The Indian Chief: The Story of a Revolution. Aimard Gustave

The Indian Chief: The Story of a Revolution - Aimard Gustave


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then?" he asked.

      "And you?" the other answered boldly.

      "I! My presence is perfectly natural, and easily to be explained."

      "And mine too."

      "Ah!"

      "Hang it! I am here because you are so."

      "Hum!" the colonel said, maintaining a reserve. "Explain that to me, will you?"

      "I am quite ready to do so, but the spot is badly selected for talking Come with me."

      "I beg your pardon, Buitre, my friend. We are, as you said yourself, old acquaintances."

      "Which means?"

      "That I doubt you excessively."

      The bandit began laughing.

      "A confidence that honours me," he said, "and of which I am deserving. Did you find in the mission church the hilt of a dagger with an S engraved on the pommel?"

      "Yes."

      "Very good. That hilt signified, I think, that you were to take a walk in this quarter?"

      "It did."

      "Well, the persons with whom you must converse are before you. Do you now understand?"

      "Perfectly."

      "Then let us have a talk; but as what we have to say only concerns ourselves, and it is unnecessary to mix up in our business people who have no concern with it, we will proceed to a spot where we shall have nothing to fear from indiscreet ears."

      "Who the deuce do you expect will surprise you here?"

      "No one, probably; but, my esteemed friend, as prudence is the mother of safety, I have become, since our last parting, extraordinarily prudent."

      "I'll go wherever you please."

      "Come on."

      The three men re-entered the forest.

      Valentine followed them pace by pace. They did not go far. On arriving a certain distance from the river they stopped at the entrance of a large clearing, in the centre of which rose an enormous block of green rock. The three men clambered up, and, on reaching the top, lay down at their ease on a species of platform.

      "There!" El Buitre said, "I believe we can talk here in perfect surety."

      Valentine was for an instant rather disappointed at this precaution on the part of the bandits. Still he did not give in. The hunter was accustomed to see material impossibilities arise before him of the same nature as in the present case. After a few seconds' reflection he looked around him with a malicious glance.

      "Now to see who is the most cunning," he muttered.

      He lay down on the ground. The grass grew tall, green, and close in the clearing; and Valentine began crawling, with a slow and almost imperceptible motion, in the direction of the rocks, passing through the grass without imparting the slightest oscillation to it. After about a quarter of an hour of this manoeuvre the hunter saw his efforts crowned with success; for he reached a spot where it was possible for him to rise, and whence he was enabled to overhear perfectly all that was said on the platform, while himself remaining invisible.

      Unfortunately the time he had employed in gaining his observatory prevented him hearing what were probably very important matters. At the moment he began listening El Buitre was the speaker.

      "Bah, bah!" he said with that mocking accent peculiar to him, "I answer for success. Even if the French are devils, each of them is not equal to two men. Hang it all, let me alone!"

      "Canarios! may I be hanged if I interfere at all in this affair! I have done too much already," the colonel made answer.

      "You are always a trembler. How do you expect that men half demoralised, fatigued by a long journey, can resist the combined and well-directed attack of my brother's, this Apache chief's, band, supported as they will be by the eighty scoundrels the Mexican Government has placed at my disposal for this expedition?"

      "I do not know what the French will do; but you will, perhaps, learn that they are stout fellows."

      "All the better – we shall have the more fun."

      "Take care not to have too much," El Garrucholo said with a grin.

      "Go to the deuce with your observations! Besides, I have a grudge against their chief, as you know."

      "Bah! how can a man like you have a grudge against anyone in particular? He only has a grudge against riches. Who are your men?"

      "Cívicos– real bandits – regular game for the gallows. My dear fellow, they will perform miracles."

      "What! cívicos? The idea is glorious – the men whom the hacenderos pay and support for the purpose of fighting the redskins."

      "Good Lord, yes, that is the way of the world. This time they will fight by the side of the redskins against the whites. The idea is original, is it not, especially as, for this affair, they will be disguised as Indians?"

      "Better still. And the chief, how many warriors has he with him?"

      "I do not know; he will tell you himself."

      The chief had remained gloomy and silent during this conversation, and the colonel now turned toward him with an inquiring glance.

      "Mixcoatzin is a powerful chief," the redskin said in his guttural voice: "two hundred Apache warriors follow his war plume."

      El Garrucholo gave a significant whistle.

      "Well," he continued, "I maintain what I said."

      "What?"

      "You will receive an awful thrashing."

      El Buitre repressed with difficulty a gesture of ill-temper.

      "Enough," he said; "you do not know the Indians. This chief is one of the bravest sachems of his tribe. His reputation is immense in the prairies. The warriors placed under his orders are all picked men."

      "Very good. Do what you please: I wash my hands of it."

      "Can we at least reckon on you?"

      "I will execute punctually the orders I received from the general."

      "I ask no more."

      "Then nothing is changed?"

      "Nothing. Always the same hour and the same signal."

      "In that case it is useless for us to remain longer together. I will return to the mission, for I must try to avoid any suspicion."

      "Go, and may the demon continue his protection to you!"

      "Thanks."

      The colonel left the platform. Valentine hesitated a moment, thinking whether he should follow him; but, after due reflection, he felt persuaded that all was not finished yet, and that he should probably still obtain some precious information. El Buitre shrugged his shoulders, and turning to the Indian chief, who was still impassive, said, —

      "Pride has ruined that man. He was a jolly comrade a few years back."

      "What will my brother do now?"

      "Not much. I shall remain in hiding here until the sun has run two-thirds of its course, and then go and rejoin my comrades."

      "The chief will retire. His warriors are still far off."

      "Very good. Then we shall not meet again till the appointed moment?"

      "No. The paleface will attack on the side of the forest, while the Apaches advance by the river."

      "All right! But let us be prudent, for a misunderstanding might prove fatal. I will draw as near as possible to the mission; but I warn you that I shall not budge till I hear your signal."

      "Wah! my brother will open his ears, and the miawling of the tiger-cat will warn him that the Apaches have arrived."

      "I understand perfectly. One parting remark, chief."

      "I listen to the paleface."

      "It is clearly understood that the booty will be shared equally between us?"

      The


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