"Where"s my pardner gone?" The child only stared, having no English apparently.
While the Boy packed the rest of the things, and made the tattered canvas fast under the lashing, Joe came out of the Kachime. He stood studying the prospect a moment, and his dull eyes suddenly gleamed.
Anna was coming up from the river with her dripping pail. He set off with an affectation of leisurely indifference, but he made straight for his enemy. She seemed not to see him till he was quite near, then she sheered off sharply. Joe hardly quickened his pace, but seemed to gain.
She set down her bucket, and turned back towards the river.
"Idiot!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the Boy; "she could have reached her own ighloo."
The dirty child grinned, and tore off towards the river to watch the fun. Anna was hidden now by a pile of driftwood. The Boy ran down a few yards to bring her within range again. For all his affectation of leisureliness and her obvious fl.u.s.ter, no doubt about it, Joe was gaining on her. She dropped her hurried walk and frankly took to her heels, Joe doing the same; but as she was nearly as fleet of foot as Muckluck, in spite of her fat, she still kept a lessening distance between herself and her pursuer.
The ragged child had climbed upon the pile of drift-wood, and stood hunched with the cold, his shoulders up to his ears, his hands withdrawn in his parki sleeves, but he was grinning still. The Boy, a little concerned as to possible reprisals upon so impudent a young woman, had gone on and on, watching the race down to the river, and even across the ice a little way. He stood still an instant staring as Joe, going now as hard as he could, caught up with her at last. He took hold of the daughter of the highly-respected Yagorsha, and fell to shaking and cuffing her. The Boy started off full tilt to the rescue.
Before he could reach them Joe had thrown her down on the ice. She half got up, but her enemy, advancing upon her again, dealt her a blow that made her howl and sent her flat once more.
"Stop that! You hear? _Stop_ it!" the Boy called out.
But Joe seemed not to hear. Anna had fallen face downward on the ice this time, and lay there as if stunned. Her enemy caught hold of her, pulled her up, and dragged her along in spite of her struggles and cries.
"Let her alone!" the Boy shouted. He was nearly up to them now. But Joe"s attention was wholly occupied in hauling Anna back to the village, maltreating her at intervals by the way. Now the girl was putting up one arm piteously to shield her bleeding face from his fists. "Don"t you hit her again, or it"ll be the worse for you." But again Joe"s hand was lifted. The Boy plunged forward, caught the blow as it descended, and flung the arm aside, wrenched the girl free, and as Joe came on again, looking as if he meant business, the Boy planted a sounding lick on his jaw. The Pymeut staggered, and drew off a little way, looking angry enough, but, to the Boy"s surprise, showing no fight.
It occurred to him that the girl, her lip bleeding, her parki torn, seemed more surprised than grateful; and when he said, "You come back with me; he shan"t touch you," she did not show the pleased alacrity that you would expect. But she was no doubt still dazed. They all stood looking rather sheepish, and like actors "stuck" who cannot think of the next line, till Joe turned on the girl with some mumbled question.
She answered angrily. He made another grab at her. She screamed, and got behind the Boy. Very resolutely he widened his bold buck-skin legs, and dared Joe to touch the poor frightened creature cowering behind her protector. Again silence.
"What"s the trouble between you two?"
They looked at each other, and then away. Joe turned unexpectedly, and shambled off in the direction of the village. Not a word out of Anna as she returned by the side of her protector, but every now and then she looked at him sideways. The Boy felt her inexpressive grat.i.tude, and was glad his journey had been delayed, or else, poor devil--
Joe had stopped to speak to--
"Who on earth"s that white woman?"
"Nicholas" sister."
"Not Muckluck?"
She nodded.
"What"s she dressed like that for?"
"Often like that in summer. Me, too--me got Holy Cross clo"es."
Muckluck went slowly up towards the Kachime with Joe. When the others got to the water-hole, Anna turned and left the Boy without a word to go and recover her pail. The Boy stood a moment, looking for some sign of the Colonel, and then went along the river bank to Ol" Chief"s. No, the Colonel had gone back to the Kachime.
The Boy came out again, and to his almost incredulous astonishment, there was Joe dragging the unfortunate Anna towards an ighloo. As he looked back, to steer straight for the entrance-hole, he caught sight of the Boy, dropped his prey, and disappeared with some precipitancy into the ground. When Anna had gathered herself up, the Boy was standing in front of her.
"You don"t seem to be able to take very good care o" yourself." She pushed her tousled hair out of her eyes. "I don"t wonder your own people give it up if you have to be rescued every half-hour. What"s the matter with you and Joe?" She kept looking down. "What have you done to make him like this?" She looked up suddenly and laughed, and then her eyes fell.
"Done nothin"."
"Why should he want to kill you, then?"
"No _kill_" she said, smiling, a little rueful and embarra.s.sed again, with her eyes on the ground. Then, as the Boy still stood there waiting, "Joe," she whispered, glancing over her shoulder--"Joe want me be he squaw."
The Boy fell back an astonished step.
"Jee-rusalem! He"s got a pretty way o" sayin" so. Why don"t you tell your father?"
"Tell--father?" It seemed never to have occurred to her.
"Yes; can"t Yagorsha protect you?"
She looked about doubtfully and then over her shoulder.
"That Joe"s ighloo," she said.
He pictured to himself the horror that must a.s.sail her blood at the sight. Yes, he was glad to have saved any woman from so dreadful a fate. Did it happen often? and did n.o.body interfere? Muckluck was coming down from the direction of the Kachime. The Boy went to meet her, throwing over his shoulder, "You"d better stick to me, Anna, as long as I"m here. I don"t know, I"m sure, _what"ll_ happen to you when I"m gone." Anna followed a few paces, and then sat down on the snow to pull up and tie her disorganized leg-gear.
Muckluck was standing still, looking at the Boy with none of the kindness a woman ought to show to one who had just befriended her s.e.x.
"Did you see that?"
She nodded. "See that any day."
The Boy stopped, appalled at the thought of woman in a perpetual state of siege.
"Brute! hound!" he flung out towards Joe"s ighloo.
"No," says Muckluck firmly; "Joe all right."
"You say that, after what"s happened this morning?" Muckluck declined to take the verdict back. "Did you see him strike her?"
"No _hurt_."
"Oh, didn"t it? He threw her down, as hard as he could, on the ice."
"She get up again."
He despised Muckluck in that moment.
"You weren"t sorry to see another girl treated so?"
She smiled.
"What if it had been you?"
"Oh, he not do that to _me_."
"Why not? You can"t tell."
"Oh, yes." She spoke with unruffled serenity.