Ted Strong in Montana Part 17
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"That was the work of the young men, and they are now sorry for it,"
said the medicine man.
Ted looked at the young fellow whom he had unhorsed, and saw that his face was distended in a sarcastic smile.
"The young brave yonder is the one who led the raid on my corral. He does not look sorry," said Ted, pointing to the offender.
Flying Sun threw a glance in the direction of the young man, and said a few words sharply in the Blackfeet tongue.
"Crazy Cow is young and the son of a chief. His blood is hot within him, and he does not know what he does," said Flying Sun.
Crazy Cow's face at once a.s.sumed a look of sadness.
"I have not come for war," said Ted gravely, "but I want to warn you and your tribe that I will not stand for any raids on our ranch. You will find that we are good fighters, and that we can kill just as well as the soldiers. The ranch is ours, and the cattle and horses are ours, and do not belong to the young men of your tribe. They must leave us alone, or we will be compelled to deal out justice to them in our own way, which is a hard one."
"Very well, my brother," said the wily old chief. "We desire to live in peace with our white brothers. Your cattle and horses shall be sacred to our young men."
"I mean this," said Ted, looking at the old man severely. "Keep your young men away from our ranch, or they will be killed."
At this Crazy Cow drew himself up to his full height, and looked at Ted with scorn.
"Two can make killing," he said, in perfectly plain English.
"Perhaps they can," said Ted quickly. "But I want to say to you particularly, that if you are ever seen within the lines of the Long Tom Ranch again you will be sorry that you ever were born. I have said enough. Get on your horses and go. You are now on the ranch. Get beyond it."
The young Indian gave a short, harsh laugh, and strode toward a pony, decorated after the fas.h.i.+on of war ponies with feathers and bits of red flannel woven into his mane and tail.
The other Indians were not slow to follow his example, and soon they were all mounted.
"Now look out for treachery," said Ted in an aside to the boys.
"Keep your eyes peeled, fellows," said Ben, pa.s.sing the word along back.
"Ride up in open order so that we can surround that bunch if they get gay," said Ted, in a low voice, and the boys rode out and scattered themselves in a long line.
The Indians were bunched pretty well together.
It was a critical moment.
The slightest suspicious move on the part of the boys might have alarmed the Indians and started a fight.
While the boys kept their hands on their weapons not one was drawn.
The Indians rode off to a distance of a few hundred feet, then halted.
All had their rifles or guns in their hands, but not in a hostile way.
They were well aware that the white boys were much better armed than they, and were not in a temper to stand any foolishness.
It seemed as if the Indians had stopped to say good-by before riding away into the mountains.
But when they stopped, Crazy Cow rode out from them a short distance and stopped.
"I am Crazy Cow," he said in a boastful way.
This was in the manner of a personal challenge, as if he had said: "Who the deuce are you? Knock the chip off my shoulder if you dare."
Ted looked at him for a moment, for Crazy Cow was staring at him with an impertinent look in his face.
"I don't care who you are," said Ted, who was disgusted with the fellow's airs. "If you were the chief himself, I would tell you to keep away from my cows and ponies. What is the son of a chief? Nothing!"
The tone in which Ted said this was such that the young Indian flushed a deeper red, and grasped his rifle harder.
"I am an educated Indian," said Crazy Cow, "and as good as any white man. This is my country, and I shall go wherever I please."
"Go where you will, except on my ranch. Keep off that."
The Indian shrugged his shoulders.
"I go where I please. You, whoever you are, have no right to prevent me from going anywhere. Who are you to talk to me like that?"
"My name is Ted Strong. I am a deputy United States marshal. Do you know what that is?"
"Yes. I spit on them."
"Well, here's one you won't spit on. That's a cinch. You ought to be ashamed of yourself, a man who got his education free from the United States, to talk that way."
"Bah! I hate the United States which robbed my people of their lands, and then made treaties only to break them. Since they have driven me into the mountains they owe me a living, and I'm going to collect it."
"Very well, only be careful how you do it. I have said enough."
"Ted Strong talks big and much, but does nothing. He is a coward who is afraid of the Indian."
"I am not afraid of you. I think I have shown it."
"Yes, but you ran when I surprised you by the stream."
"My pony ran, and to keep from losing him I clung to him."
"It was a good thing for you that he did run. If he hadn't, you would never have gone home again, and the buzzards and vultures, a.s.sisted by the prairie wolves, would have you by now."
"Big talk means nothing. You are not a fighter, you are a squaw. You are a fool and a boaster."
"No, I am a chief, and a warrior. I have seen the blood of the white man flow, and I drank it. I am brave."
"You're full of hot air. Run along now; I'm disgusted with you."
"Hah! White squaw afraid to fight. Go back to your camp, and cook the meals and wash the clothes in the tub."
Crazy Cow made motions, of scrubbing at a tub.
Ted Strong in Montana Part 17
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Ted Strong in Montana Part 17 summary
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