ermine would have known what to do. In his life a wounded or broken man had been a frequent experience. As he took her wrist to feel her pulse,
his own hands trembled so that he gave over; he could feel nothing but the mad torrent of his own blood.

Turning his face in the direction where the hunt had gone, he yelled, “Help! Help!” but the sound never reached the thudding hunt. Putting his arm under her shoulder, he raised her
up, and supporting her, he looked hopelessly around until his eye fell on the Yellowstone only a short distance away. Water had always been what the wounded wanted. He slowly gathered her in his
arms, gained his feet, and made his way toward the river. A gopher-hole had planned what Ermine never could; it had brought her body to him, but it might be a useless gift unless the water gave him
back her life.

He bore the limp form to the sands beside the flowing river and laid it down while he ran to fill his hat with water. He made fast work of his restoration, rubbing her wrists and sprinkling her
forehead with water; but it was long before a reward came in the way of a breath and a sigh. Again he raised her in a sitting position against his knee.

“Breathe, Katherine—try again—now breathe.” And he pressed her chest with his hand, aiding nature as best he knew, until she sighed again and again.

The girl was half damp in death, while like a burning mine the pent-up fire-damp exploded and reverberated through the veins of the young man. Oh, if he could but impart his vitality to her.
Possibly he did, for presently her weakness permitted her to note that the sky was blue, that the treetops waved in familiar forms, that the air flooded her lungs, and that a cooling rain was
falling. Again she drifted somewhere away from the earth in pleasant passage through kaleidoscopic dreams of all a girl’s subconsciousness ever offers.

Her eyes spread, but soon closed in complete rest against the easy cradle. She sensed kindly caresses and warm kisses which delighted her. The long yellow hair hung about her face and kept it
shadowed from the hot sun.

“Oh my! Oh my! Where am I? Is that you—How do I—” but the effort exhausted her.

“God—God—Sak-a-war-te come quick! It will be too late.” He put more water on her face.

The hunt missed the wolf in the cover of the river-bottom. It doubled on the dogs, and out of sight was out of mind with the fast-running hounds.

“She gave us a run, anyhow,” sang out Major Searles to Wolf-Voice.

“Yaes, d——him; she give me a bite and two run. What good was come of eet, hey—why ain’t you keel him first plass, by Gar?”

“Oh! You are a poor sport, Wolf-Voice.”

“Am poor sport, hey? All right; nex’ wolf she not tink dat, mabeso.”

Laughing and talking, they trotted home, picking up belated ones who had strung behind the fastest horses.

“Where is Miss Searles, Major?” spoke one.

BOOK: John Ermine of the Yellowstone
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