"Has he ever seen service?"
"No, but he knows what danger is, and he has been in some situations that you wouldn"t care to be placed in. During long months of his life he lived in constant fear of a violent death."
"I don"t doubt that he told you so, but I don"t believe it, all the same," observed the orderly.
"I can"t help that. I am personally acquainted with him, and you are not. I was with him when the steamer to which he belonged was burned on the Mississippi River, and came to Texas with him. He owns a big cattle-ranche a few miles from here, and has an income of about forty thousand dollars a year."
"Aha! that accounts for the milk in the cocoa-nut," exclaimed the orderly. "I know now why it was that the colonel met him in so friendly a manner. Even those stern old regulars soften in the presence of one who was born with a silver spoon in his mouth, don"t they?"
"But George Ackerman"s money didn"t get him the position he holds," said Bob quickly. "He has been a prisoner among the cattle-thieves on the other side of the river, and knows where they hang out. He is here to act as our guide when we pursue the raiders across the river."
"What did the cattle-thieves take him prisoner for?"
"Because they were promised twenty thousand dollars for it by George"s guardian, who wanted to get him out of the way, so that his son could inherit George"s property. But he managed to escape from them, went up North and became a pilot, and it was while he was serving in that capacity that I made his acquaintance."
"That"s a very pretty story," remarked the orderly, "but doesn"t it sound almost too much like a dime novel?"
"If you don"t believe it ask Gus Robbins, if you get a chance to speak to him. He knows George, and has reason to be grateful to him too. Gus came down here to visit Ned Ackerman while the latter"s father was acting as George"s guardian, and got himself into trouble that would have ended seriously if George had not befriended him. It was through that same visit that Gus got into the army."
"Did you hear what the colonel said to him about a servant?" asked the orderly. "Whoever saw a scout with a servant? I never did, and neither did I ever before see a man holding that position treated with so much consideration by a post-commander. I can"t account for it."
Bob could not account for it either, and so he attempted no explanation.
We may tell the reader that there were two good reasons for it. In the first place, George was not a regular scout; he might, with more propriety, have been called a volunteer aide. It is true that he was sworn into the service, and that he was bound to do his duty faithfully "during the pleasure of the commanding officer" of Fort Lamoine, but he drew no pay from the government. He did not even ask that he should be fed while he lived at the fort, but stood ready to pay his share of the mess-bill. He had freely offered his services as guide to the troops because he, in common with every rancheman and farmer in that country, wanted the raiding-parties broken up, and he believed that he could do as much, if not more, toward accomplishing that object than any other single civilian. He was not obliged to wear a uniform (being sworn in, he had a _right_ to wear it), but he had purchased it for the same reason that he had purchased the Mexican costume and the other clothing he had brought with him--because he believed it might some day be of use to him. We have already seen how one of his disguises came into play. If he had not brought with him that Mexican suit, it is hard to tell how Bryant would have been captured.
In the next place, the colonel was an old acquaintance and friend of George"s father. He had often enjoyed Mr. Ackerman"s hospitality, and he could say, with Zeke, that he had carried George in his arms when the latter was a "yelling baby not knee-high to a duck," and when he himself was nothing but a second lieutenant. Since that time a great many things had happened. Mr. Ackerman and his wife were dead, the second lieutenant had pa.s.sed through a terrible war, had worn a major-general"s shoulder-straps in the volunteer army and won a brevet colonelcy in the regulars, and George had grown almost to manhood. Neither of them knew of the presence of the other in that country until George, accompanied by Mr. Gilbert and a few other ranchemen, came to the fort to offer his services. The colonel knew the boy as soon as he heard his name, and it was on account of the respect and affection he cherished for the memory of his father that he extended so cordial a greeting to him; but, like all the other soldiers who had seen him, the colonel did not think that George was just the guide he wanted.
"I need somebody with age and experience, George," said he, "and you have neither. I know you can handle a herd of cattle and manage your ranche in good style, but I am not so certain of your ability to act as guide to my troops. I admire your pluck, and I should be glad to have you come here and live until you get tired of it; and in order to make it lawful for you to stay here, I will give you a position as forage-master."
"I am very much obliged to you, sir, but that is a berth I don"t want,"
answered George. "I want to help put down those raiders."
"But just think of the responsibility that would rest upon you,"
protested the colonel. "A single blunder on your part might cripple me fearfully."
"You need have no fears on that score," said Mr. Gilbert. "George is good wherever you put him. He is acquainted with Fletcher, who is the most active of all the raiders who trouble us; he knows where he hangs out, and he is the only one on this side of the river who does. When it comes to trailing, he is at home there too. Can you look at a trail and tell how old it is and how many men or horses made it?"
No, the colonel couldn"t do that. He always looked to his scouts for information on those points.
"George can do it," said Mr. Gilbert. "He has served his time under one of the best trailers in the country; and that is Zeke, his herdsman."
After a little more conversation the colonel, although not without many misgivings, accepted the offer of George"s services; and he never had occasion to regret it. During the very first expedition that was sent out of the fort after he reported there for duty he showed what he was made of, and gave the colonel reason for placing almost unlimited confidence in his judgment. Acting as Bob Owens"s counsellor, he enabled the latter to perform an exploit that made him the lion of the post.
Having dressed himself, George pa.s.sed through the colonel"s office and out through the hall to the parade. In the outer door was seated a man who was bent half double, with his elbows resting on his knees and his face buried in his hands. Hearing the sound of the boy"s footsteps, he raised his head, revealing a countenance so haggard and sorrowful that George was startled at the sight of it. The man moved aside to allow him room to pa.s.s, and then covered his face with his hands again, and as George walked out he was sure he heard him utter a suppressed moan. The man was not a soldier, for he was dressed in citizen"s clothes. He looked like a rancheman; and as George was a rancheman himself, he naturally felt some sympathy for the unknown sufferer. After hesitating a moment, weighing in his mind the propriety of the step he was about to take, he turned back and asked,
"What is the matter with you, sir? Are you ill?"
""Ill"?" repeated the man, without looking up. "Worse than that--worse than that."
"Is there anything that I can do for you?" asked George. "You seem to be in great trouble."
As these words fell upon his ear the man straightened up, and, gazing at George with a pair of wild-looking eyes, said, in a voice that was rendered husky by some strong emotion,
"I am in trouble, partner, and although I do not think you can help me in any way, I feel grateful to you for your sympathy. I have been bounced by the hostiles and cleaned out--completely cleaned out."
"That _is_ bad," returned George, who told himself that the man took his loss very much to heart. He knew a good many stock-raisers who had been "bounced" and "cleaned out," but he had never before seen one who seemed to be so utterly broken down by his misfortunes as this one did. The stranger"s next words, however, explained it all.
"The loss of my ranche and stock I don"t mind," said he; "that"s nothing. But when one sees his two motherless boys carried off by the red fiends, while he is powerless to help them, it"s pretty rough, it"s pretty rough."
"Why, this must be the man the colonel told me about last night," said George to himself.
"I should not fear that the savages would raise their hands against the lives of the boys (they are too young to be put to torture, one being eight and the other ten years of age) if it were not for one thing,"
continued the bereaved father, jumping to his feet and pacing back and forth like a caged tiger. "I made a hard fight of it, and dropped a Kiowa for every year of my oldest boy"s age. Of course the death of those warriors will have to be avenged by their relatives. Perhaps you don"t know it, but that is Indian law."
"I do know it," interrupted George. "I couldn"t have lived so close to these raiders, both Indians and Mexicans, nearly all my life without learning something about their ways, could I? I am a Texan, like yourself."
"You are? I took you for a Yankee soldier."
"There"s where you made a mistake," replied George. "I was born in Miller county in this State, and I am here to act as guide to the troops when they cross the river in pursuit of the cattle-thieves."
"Good! Put it there!" exclaimed the man, extending his hand, while his face for the moment showed the pleasure he felt at the meeting. "My name is Wentworth; what is yours?"
George told him, and Mr. Wentworth said he had often heard the name, and in a roundabout way had learned something of the family history.
"I have heard of you too," said George. "You have often been obliged to run in order to save your life and stock, have you not?"
"Yes, and I have always succeeded in getting safely away; but there is a first time for everybody, and mine came three days ago. I was going on to say that I am afraid the savages will take vengeance on my helpless little boys for the braves I shot in the fight," continued Mr.
Wentworth. "If they don"t do that, they will probably hold them for ransom; but they might as well tomahawk the boys at once and put them out of their misery, for I haven"t a horn nor a hoof nor a cent of money to give in exchange for them. I know I have seen them for the last time, but won"t I make it hot for those who stole them?"
George could not say anything comforting. The sight of the strong man"s overwhelming grief struck him dumb.
"I know some of the bucks who were in the fight," continued Mr.
Wentworth, grinding his teeth and rubbing his hands nervously together.
"They have often camped on my ranche when they came down here buffalo-hunting. I don"t care what treaties our government may make with that tribe; there will be eternal war between me and them. No Kiowa shall ever cross my trail and live--no, not if I hang for it. I only wish that some of those peace commissioners--those lunatics who believe that an Indian is a human being and needs only kind treatment to make him peaceable and friendly--could stand in my boots this minute. I tell you, Ackerman, if one of them were here now I"d stand and see an Indian shoot him, and never lift a hand in his defence. I got in last night and told the colonel about it, and he said he would send out a couple of companies this morning with orders to overtake and punish them if possible; but he might as well save his men and horses, for it isn"t possible. They have reached the Staked Plains by this time, and are safe from pursuit. This is a lovely government for a white man to live under, isn"t it? It is too cowardly to protect us from the Mexicans, and too tender-hearted to hang an Indian for murder unless he happens to kill some one high in authority, like General Canby."
Mr. Wentworth seemed almost beside himself when he thought of his boys, who were now so many miles away from him, for then it was that he realized how powerless he was to help them. He went on in this strain until he had talked himself out of breath, and then he went back to his seat on the doorstep and covered his face with his hands.
CHAPTER IX.
WHAT GEORGE KNEW ABOUT TRAILING.
"It is a hard case," said George to himself as he walked slowly toward the gate, "and I believe, as Mr. Wentworth does, that he has seen his children for the last time. In the first place, the chances are that the Indians, having so long a start, will not be overtaken; but if they go out of their way to attack other isolated ranches, and the troops should come up with them, their very first act, if they saw that they were likely to be whipped, would be to kill their captives, so that they could not be rescued. It _is_ a hard case, that"s a fact, and I don"t see that anything can be done about it. I wish Zeke were here to give his opinion on the subject."
The troopers, having answered to the names, were going out to bring in their horses preparatory to grooming them, and George went with them to bring in his own. Nearly an hour was devoted to this important duty, which was performed under the watchful eye of an officer, and although George often saw his friend Bob, the latter did not speak to him. There were a good many shoulder-straps around, and work, and not talk, was the order of the day. Even those of the officers who, having no servants, were obliged to act as their own grooms, had very little to say to one another; but when these same officers were gathered around the breakfast-table half an hour later, they were lively and talkative enough. There they met on a footing of perfect equality, like the members of a private family, although the juniors did not forget to say "sir" when addressing their superiors. There were no orders issued during the progress of the meal, and in fact very little was said about military matters; but still, George heard enough to satisfy him that active operations against the thieving Kiowas were to be commenced immediately, and that he was to make one of an expedition upon whose success a good deal depended.