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"No one could mistake Golden Face for anything but a warrior," he said, sweetly. "Is he not surrounded by his friends, his brothers? Who requires to go armed among his friends?"
There was nothing for it but to accept the position, and, moreover, to accept it with a good grace. Suddenly there arose a terrific din outside--shrieks and yells, shouts of demoniac laughter, and the trampling of many feet.
Note 1. General George A. Custer, who fell into an ambuscade on the Little Bighorn river, and perished with his entire command at the hands of the hostile Sioux, under Sitting Bull, on the 25th June, 1876.
CHAPTER THIRTY FOUR.
THE TWO VICTIMS.
If ever a spectacle of h.e.l.l let loose was vouchsafed to mortal eye, a.s.suredly it must have borne a strong family likeness to that presented by the Indian village, as Vipan and the three chiefs stepped gravely outside the _teepe_ to see what was going on.
A wild, roaring, yelling crowd came surging into the open s.p.a.ce where stood the council-lodge. Bucks and squaws, children and dogs, all mingled together in a motley ma.s.s, whooping, laughing, chattering and grinning. A sea of wild excited faces, the crowd poured onward, gathering as it rolled. Then the cause of all this excitement became discernible. In the front of the throng, in the centre of a group of yelling squaws, hustled, beaten, kicked, dragged along by the bloodthirsty harpies, were two white men. Their arms were tightly bound behind their backs, but their feet were tied so as to enable them to make short steps. They had been stripped naked, and their bodies, already lacerated with many a weal, and bruised from the switches and clubs of their tormentors, were plentifully besmeared with their own blood.
"Wagh, Golden Face!" exclaimed Sitting Bull, with grim humour. "Our squaws seem to handle your countrymen very tenderly."
The adventurer made no reply. Even he felt his heart sicken within him at the thought of the hideous fate these two wretched men were about to undergo. Yet drawn by an uncontrollable impulse, he found himself moving beside the three Indians, who were strolling leisurely in the direction taken by the crowd. Not that his red friends manifested any interest in the proceedings. The torture of helpless prisoners was sport for boys and squaws, and unworthy of the attention of great chiefs or warriors of renown. Still, with the characteristic weakness of their race to witness anything unusual, they followed the crowd.
As the latter thundered along the open s.p.a.ce, the inmates of the cl.u.s.tering groups of _teepes_ on either side poured forth to swell its ranks. Young bucks would dart out in front, and execute a series of leaps in the air, uttering shrill whoops, and even the river was dotted with bull-boats, as the inhabitants of the villages on the opposite bank crowded over in hundreds to see the fun. Knives were flourished in the prisoners' faces, kicks and slaps were their portion at every step; indeed, it almost seemed that the ill-usage of the infuriated mob would mercifully end their sufferings before they should reach the terrible stake. Something of this seemed to strike their tormentors themselves, for all of a sudden a compact band of young bucks charged into the ma.s.s, drove back the yelling squaws, and seizing the two unhappy wretches, dragged them forward at a smart run.
Just outside the village was a clear s.p.a.ce. Here a couple of stout posts, eight or nine feet high, had been driven into the ground about a dozen yards apart.
And now Vipan had an opportunity of estimating the strength of the band or bands into whose midst he had so involuntarily penetrated. Far along the river-banks on either side, extending a distance of five or six miles, the tall lodges stood in lines and cl.u.s.ters among the thin belt of timber which lined the stream. These and the village behind him, roughly reckoning, he estimated to represent some four or five thousand warriors. Overhead the great mountains shot up their craggy heads, blasted into a score of fantastic shapes, frowning down upon the barbarous scene like grim tutelaries of destruction.
The two miserable men were backed against the posts and firmly secured, their arms being drawn up high above their heads and stretched to the utmost. Powerless to move a limb, they were ready for the torturers.
Suddenly a piercing cry for help burst from one of them. In it Vipan recognised his own name.
In deference to their rank, the crowd had made way for the chiefs in whose company he was. At a sign from Sitting Bull, it now gave way further, and Vipan was able to approach within easy speaking-distance of the prisoners.
"Oh, for G.o.d's sake, Mr Vipan, save me from torture! Kill me--put me out of my misery at once!"
Vipan stared at the utterer of this agonised prayer. In the distorted features, cut and bruised out of all knowledge, and livid with the dews of bodily and mental anguish, in the strained eyeb.a.l.l.s staring from their sockets in deadly fear, he could hardly recognise the unfortunate Geoffry Vallance.
A curious change pa.s.sed over the adventurer's face, so curious that even many of the Indians standing around noticed it and wondered.
"I am the last person in this world, of whom _you_ ought to ask a benefit," he said curtly.
Had there been time for reflection, poor Geoffry might well have been amazed. Now, half-frenzied with terror, he only moaned:
"Save me from the torture! Kill me, that is all I ask you!"
"I cannot if I would," was the answer, in a more relenting tone. "How did you manage to let them capture you?"
"It was the day the camp was taken," gasped the wretched prisoner. "I was lingering behind and got lost, and then my horse ran away when I was dismounted. I don't know how it was, but I looked up and found myself in the middle of the Indians."
"Well, I can do nothing for you. Mind me, though. I knew a chap in your position once. He managed to roll his tongue back into his throat and choke himself. He escaped the fire that way. Try it. It's your only chance."
The despairing moan with which this gloomy alternative was received was drowned by a loud cry from the other white man.
"Colonel Vipan. Git us out of this fix, for the Lord's sake! I kin put you on to a good thing, I kin!"
The adventurer turned in amazement. He saw what was a villainous countenance at the best of times, and now with the s.h.a.ggy beard matted with saliva and gouts of blood, it was hideous and horrible in the extreme. He recognised the man he had felled in the liquor saloon at Henniker City--Bitter Rube.
"How in thunder did you get into this hobble?" he said.
"It's this way, Colonel. The red devils jumped us at our _placer_.
They scalped the other three."
"Burntwood Creek?"
"That's it, Colonel. You get me out of this, and I'll make you a rich man for life. There's gold there worth millions and millions."
"Glad to hear it, Bitter Rube," was the unconcerned reply. "I know the place all right; going to work it by and by. It's where your mate jumped me and got laid out for his pains. Remember your scheme to lynch me, eh, Bitter Rube?"
"Oh, Lord, Colonel. It was the other chaps. See here now--"
"Well, I can't even repay the little service you were going to render me--a short shrift and a long rope," interrupted Vipan, the scowling glances and increasing murmurs of the throng convincing him of the peril he himself was incurring. A frantic yell burst from the prisoner.
"You snake-sp.a.w.ned white Injun! Here's a white man being cut into chunks before your eyes. I'll haunt yer! I'll ghost yer! I'll make life a h.e.l.l to yer!"
The miserable wretch went on to bellow the most frantic blasphemies.
One of the young Indians, stepping up behind him, thrust a red-hot f.a.ggot into his open mouth. This was greeted as an excellent joke by the onlookers, who shouted and screamed with laughter. Then one of them applied a light to the victim's unkempt and s.h.a.ggy beard. It frizzled and flared up, burning the wretched man frightfully about the face and head. The mirth of the spectators became well-nigh uncontrollable.
"How! white brudder," said a burly buck, grinning hideously into Geoffry's face, and patting him fraternally on the shoulder. "Injun brudder hab heap fun. Injun brudder not hurt you first. Other man hurt first--you see him--you hab heap good fun. You hurt first, you no laugh--other hurt first, you plenty laugh--Injun brudder plenty laugh.
How--how!"
Then the wretched Geoffry understood that with a diabolical refinement of cruelty the savages intended that he should witness the torture and death of his companion in adversity before his own turn came. He could only raise his eyes stupidly to the grinning countenance of his addresser.
Two squaws now stepped forward--hideous hags whose long flattened b.r.e.a.s.t.s fell in disgusting flaps below their waists. They were nearly naked, and each held in her hand a sharp knife. Advancing to the sufferer they made an incision down each of his sides, and proceeded to skin him alive as coolly as a butcher would flay a dead sheep.
The anguished shrieks of the victim were terrible to hear; but no spark of pity did they stir in the hearts of the ruthless fiends who crowded around, gloating over this diabolical performance. They danced and laughed, leaping high in the air, hurling taunting epithets at the miserable victim, and exhorting the other prisoner to observe what was in store for him. And in their h.e.l.lish glee the women, if anything, surpa.s.sed the younger and more ferocious of the warriors.
For nearly an hour the scene went on--varied at intervals by the pa.s.sing of a lighted torch along those portions of the victim's body already laid bare. The piercing shrieks of the tortured wretch sunk into laboured and hollow groans--then ceased altogether. He had fainted.
A glance having sufficed to show them that he was not dead, the performers stood back, contemplating their handiwork with a grin of ferocious satisfaction. And so deftly had they done it, that from chin to feet, the front and sides of the sufferer's body was entirely denuded of skin, which hung from his shoulders in a bleeding and ghastly mantle.
Yet this was only the first stage of his torture.
Vipan, who had perforce witnessed this hideous spectacle, felt seized with a violent and well-nigh uncontrollable nausea, and would have turned away. But as the exhibition of the slightest repulsion or feeling would have been not merely inexpedient, but highly dangerous, he was constrained to master himself. Besides, a sort of horrible fascination rooted him to the spot--an overmastering and morbid curiosity to see how the other prisoner would fare.
Sitting Bull, who with a few other chiefs had been witnessing the h.e.l.lish performance with grave impa.s.siveness, must have read his thoughts.
"They are not King George men," he remarked laconically. "They are not your countrymen, Golden Face."
Vipan made no reply. The remark suggested an idea. He might be able to save Geoffry by claiming him as a fellow-countryman. A strange struggle took place within him. Why should he? If he attempted to do so it would be at deadly risk to himself, and even then would he meet with success? And apart from these considerations, as he himself had told the unfortunate one, he was the last man from whom the latter should claim any a.s.sistance.