<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>THE BORDER RIFLEMEN; <br/><span class="smallest"><span class="smallest">OR,</span> <br/>THE FOREST FIEND.</span></h1>
<h3>A ROMANCE OF THE BLACK-HAWK UPRISING.</h3>
<h3>BY LIEUT. LEWIS W. CARSON.</h3>
<div class="pb" id="Page_9">9</div>
<h1 title="">THE BORDER RIFLEMEN; <br/><span class="smallest"><span class="smallest">OR,</span> <br/>THE FOREST FIEND.</span></h1>
<h2 id="c1"><span class="small">CHAPTER I.</span> <br/>THE BORDER SUITOR—COONEY JOE.</h2>
<p>The sun was going down behind the western hills in a
flood of yellow light, and a river dimpled on under the
slanting rays, great fish leaping now and then from the placid
surface, and the trees along the bank casting fantastic shadows
into its depths. In a sheltered nook, near a spot where
a little creek joined the river, a settler had built a cabin,
which the hand of woman had beautified and adorned as
only the hand of woman can. Bright flowers bloomed on
each side of the rustic doorway and an English ivy vine
clung to the walls and was rapidly spreading its delicate
tendrils over the whole front. The cabin faced the stream,
and behind it the hand of industry had cleared many acres
which now showed heavy growths of cereals and roots, carefully
cultivated. It was a silvan spot, and one upon which
the eye of the artist would linger long and pleasantly.</p>
<p>The door opened suddenly, and a young girl holding a
water-pail in her hand came out with a free, careless step,
singing a merry song. She was plainly dressed, and yet
there was an air of native grace about her every movement
which plainly showed that she had not always lived amid
such wild surroundings. She was beautiful—not the vapid
beauty of cities, but that of perfect health, and a free life. Her
form was untrammeled by the fashions which cramp and
deform the beautiful women of our day, and her face, a little
browned by exposure to the to sun, glowed—</p>
<div class="verse">
<p class="t0">“With sunny beauty and rustic health.”</p>
</div>
<div class="pb" id="Page_10">10</div>
<p>Maud Müller—Whittier’s Maud—was not more beautiful
than this frontier damsel. Not only was her face cut in a
perfect mold, but her eyes sparkled with life and vivacity,
and her sunny hair, unconfined, hung about her shoulders in
beautiful profusion.</p>
<p>She left the river, turned down the creek, entered a little
grove half a mile from the house, passed through it, and
looked across the open field beyond.</p>
<p>“Father,” she cried, “are you there?”</p>
<p>No answer was returned, save the echo of her musical
voice, and she looked about her in evident surprise.</p>
<p>“Where can he have gone?” she murmured. “Father!”</p>
<p>As the words left her lips there was a slight rustle in the
bushes by her side, and a man came out and stood beside
her. He was still young, but his strikingly handsome face
bore the marks of a life of dissipation and riot. He was
quite tall, nearly six feet in his moccasins, with a face which
showed unmistakable signs of Indian blood, though somewhat
remote, and a wandering black eye, full of passion.
He was dressed in hunting costume, and held in one hand a
long rifle, and two small protuberances in the breast of his
hunting-coat showed where his pistols lay concealed.</p>
<p>“I thought I should meet you here, Sadie,” he said, quietly.
“You don’t look very glad to see me.”</p>
<p>“You know what I think of you, William Jackwood,”
she replied, turning quickly away. “How dare you to come
here, after what has happened?”</p>
<p>He laughed a low, bitter, chilling laugh, which did not
indicate enjoyment, and his black eyes seemed to emit sparks
of fire.</p>
<p>“I would not refer to our last meeting, if I were you,
Sadie,” he said, evidently controlling himself by a violent
effort. “I was half crazy with liquor that night or I would
not have said what I did. See here; give me a chance to
make this right with you and I’ll do it. I want to be a
friend to you—I do, upon my soul. I’ll ask your pardon
on my knees, if you’ll forgive, and promise not to lay it up
against me.”</p>
<p>“I forgive you,” she said, with a cold, passionless glance,
“but you must not come here any more, for all that. My
<span class="pb" id="Page_11">11</span>
father has told me not to have any more to say to you, and
I shall obey him.”</p>
<p>The man stood grinding the butt of his rifle into the soft
earth, and fighting a powerful battle to keep down his heart.
The girl no longer looked at him but took up the pail and
was moving on.</p>
<p>“Wait a moment,” he said, hoarsely. “I can’t part from
you like this, Sadie. You don’t know what you are doing
or what will happen if you don’t use me more kindly. By—I
beg your pardon, but I am half mad—I can’t stand it.
Do you know that I worship the ground you tread for your
sake, and would give my life at any moment if it would be
of service to you?”</p>
<p>“You must not speak to me in that way, Mr. Jackwood,”
she said, in a more gentle tone. “I am truly sorry for you if
you speak the truth, but I can not listen to you. Aside from
the fact that my father does not like you, I have my own inclinations
to consult, and I do not and never can love you.”</p>
<p>“Then you love some one else,” he cried savagely. “All
right; marry him if you dare, but of this be assured—the moment
you stand up before the minister with <i>any</i> man, if it
were my own brother, I will kill you both where you stand.
Do you hear me?—I will kill you both.”</p>
<p>“Do you dare to threaten me in that way, Will Jackwood?
Oh, if my father were here, he would teach you to insult his
daughter in that way. Do you think to frighten me by idle
threats? Since you force me to say it, know that the sight
of your dark face is and always has been odious to me, and
that I will never speak to you again except upon compulsion
under any circumstances.”</p>
<p>He caught her by the wrist with his disengaged hand
and held her firmly, when she dropped the pail and struck
him full in the face with her open hand. He uttered a cry
like that of an angry tiger, and letting go his hold upon the
gun caught her about the waist with his strong right arm.
Powerless in his grasp, she struggled with all her strength
and screamed for help. The call was not made in vain, for
a quick step was heard, and a heavy body crashed through
the bushes, and Sadie screamed again.</p>
<p>“Comin’, by the mortal, comin’!” roared a hoarse voice.
“Oh, yes.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_12">12</div>
<p>Will Jackwood released her instantly and caught up his
gun, just as a short, thick-set, powerfully-built man darted
from the bushes and stood beside them. He wore the fringed
hunting-shirt and beaded moccasins of the scout and hunter,
and his long, flax-colored hair was crowned by a greasy coon-skin
cap in the last stages of dissolution. The face was a
marvel of native ugliness, but in spite of that he was greeted
with a cry of joy from Sadie.</p>
<p>“Cooney Joe is hyar,” he yelled. “What is the matter
now?”</p>
<p>“I have been insulted, Joe,” cried Sadie, panting for breath.</p>
<p>“By that yer p’ison critter, I’ll bet. Now look out, Black
Will, acause I’m a-goin’ to give yer the durndest lickin’ you
ever got sence yer mammy took ye over her knee. Hyar’s
fur ye.”</p>
<p>Before Black Will could bring his rifle to a level the stout
hunter dashed in and his heart was beating against the broad
breast of the man known as Jackwood. In a moment more
they were locked in a fierce grapple, fighting in true western
style, without the slightest idea of the rules of the ring. In
a stand-off fight, the long arms and powerful build of Black
Will would have given him a decided advantage, but in the
close grapple Cooney Joe was more than his equal, and loosening
one hand by a violent effort he struck his antagonist such
a blow in the face that his teeth seemed to rattle in his jaws,
and he staggered. Throwing himself forward with a victorious
war-whoop, Cooney Joe brought him to the ground, and
the next moment was kneeling on his breast with his long,
brown fingers fastened on his throat in a decidedly uncomfortable
way.</p>
<p>“Yah-h-h—hip! Got ye that time, my sweet infant!
The old coon kin climb a tree yit. Say the word, Miss Wescott,
an’ by the big meat pie I’ll choke the life clean out of
his pesky karkidge.”</p>
<p>“Let him go for the present, Joe,” she said. “He has
been punished sufficiently, and it will teach him that I am
not friendless.”</p>
<p>“Oh, pshaw! don’t let him git off that way. Take off his
belt and let me larrup him with it till he <i>howls</i>.”</p>
<p>“No, no; don’t strike him again. Take away his weapons
and let him go.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_13">13</div>
<p>“Hold on,” said Black Will hoarsely. “Don’t touch the
pistols and I promise to go away at once, and not make a
move for revenge to-day.”</p>
<p>“That’s fair,” said Joe, rising. “I never knowed the critter
to break a fair promise, Miss Sadie, and you kin trust him.”</p>
<p>Cooney Joe stood up and Black Will slowly arose, with an
expression of fearful malice upon his dark face, slowly brushing
the dust from his clothing without speaking a word.
Cooney Joe had taken up his rifle and stood leaning upon it,
a grin of enjoyment stretching his naturally wide mouth.</p>
<p>“Curi’s how things come ’round, ain’t it? I’ve wanted a
lick at you fur nigh onto five year an’ never got a chance till
now; does me good, this does.”</p>
<p>“Of course you know I’ll have your life for it, Joe Bent,”
said Black Will, in a quiet tone.</p>
<p>“Sartin, sartin, if ye kin git it,” replied Cooney Joe. “But
don’t forgit that ef I see yer hand go anigh a pistil in a
strange company I’ll try to shoot first. ’Member that, don’t ye.”</p>
<p>“I’ll try to remember, Joe,” was the reply. “Now, Miss
Wescott, I will say to you what I intended to say when this
meddling fool broke in upon us. You shall never live to be
the wife of another man. If I can not have you, no one else
shall, I swear by every thing I hold true.”</p>
<p>“P’isen critter, ain’t you, Will?” said Cooney Joe, regarding
him with a look of benign interest, as a great natural
curiosity. “I’ll be individually an’ collectively cussed ef you
ain’t a nice picter to go a-talkin’ about marryin’ a gal like
Miss Sadie. Why, bu’st my buttons, ef I don’t think she’d
ruther have me!”</p>
<p>“I would indeed,” replied Sadie.</p>
<p>“Who asked you to speak, Joe Bent?” said Black Will,
savagely. “Keep your distance and live in safety for twenty-four
hours, but after that I will take your life, no matter
where I meet you.”</p>
<p>“You rare ’round the awfulest kind, don’t ye,” replied Joe,
with a merry look. “Dash my bacon ef you ain’t a study
fur a painter. I’ve see’d chaps in the theater at St. Louis
that rared ’round the stage jest as you do now, but somehow
they allus got special hail kolumbia in the end. Now <i>git</i>;
I don’t want to say any thing more <i>but</i> git.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_14">14</div>
<p>Black Will quietly tightened his belt, brought his rifle to
a “right shoulder shift,” and was off at a long, slinging pace
which carried him rapidly across the field.</p>
<p>“Thar goes a pizen critter, Miss Sadie,” muttered Cooney
Joe. “Now I reckon he meant jest what he said when he
told me that he’d hev my life, but I’ve took a good many
chances, though he’ll hev my ha’r sartin ef I don’t shoot first
when we meet.”</p>
<p>“I am sorry to have brought you into danger, Joe,” said
the girl.</p>
<p>“Sorry—danger—git out! D’ye think I keer fur <i>that</i>,
little gal? Why, make it the wust ye kin, the chances ar’ I
git a shot afore he does, an’ ef I <i>miss</i>, then it’s my own fault.
Whar’s yer daddy?”</p>
<p>“I came out to find him and bring him some drink. I
thought he was at work in this field.”</p>
<p>“He orter be keerful,” said Joe Bent, uneasily, “’cause the
Injins are gitting r’iled up awful, and thar’s no tellin’ when
they may break out. Let’s try an’ find him.”</p>
<p>“There he is now,” cried Sadie.</p>
<p>As she spoke, a middle-aged man, with a hoe across his
shoulder, appeared at the other side of the woods and came
rapidly toward them. As he came near he shouted cheerily
to Joe Bent, who seemed very glad to see him, and they shook
hands heartily. Mr. Wescott had the same air of gentility
which showed itself in his daughter, but, like her, had adapted
himself to his present surroundings, and looked the picture
of a genuine western farmer. In stature he was almost
a giant.</p>
<p>Sadie rapidly recounted her meeting with Black Will, and
all that had passed between them, and the face of Mr. Wescott
darkened, while his hand closed convulsively upon the
handle of his hoe.</p>
<p>“It is a lucky thing for the black-hearted scoundrel that
I was not by, Sadie,” he said, “or it would have gone hard
with him. What brings you up this way, Joe?”</p>
<p>“I sort o’ got a hint to git off the hunting grounds from
that pernicious red devil, Napope, who is sp’ilin’ fur mischief.
Ar’ ye good friends with the Injins, ’square?”</p>
<p>“Certainly; I never wronged one of them in my life.”</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_15">15</div>
<p>“Not that it matters much ef they once rise,” continued
Joe, “because then they won’t hev any friends in the white
race. I’ve my doubts of that Black Will, anyhow. Two
weeks ago I saw him in the Injin village, an’ him an’ that
cussid Napope was ez thick ez flies in sp’iled bacon.”</p>
<p>“What is the trouble with the Indians?” said Wescott, uneasily.</p>
<p>“Them cussid agents rob them like thieves,” replied Joe
Bent. “Ef Black-Hawk would only ketch an’ burn them, I
don’t believe our fellers would kick much, they act so fearful
mean. Do you know that I think the village the best place
fur Miss Sadie, ’bout this time in the year?”</p>
<p>“I’ll talk to you by-and-by,” said Wescott, with a quick
glance at his daughter’s observant face. “Come to the house
and get something to eat.”</p>
<p>They quickened their steps and reached the cabin, and
while Sadie set about preparing a meal, they sat outside and
smoked their pipes, talking in low, eager tones. Sadie could
see that their conversation was very important, and, woman-like,
felt piqued that they kept it secret from her, and hurried
her preparations. In a few moments the homely meal
was smoking on the board, and they sat down, enjoying their
food with keen relish; but the two men dropped their conversation,
or rather, changed it to indifferent subjects, much
to the disgust of Sadie. Just as they were about to rise from
the table, she gave utterance to a cry of surprise and ran to
the door, and a moment after appeared, leading an Indian
girl by the hand.</p>
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