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"I know not it all, but the Shawnees and Wyandots are making great preparations for taking the war-path."
"Is their idee to come hyerabouts?"
"I cannot tell; it may be, and it may be not."
"Whar' am they kickin' up this muss?"
"At Piqua."
"Yas; wal, I'll pay them a visit. Anything more?"
"That is all. I will now depart."
Dingle unbarred the gate, allowed her to pa.s.s out, and after securing it, made his way back to the block-house again. As he pa.s.sed out on the platform, Jenkins demanded:
"Who is that you was talking with?"
"A gal that comes down to see me once in a while."
"An Injin?"
"A half-breed--splendid critter."
"Jerusalem! she looked purty. What in the name of all that's human made she shoot that arrer at me?"
"To kill yer, in course."
"To kill me! What did she want to kill me for? I'm sure I never done her any harm."
"She thought you'd jist come out to show yerself and try and cut me out.
It made her all-fired mad."
"Did you tell her about it."
"Yas; but I can't tell you what she said. I'm goin' in to sleep now.
Don't whistle so loud, nor slap your hoofs down so, nor git to talkin'
how mean d.i.c.k Dingle is, or he might come out and make you shut up."
With these words, the ranger opened the door of the block-house and entered, leaving Jenkins completely dumbfounded at what he had said.
"By George! how did he know what I said? I'll bet that infernal Injin gal is down there yet, and waiting for a chance to shoot. I'll kill her, if she tries it, just as sure as I live. She'll wish she never knowed anything of Pete Jenkins."
But no attempt was made upon the sentinel's life, and when the morning dawned, the forest and river wore their usual appearance.
In the morning. Dingle imparted the message of the Frontier Angel to the commander of the post, and offered to visit the Piqua village and ascertain the meaning of their movements.
"If she says there is mischief afoot, you may depend that there is. Yes, Dingle, you had better go. Take who you please, find out what you can, and get back as soon as possible."
The visit of this strange being was only a night or two after the interview between Abbot and Peterson, so that the latter had not yet started upon his hunt after the renegade McGable. Upon consulting with Dingle, it was argued between them that, as there was no need of hurrying in such a matter, they would defer their expedition until after their return from Piqua. The safety of the settlement was paramount to all other considerations. Besides, it was very probable that the renegade was in the village named, and they were just as likely to accomplish the object of both their journeys at the same time. The two rangers held a long consultation, and the conclusion they came to took all by surprise. It was that Peterson should visit the Shawnee town in Paint Creek valley, while Dingle, in company with the redoubtable Jenkins, would reconnoiter Piqua. There was wisdom in this plan certainly, but many thought it singular that the two should separate, when they had never been known to do such a thing before when in service.
The Shawnees were the great enemy of the whites, and to them may be traced nearly all of the long and b.l.o.o.d.y wars on the frontier. They were a vindictive, revengeful, "restless people, delighting in wars." Their very name, as has been remarked, was a word of terror or of execration to the early settlers among the canebrakes of Kentucky or upon the rich bottoms of Ohio.
When this country was discovered, the Shawnees occupied the southern part of Georgia and Florida. Here they, at last, became so obnoxious to the other Indians by their continual murders and robberies, that a combination of the most powerful tribes--the Choctaws, Cherokees, and Creeks, was effected, and perpetual, unceasing war was declared against them. Finding the country too hot to hold them, the Shawnees emigrated north, settling on the Ohio and its tributaries. The Wyandots welcomed them, and they increased to a mighty and powerful nation, retaining their characteristic traits. From the commencement of the old French war, in 1755, down to the final struggle between Tec.u.mseh and the whites, nearly sixty years after, they were continually engaged in some murderous foray, interrupted only by a dozen years of quiet, succeeding the treaty of Wayne.
Like all large Indian nations, the Shawnees were subdivided into tribes, and these subdivided into families. The names of but four of these tribes are now known: The Piqua, Kiskapoc.o.ke, Chillicothe, and Mequachake. Piqua, in the Indian tongue, means a _man rising from the ashes_, and there is a tradition among them, that it was thus this division originated.
They had a large village at the head of Ma.s.sie's Creek, a short distance north of where Xenia now stands, and another named Piqua, on Mad River, a few miles below Springfield. Their princ.i.p.al headquarters were in the valley of Paint creek and Sciota river.
The simple preparations of the scouts were made, and it was agreed they should start in a few hours upon their perilous journey.
CHAPTER VII.
THE PURSUIT OF KNOWLEDGE UNDER DIFFICULTIES.
PETERSON'S destination being the Sciota valley, he left the settlement and proceeded eastward, up the Ohio, until the mouth of the Sciota was reached, when he prosecuted his journey in a northerly direction, making it all on foot. Leaving him to continue his duty, we will follow the fortunes of the other two.
Dingle had two reasons for taking Jenkins with him. The first was for his own good, and the second was for his own--that is the ranger's--amus.e.m.e.nt. He counted on little difficulty in ascertaining all that he wished, and believed that his companion would be so tractable in his hands that little trouble need be apprehended from his erratic disposition. His plan was to proceed westward, following the course of the Ohio, until the mouth of the Little Miami was reached, up which he would proceed in a canoe. As he had often visited the same town, he took occasion, when upon one of his expeditions, to "borrow" an Indian canoe, as he expressed it, and concealing it at the mouth of this river, to be used for the purpose named.
"Confound it! what did you want to take me along for?" demanded Jenkins, spitefully, after they were fairly in the wood.
"Why, to scout around, and obsarve the pecooliarities of the Shawnees,"
replied Dingle.
"Yes, s'pose so! darned if I don't shoot every one I see!"
"Good! give us your paw on that, Jenkins, you're some, after all."
"After all what?" demanded the wrathful man, not at all relis.h.i.+ng the eagerness with which the ranger took his threat.
"After all the dodgin' and sneakin' you've done when the reds war around."
"See here now!" exclaimed Jenkins, stepping in front of and confronting the ranger. "I want to know what you mean by that? That's a reflection upon my courage which I never intend to permit."
Dingle, concluding it best not to offend him at present, answered, "I meant the time you fell down so flat when the Frontier Angel fired her arrer at you."
"Do you know what made me do it, sir?"
"Oh! yes--I mind me now, you had a fit just then."
"Well, sir, don't let me hear anything more about that then; I have explained all about them fits, and you must remember."
"Wal, never mind, Jenkins, it won't do to git them now, coz why, if you do, when you come to again, you'll find you've cotched another kind of fits--wal, you will, ole feller."
"Do you s'pose, d.i.c.k, they'll watch us close?" asked Jenkins, in a tone so changed from his braggadocio style to that of earnest inquiry, that Dingle could not conceal a smile.