"Whew!" panted Bob, who was very much impressed, although not wholly convinced, by his companion"s clear and forcible reasoning. "Then I am the chief man in this scout, am I? Suppose--I say, just _suppose_--I should be lucky enough to rescue those boys alive and unharmed, what would the fellows say? What would Mr. Wentworth say?"
"The boys would cheer you, and you would win Mr. Wentworth"s everlasting grat.i.tude," replied George. "But, Bob, the prisoners have not been rescued yet, and I warn you that unless you are as sly as a fox you will be the means of their death. If the Indians discover you, and find themselves unable to escape, their very first act will be to kill those boys."
"Good gracious!" exclaimed Bob, dropping his reins upon the horn of his saddle and pulling off his cap with one hand while he scratched his head vigorously with the other. "_Good_ gracious! The captain never thought of that when he sent me off with this squad, did he? George, the responsibility is too heavy for me. I think I"ll ask the captain where he is, and then go and report to him."
"That wouldn"t be a very smart trick," protested George. "You would not only be taken to task for wasting valuable time, but the Indians, seeing a smoke that they couldn"t understand arise on their trail, would take the alarm at once, and you would lose a fine chance of distinguishing yourself."
"Don"t you suppose they saw the smoke that Lieutenant Earle sent up?"
"Of course they did--the captain"s too. Those same smokes were a good thing for us, for I am of the opinion that they threw our party off their guard by leading them to believe they are not pursued. You mustn"t send up a smoke along this trail if you want to catch those Indians.
What are your orders, anyhow?"
"To follow the trail until I am recalled or until the Indians throw me off entirely," replied Bob.
"Then don"t you see that you would be disobeying orders by marching your squad back to the column without a recall?" asked George. "You would surely get yourself into trouble by doing that, and besides, you would be hauled over the coals for not taking better care of your men and horses. They couldn"t stand twenty miles more to-night without a rest, and how much of a rest could they get here in this oven, with no gra.s.s or water? Don"t do it, Bob."
"But the prisoners--just think of the prisoners!" exclaimed the perplexed corporal. "I don"t want to feel that I am responsible for any harm that may befall them."
"I don"t see how you are going to shirk it."
"Well, will you take command?"
"Certainly not," answered George quickly. "Don"t confess your incapacity by surrendering your authority. Besides, a scout never commands--he only advises; and I will help you in that way all I can. Go on, and say that you will do your best."
"I will," said Bob, slamming his cap upon his head and seating himself firmly in his saddle. "If we can only place ourselves in a position to cover those boys, the Indians will not have a chance to touch them, I"ll bet you. My men are all good marksmen."
"And I am a tolerable one myself," said George. "A single hair of those boys" heads is worth the lives of all the Indians that ever saw the Staked Plains, and if it becomes necessary to shoot in their defence, I am ready. There is a high sandhill, and if you will stop here for a few minutes I will go up and see if I can discover anything."
Bob raised his hand to halt the squad, and George swung himself out of his saddle. His first care was to lay aside his cap and rifle, and his next to pull up a quant.i.ty of gra.s.s and weeds to be used as a screen.
With these in one hand and his field-gla.s.s in the other he crept slowly to the top of the sandhill, and, holding the screen a few inches above the ground, he pushed his field-gla.s.s under it and looked around.
"Aha!" was his mental exclamation, "I shall have good news to carry back to the boys. There"s a deep gully about five miles off, and there must be a stream of water running through it, or else those willows would not be growing there. I wish we had got here an hour earlier, for then I should have had daylight to aid me in making my observations. The Indians probably halted in that gully a few hours ago, and the question to be decided now is--Hallo! If that isn"t smoke rising among those trees, what is it? And didn"t that little cl.u.s.ter of bushes over there on the top of that hill shift its position just now?"
George"s heart beat wildly as he propounded these inquiries to himself.
He took another long look, and then with a very slow and gradual motion he deposited his screen upon the sand and backed down to the plain. His stealthy movements told the troopers that he had seen something.
"Corporal," said he as they rode up to him, "before you ask any questions let me suggest that you order your men to remove their sabres as quietly as possibly."
Bob quickly unhooked his own sabre from his belt, and looked at his men, who made all haste to follow his example. They knew that there could be but one reason for this order. A steel scabbard hanging by the side of a careless rider will strike against his spurs with every step his horse takes, or rattle against his leg as the trooper walks about, giving out a clear ringing sound that will betray his presence to foes far less watchful and sharp-eared than Indians.
"So we have run them into their holes, have we?" said Bob when he had acted upon George"s suggestion.
"That remains to be seen. They are camped about five miles from here, and one of their lookouts is watching the trail."
The troopers looked at Bob as if to ask what he was going to do about it, and Bob, who had as little idea of the orders he ought to give under the circ.u.mstances as he had of the Greek language, looked at George. The latter did not say anything, for he wanted the troopers to hold fast to their belief that the corporal was able to act for himself in any and every emergency; but he gave his friend a look that was plainly understood.
"Dismount," commanded Bob; "we"ll rest here until we can determine upon something. Let every man keep fast hold of his horse, for a neigh from one of them would make dough of our cake in a little less than no time.
Eat and whisper as much as you please, but--"
"Don"t smoke," put in George.
"Oh, Moses!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the troopers in subdued tones.
"An Indian will smell smoke from a pipe or a camp-fire a long distance,"
added George.
"Then keep your pipes in your pockets, where they can"t do any mischief," said Bob.--"George, I"d like to take a look at that camp."
George at once led the way up the hill, but when he neared the top he said in a whisper,
"Perhaps you had better trust to my eyes instead of your own; not but that you can see as far as I can, but you might be a little careless in handling that screen, and the least false motion on your part would be seen by that lookout, whose eyes are as good as a telescope."
"All right!" replied Bob, who wondered what he should have done if George had not been there to advise him. "What shall we do?"
"Let me take another look, and then I will talk to you."
So saying, George crept back to the top of the hill and looked under his screen as before. It was rapidly growing dark, but he could see that the sentry still kept his position, and that the camp-fire was burning brightly.
"They do not stand in the least fear of pursuit," said he as he backed down to Bob"s side, "but they have taken measures to prevent surprise, as they always do when they are on the war-path."
"How long do you suppose that sentry will stay there?"
"Just as long as his friends stay in the gully. I do not mean by that that this particular Indian will act as lookout all the time, but that some member of the party will be constantly on the watch."
The first thing to be done was to decide upon a plan of operations, and this took a good deal of hard thinking, for there was a good deal depending upon it. George made the most of the suggestions, and Bob accepted every one of them without argument. The camp was to be attacked as soon as they could get within reach of it: both were agreed upon that. Bob advised a surround, in order to prevent the escape of any of the Indians; but George objected, urging as a reason for his objections that no one but an Indian could work his way through those thick bushes and trees without making a good deal of noise, and that would knock the whole thing in the head.
"Don"t be too ambitious," said he. "Don"t try to grab too big a handful, and so run the risk of losing everything. Keep your men near you, so that you can have an eye on every one of them. Look out for the boys; and if by so doing you give the Indians a chance to escape, as you will most likely, let them go and welcome."
An immediate advance having been resolved upon, and the part that each man was to play in the coming fight (provided the Indians decided to make a fight of it) having been thoroughly discussed, Bob and his companion returned to the place where they had left the troopers. The former issued his orders in a few brief words, and in a very short s.p.a.ce of time eight barefooted men, armed only with their carbines and revolvers, were drawn up in line ready to do his further bidding; while the four troopers who were to be left behind to hold the horses and to take care of the sabres, shoes and stockings which their lucky comrades had thrown upon the ground, listened with as good grace as they could to a few parting words from their corporal.
"Now, boys," said the latter, "keep quiet and don"t smoke. We have been following the trail of only five Indians, but we don"t know how many may have joined them since they went into camp; so you must hold yourselves in readiness for any emergency. Keep a good lookout for the signal, and if you don"t see it by the time the moon rises, which will be about midnight, take care of yourselves. Draw as straight a course for the column as you can, and tell the boys, when you find them, that the reds got the best of us while we were trying to do our duty. Good-bye.--Lead on, George."
Although our hero had pa.s.sed his life amid scenes of danger, and more than once listened to the sound of hostile bullets (that was during the "neighborhood row" of which we have spoken in the first volume of this series), he had never before taken part in a scout after Indians, and it may be readily imagined that Bob"s parting words did not serve to encourage him in any great degree. Bob seemed to think that there was a possibility that their attempted surprise might end in utter defeat. The bare thought was enough to make George"s hair stand on end, but it did not make him lose any of the sympathy he felt for the boy-captives or falter in his resolve to do all he could toward effecting their release.
In obedience to Bob"s order to "lead on" he raised his rifle to his shoulder and glided off into the darkness, the troopers following in single file. Before he had marched half a mile Bob hurried up and placed himself by his side.
"Say, George," he whispered, "you are not going toward the camp. If you follow this course, you will miss it by half a mile or more."
"I don"t want to go toward the camp," was the reply. "We must circle around so as to come up in the rear of that sentry, who, as I told you, will stay on the top of that hill as long as his friends stay in the gully."
"Do you think we can capture him without alarming the others?"
"We are not going to try; at least, I sha"n"t advise it. If we can save the boys, we ought to be satisfied. That sentry will dig out as soon as he scents danger, and all we can do is to let him go."
"How awful still it is, and how fearful dark!" continued Bob. "I hope you won"t get confused and miss your way."
"There is no danger of that," replied George confidently. "I can see the stars, and they are as good as a compa.s.s to me. I have often travelled by them, and they have never fooled me yet."
"Where are the wolves, I wonder?" said Bob, who was so impatient and so highly excited that he could not long hold his peace. "They keep up their unearthly howls every night when we wish them a thousand miles away, but now, when a yelp from one of them would be a relief, they don"t put in an appearance."