The Riflemen of the Miami Part 11
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"How came you in these parts, my friend?"
"Heaven save you, I _run_ here. The Injins have been after me."
"They didn't catch you?"
"No, sir," replied the young man, bursting into a loud guffaw. "I run too fast."
"What might be your name?"
"Zeke Hunt, but I'm derned 'fraid it won't be any name at all if I stay in these parts much longer. Oh, dear," whined the young man, "I wish I was back in Pennsylvany, on the farm."
"What made you leave it?"
"The old man whipped me, and I run away."
"Why don't you go back?"
"I'd rather meet all the painted Injins in the woods than him. He'd whip me all through the town."
"No doubt you deserve it."
"Boo-hoo! you ain't going to lick me too, are you?" plead the man, gouging one eye with his finger.
"No, no; don't make a fool of yourself. What would I wish to hurt you for?"
"I don't know, I'm sure. I'm 'fraid of everybody."
"See here, Zeke, was there any Injins chasing you, just now?"
"Yes--no. I've been clear of them a long time, I run so fast; but I'm just as afeard, as I s'pose the Injins are all over the woods."
"Not so bad as that, though we'd be willing to get along if there was a few less."
"Yes, that's so. Got any thing to eat?"
"No, but we'll soon have something."
"Can I go 'long with you?" asked the frightened fellow.
"If you wish to, provided you do what I want you to."
"Oh, I'll do any thing for you. Who's that with you?" he questioned, peering around the hunter, who, although he had advanced a few steps, still stood in front of Edith.
"A young friend, Miss Edith Sudbury."
"Glad to see you," said the young man, with an awkward bow.
"But see here," pursued the Rifleman, "how comes it you are in these woods at all? You didn't come all the way from Pennsylvany alone?"
"Oh, no--oh, no. I came down the Ohio in a flat-boat."
"How is it that you are here, then?"
"The other day we stopped along the sh.o.r.e a while, and I went off in the woods, and got lost. When I found my way back, the flat-boat had gone, and I was left alone. I've been wandering around ever since, and am nearly starved to death. Be you two hunting?"
"No, we are making our way to a settlement some miles off. Do you wish to go with us?"
"Yes, anywhere to get out of these derned woods. Gracious! what a big job it'll be to cut all these trees down," said young Hunt, looking above and around him, as though absorbed with this new idea.
"A big job, certainly; but there'll be a big lot to do it when the time comes. There don't appear to be any reason why we should wait, and so we'll move ahead."
"Which way are you going?"
"Right ahead."
"Over the same ground that I come over?"
"I s'pose so."
"Oh, heavens! you are lost if you do. Don't do that."
"What's the matter? Any danger?"
"The woods are chuck full of Injins, I tell you. There must have somebody pa.s.sed that way and they looking for them, there are so many."
Dernor turned and spoke to Edith:
"No doubt he is right. It is but what I suspected. What shall I do?
Take a longer way home, and a safer one, or the short route?"
"Take the _safest_, whichever that may be."
"That is the longest. Come on, friend."
"I'm follerin'," replied that worthy, striding after him.
It was considerably past the hour of noon, and the brisk walk through the woods had given the Rifleman an appet.i.te something akin to that of his new-found companion, so that he did not forget the expressed wish of the latter. He had no difficulty in bringing down another turkey and cooking it. There was one peculiarity which did not escape either Dernor or Edith. On the part of the latter it occasioned no concern, but it was the subject of considerable wonder and speculation with the former. Zeke Hunt, as he called himself, professed to be ravenously hungry; but when the tempting, juicy meat of the turkey was placed before him, he swallowed but a few mouthfuls. This was a small matter, it was true, and with any one except the Rifleman, would have escaped notice but this sagacious hunter considered it of so much importance as to ask an explanation.
"You appeared to be dying with hunger, and now, when food is offered, you hardly touch it. What is the meaning of that?"
"I don't know," said Zeke, wiping his fingers on the hair of his head.
"Yes, you do know. Tell me the meaning of it."
"S'pose I ain't hungry."
"Isn't the bird cooked well enough?"
"Wouldn't hurt if 'twas cooked better."
The Riflemen of the Miami Part 11
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The Riflemen of the Miami Part 11 summary
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