started on again. Father and Mother were terribly sad. Sometimes I was afraid that Mother could not live through it. They seemed awfully nervous and afraid all the time, too.
came to a little town, or some houses, but we seldom stopped. Father seemed in a hurry to get where we were going, and Mother didn't seem to care about anything. Two or three times we had a scare about Indians, but they never came very near to us. Then one day when
thought it was just a whirlwind, and then we were afraid it was Indians. But after a while we made out that it was an emigrant wagon, being driven by a woman. That surpr
es with her hands while shudders shook her frame. "Don't," she cri
ly, "you know the rest. It was you
ere silent. Ruth crept up and put her
be a little sister to us in b
d put her arm
y sisters or brothers. I'd like
d honest Ruth,
d Lige; but Jo
three wagons were drawn into a cir
d in the wagon with his wife and the younger children, he stretched himself out beside the wagons, with Spotty nea
hrough the grass and the occasional howling of a coyote. For a long time he lay awake, some vague, haunting
lock Joe woke, and seeing his father patrolling up and down beside the wagons insisted that he should go
his knees, and looked up at the silent stars
ing to doze, when a low, ominous growl from Spotty caus
raised, his lips drawn back showing his teeth, growlin
but remained mot
rd a soft rustli
he stars he made out a dim silho
cried, "or
hua Peniman w
?" he whisp
over there b
arcely left his lips when
came, barked through the darkness. The shot was answered by a wild, shri
he ground another had taken his place, rushing toward the white man with uplifted tomahawk and blood-curdling yell. He was almost upon him when a sharp "cr
s freckled face was very pale, but the blue eyes were shining in a way t
Hannah Peniman, her revolver in her hand. Her face was white
carried terror to the hearts of so many early settlers on the plains the Indian
ce rose another cry. The heart of Jos
d hopeless before, but they had firearms while the savages seemed to be armed only with bows and a
" rang the cry t
d stood still. Some sudden instinct made Joe raise his musket and fir
or Indian, friend or foe; but some sure instinct told him that w
swift rush from the darkness outside the circle of wagons, and in the starlight they
ed himself from the rest, and slipping into the shadows made his way noiselessly as a serpe
rrolls. Hannah Peniman was guarding the rear of the wagon, her revolver cocked and ready in her hand, while Joe and Lige at the front and back of the o
burst through their guard the shrill "Ki-ki-ee-ee-ee!" again smote upon their ears, and an instant later the sound of wild yelps
hought their la
Lige, help thy mother guard the rear! To me, to me, Joe! We must try
that he threw it back upon its haunches. He cast a swift, searching look at the man and boys who stood so resolutely before their wagon
surprised them by askin
der. In the excitement of the moment he had no time to think of the strangeness, the incongruity of the question. All he could think of was that
, and a moment later there was the clamor of a battle cry, the wild thundering of hoofs, the crash of blows, the uproar of battle. Before the horrified pioneers kn
saved; that death-horrible death-and worse than deat
nd the boys reloaded their muskets. Mr. Peniman snatching the axe from th
The moment was too tense, the strug
ps and cries grew fainter and
. Then Joshua Peniman lowered his gu
ey have gone!
o!" replied Joe
ard. I'll l
sket ready he made a t
t far away, but there was no sign of any li
he wagons reliev
n? He could not
me I cannot understand what happened, but somehow,
like that?" Joe demanded. "Does th
know what to think of it. But I scarcely thi
he wagon seats covered with blankets, now
nd that the last ones that came-those that came on horseback-drove the others away. They didn't come together. There weren't many of those Indians that attacked us first, and they came on fo
truce. He asked me if I was a Quaker! I never thought about it until this moment. How strange-how passing strange! How did he guess-how could he know-it must have been he who saved us!" Then suddenly catching sight of his wife's deathly face he turned to her. "Go lie down, Hannah, thee is all u
the hand on his shoulder, sent Joe awa
d down and all about it, with his musket over his shoulder and Spotty
when looking across the pathless prairies towa
igure. When it came within musket range he
or I'll
earer, riding his pony as erect and motionless as a bronze statue, the pioneer
y to a halt before the white man
a Peniman, answering
ian cam
Quake
swered as he had answered t
uaker
You a
over the impassive,
bagoes. Live Omaha Reser
you are one of the tribe who were put in charge of the Fri
apahoes, sought protection at the Reservation in Omaha. There the remnants of the tribe were put under the pro
chief
thee' to you boy.
you saved me-me and my famil
rd and grasped t
l to his own the ch
. Good heart. Good f
Who were the others-those
nd spurned the dead body i
, eh? Are the Sioux
heart. Winnebago good Indi
w you relieve my anxious heart. But how did it happen
his arms across
h on war-path. Kill heap white men. Me hear gun, know trouble. My you
come. You saved our live
campment they fell upon a scrap of paper which lay under the Carroll wagon. He stro
e of the ravine, and back of them the
ntly. Joshua Peniman
ng a well-defined footmark in the muddy
tooped and exami
er sole and the imprint of a bo
ite
ce he stood stari
man should be among them-that a white man was one of those howling demons who
ced sharply
you m
wagon. It was unoccupied. And you see
u b
are all going
ho
sh I
f paper he had picked up under the
, pointing to t
scrap, and its edges showed that it had been torn recently and hastily. As
is pulses he turned and
curtain and looked in he
scattered about; and the dispatch-box, placed in the hands of Nina Carroll by her dying mother, which contained all her money, deeds, pap