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by Raine, William MacLeod




  The Project Gutenberg eBook, Man Size, by William MacLeod Raine

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  Title: Man Size

  Author: William MacLeod Raine

  Release Date: December 8, 2003 [eBook #10404]

  Language: English

  ***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MAN SIZE***

  E-text prepared by Kevin Handy, Dave Maddock, Josephine Paolucci, and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team

  MAN-SIZE

  BY

  WILLIAM MACLEOD RAINE

  AUTHOR OF

  THE BIG-TOWN ROUND UP,

  OH, YOU TEX! ETC

  1922

  TO

  CAPTAIN SIR CECIL E. DENNY, BART.

  OF THE FIRST THREE HUNDRED RIDERS OF THE PLAINS

  WHO CARRIED LAW INTO THE LONE LANDS

  AND MADE THE SCARLET AND GOLD

  A SYNONYM FOR

  JUSTICE, INTEGRITY, AND INDOMITABLE PLUCK

  CONTENTS

  I. IN THE DANGER ZONE

  II. THE AMAZON

  III. ANGUS McRAE DOES HIS DUTY

  IV. THE WOLFERS

  V. MORSE JUMPS UP TROUBLE

  VI. "SOMETHING ABOUT THESE GUYS"

  VII. THE MAN IN THE SCARLET JACKET

  VIII. AT SWEET WATER CREEK

  IX. TOM MAKES A COLLECTION

  X. A CAMP-FIRE TALE

  XI. C.N. MORSE TURNS OVER A LEAF

  XII. TOM DUCKS TROUBLE

  XIII. THE CONSTABLE BORES THROUGH DIFFICULTIES

  XIV. SCARLET-COATS IN ACTION

  XV. KISSING DAY

  XVI. A BUSINESS DEAL

  XVII. A BOARD CREAKS

  XVIII. A GUN ROARS

  XIX. "D' YOU WONDER SHE HATES ME?"

  XX. ONISTAH READS SIGN

  XXI. ON THE FRONTIER OF DESPAIR

  XXII. "MY DAMN PRETTY LI'L' HIGH-STEPPIN' SQUAW"

  XXIII. A FORETASTE OF HELL

  XXIV. WEST MAKES A DECISION

  XXV. FOR THE WEE LAMB LOST

  XXVI. A RESCUE

  XXVII. APACHE STUFF

  XXVIII. "IS A' WELL WI' YOU, LASS?"

  XXIX. NOT GOING ALONE

  XXX. "M" FOR MORSE

  XXXI. THE LONG TRAIL

  XXXII. A PICTURE IN A LOCKET

  XXXIII. INTO THE LONE LAND

  XXXIV. THE MAN-HUNTERS READ SIGN

  XXXV. SNOW-BLIND

  XXXVI. THE WILD BEAST LEAPS

  XXXVII. NEAR THE END OF A LONG CROOKED TRAIL

  XXXVIII. OVER A ROTTING TRAIL

  XXXIX. A CREE RUNNER BRINGS NEWS

  XL. "MALBROUCK S'EN VA-T-EN GUERRE"

  XLI. SENSE AND NONSENSE

  XLII. THE IMPERATIVE URGE

  CHAPTER I

  IN THE DANGER ZONE

  She stood on the crown of the hill, silhouetted against a sky-line of deepest blue. Already the sun was sinking in a crotch of the plains which rolled to the horizon edge like waves of a great land sea. Its reflected fires were in her dark, stormy eyes. Its long, slanted rays were a spotlight for the tall, slim figure, straight as that of a boy.

  The girl's gaze was fastened on a wisp of smoke rising lazily from a hollow of the crumpled hills. That floating film told of a camp-fire of buffalo chips. There was a little knitted frown of worry on her forehead, for imagination could fill in details of what the coulée held: the white canvas tops of prairie schooners, some spans of oxen grazing near, a group of blatant, profane whiskey-smugglers from Montana, and in the wagons a cargo of liquor to debauch the Bloods and Piegans near Fort Whoop-Up.

  Sleeping Dawn was a child of impulse. She had all youth's capacity for passionate indignation and none of the wisdom of age which tempers the eager desire of the hour. These whiskey-traders were ruining her people. More than threescore Blackfeet braves had been killed within the year in drunken brawls among themselves. The plains Indians would sell their souls for fire-water. When the craze was on them, they would exchange furs, buffalo robes, ponies, even their wives and daughters for a bottle of the poison.

  In the sunset glow she stood rigid and resentful, one small fist clenched, the other fast to the barrel of the rifle she carried. The evils of the trade came close to her. Fergus McRae still carried the gash from a knife thrust earned in a drunken brawl. It was likely that to-morrow he would cut the trail of the wagon wheels and again make a bee-line for liquor and trouble. The swift blaze of revolt found expression in the stamp of her moccasined foot.

  As dusk fell over the plains, Sleeping Dawn moved forward lightly, swiftly, toward the camp in the hollow of the hills. She had no definite purpose except to spy the lay-out, to make sure that her fears were justified. But through the hinterland of her consciousness rebellious thoughts were racing. These smugglers were wholly outside the law. It was her right to frustrate them if she could.

  Noiselessly she skirted the ridge above the coulée, moving through the bunch grass with the wary care she had learned as a child in the lodges of the tribe.

  Three men crouched on their heels in the glow of a camp-fire well up the draw. A fourth sat at a little distance from them riveting a stirrup leather with two stones. The wagons had been left near the entrance of the valley pocket some sixty or seventy yards from the fire. Probably the drivers, after they had unhitched the teams, had been drawn deeper into the draw to a spot more fully protected from the wind.

  While darkness gathered, Sleeping Dawn lay in the bunch grass with her eyes focused on the camp below. Her untaught soul struggled with the problem that began to shape itself. These men were wolfers, desperate men engaged in a nefarious business. They paid no duty to the British Government. She had heard her father say so. Contrary to law, they brought in their vile stuff and sold it both to breeds and tribesmen. They had no regard whatever for the terrible injury they did the natives. Their one intent was to get rich as soon as possible, so they plied their business openly and defiantly. For the Great Lone Land was still a wilderness where every man was a law to himself.

  The blood of the girl beat fast with the racing pulse of excitement. A resolution was forming in her mind. She realized the risks and estimated chances coolly. These men would fire to kill on any skulker near the camp. They would take no needless hazard of being surprised by a band of stray Indians. But the night would befriend her. She believed she could do what she had in mind and easily get away to the shelter of the hill creases before they could kill or capture her.

  A shadowy dog on the outskirt of the camp rose and barked. The girl waited, motionless, tense, but the men paid little heed to the warning. The man working at the stirrup leather got to his feet, indeed, carelessly, rifle in hand, and stared into the gloom; but presently he turned on his heel and sauntered back to his job of saddlery. Evidently the hound was used to voicing false alarms whenever a coyote slipped past or a skunk nosed inquisitively near.

  Sleeping Dawn followed the crest of the ridge till it fell away to the mouth of the coulée. She crept up behind the white-topped wagon nearest the entrance.

  An axe lay against the tongue. She picked it up, glancing at the same time toward the camp-fire. So far she had quite escaped notice. The hound lay blinking into the flames, its nose resting on crossed paws.

  With her hunting-knife the girl ripped the canvas from the side of the top. She stood poised, one foot on a spoke, the other on the axle. The axe-head swung in a half-circle. There was a crash of wood, a swift jet of spouting liquor. Again the axe swung gleaming above her head. A third and a fourth time it crashed against the staves.

  A man by the camp-f
ire leaped to his feet with a startled oath.

  "What's that?" he demanded sharply.

  From the shadows of the wagons a light figure darted. The man snatched up a rifle and fired. A second time, aimlessly, he sent a bullet into the darkness.

  The silent night was suddenly alive with noises. Shots, shouts, the barking of the dog, the slap of running feet, all came in a confused medley to Sleeping Dawn.

  She gained a moment's respite from pursuit when the traders stopped at the wagons to get their bearings. The first of the white-topped schooners was untouched. The one nearest the entrance to the coulée held four whiskey-casks with staves crushed in and contents seeping into the dry ground.

  Against one of the wheels a rifle rested. The girl flying in a panic had forgotten it till too late.

  The vandalism of the attack amazed the men. They could have understood readily enough some shots out of the shadows or a swoop down upon the camp to stampede and run off the saddle horses. Even a serious attempt to wipe out the party by a stray band of Blackfeet or Crees was an undertaking that would need no explaining. But why should any one do such a foolish, wasteful thing as this, one to so little purpose in its destructiveness?

  They lost no time in speculation, but plunged into the darkness in pursuit.

  CHAPTER II

  THE AMAZON

  The dog darted into the bunch grass and turned sharply to the right.

  One of the men followed it, the others took different directions.

  Up a gully the hound ran, nosed the ground in a circle of sniffs, and dipped down into a dry watercourse. Tom Morse was at heel scarcely a dozen strides behind.

  The yelping of the dog told Morse they were close on their quarry. Once or twice he thought he made out the vague outline of a flying figure, but in the night shadows it was lost again almost at once.

  They breasted the long slope of a low hill and took the decline beyond. The young plainsman had the legs and the wind of a Marathon runner. His was the perfect physical fitness of one who lives a clean, hard life in the dry air of the high lands. The swiftness and the endurance of the fugitive told him that he was in the wake of youth trained to a fine edge.

  Unexpectedly, in the deeper darkness of a small ravine below the hill spur, the hunted turned upon the hunter. Morse caught the gleam of a knife thrust as he plunged. It was too late to check his dive. A flame of fire scorched through his forearm. The two went down together, rolling over and over as they struggled.

  Startled, Morse loosened his grip. He had discovered by the feel of the flesh he was handling so roughly that it was a woman with whom he was fighting.

  She took advantage of his hesitation to shake free and roll away.

  They faced each other on their feet. The man was amazed at the young Amazon's fury. Her eyes were like live coals, flashing at him hatred and defiance. Beneath the skin smock she wore, her breath came raggedly and deeply. Neither of them spoke, but her gaze did not yield a thousandth part of an inch to his.

  The girl darted for the knife she had dropped. Morse was upon her instantly. She tried to trip him, but when they struck the ground she was underneath.

  He struggled to pin down her arms, but she fought with a barbaric fury. Her hard little fist beat upon his face a dozen times before he pegged it down.

  Lithe as a panther, her body twisted beneath his. Too late the flash of white teeth warned him. She bit into his arm with the abandon of a savage.

  "You little devil!" he cried between set teeth.

  He flung away any scruples he might have had and pinned fast her flying arms. The slim, muscular body still writhed in vain contortions till he clamped it fast between knees from which not even an untamed cayuse could free itself.

  She gave up struggling. They glared at each other, panting from their exertions. Her eyes still flamed defiance, but back of it he read fear, a horrified and paralyzing terror. To the white traders along the border a half-breed girl was a squaw, and a squaw was property just as a horse or a dog was.

  For the first time she spoke, and in English. Her voice came bell-clear and not in the guttural of the tribes.

  "Let me up!" It was an imperative, urgent, threatening.

  He still held her in the vice, his face close to her flaming eyes.

  "You little devil," he said again.

  "Let me up!" she repeated wildly. "Let me up, I tell you."

  "Like blazes I will. You're through biting and knifing me for one night." He had tasted no liquor all day, but there was the note of drunkenness in his voice.

  The terror in her grew. "If you don't let me up—"

  "You'll do what?" he jeered.

  Her furious upheaval took him by surprise. She had unseated him and was scrambling to her feet before he had her by the shoulders.

  The girl ducked her head in an effort to wrench free. She could as easily have escaped from steel cuffs as from the grip of his brown fingers.

  "You'd better let me go!" she cried. "You don't know who I am."

  "Nor care," he flung back. "You're a nitchie, and you smashed our kegs. That's enough for me."

  "I'm no such thing a nitchie[1]," she denied indignantly.

  [Footnote 1: In the vernacular of the Northwest Indians were "nitchies." (W.M.R.)]

  The instinct of self-preservation was moving in her. She had played into the hands of this man and his companions. The traders made their own laws and set their own standards. The value of a squaw of the Blackfeet was no more than that of the liquor she had destroyed. It would be in character for them to keep her as a chattel captured in war.

  "The daughter of a squaw-man then," he said, and there was in his voice the contempt of the white man for the half-breed.

  "I'm Jessie McRae," she said proudly.

  Among the Indians she went by her tribal name of Sleeping Dawn, but always with the whites she used the one her adopted father had given her. It increased their respect for her. Just now she was in desperate need of every ounce that would weigh in the scales.

  "Daughter of Angus McRae?" he asked, astonished.

  "Yes."

  "His woman's a Cree?"

  "His wife is," the girl corrected.

  "What you doin' here?"

  "Father's camp is near. He's hunting hides."

  "Did he send you to smash our whiskey-barrels?"

  "Angus McRae never hides behind a woman," she said, her chin up.

  That was true. Morse knew it, though he had never met McRae. His reputation had gone all over the Northland as a fearless fighting man honest as daylight and stern as the Day of Judgment. If this girl was a daughter of the old Scot, not even a whiskey-trader could safely lay hands on her. For back of Angus was a group of buffalo-hunters related to him by blood over whom he held half-patriarchal sway.

  "Why did you do it?" Morse demanded.

  The question struck a spark of spirit from her. "Because you're ruining my people—destroying them with your fire-water."

  He was taken wholly by surprise. "Do you mean you destroyed our property for that reason?"

  She nodded, sullenly.

  "But we don't trade with the Crees," he persisted.

  It was on the tip of her tongue to tell him that she was of the Blackfoot tribe and not of the Crees, but again for reasons of policy she was less than candid. Till she was safely out of the woods, it was better this man should not know she was only an adopted daughter of Angus McRae. She offered another reason, and with a flare of passion which he was to learn as a characteristic of her.

  "You make trouble for my brother Fergus. He shot Akokotos (Many Horses) in the leg when the fire-water burned in him. He was stabbed by a Piegan brave who did not know what he was doing. Fergus is good. He minds his own business. But you steal away his brains. Then he runs wild. It was you, not Fergus, that shot Akokotos. The Great Spirit knows you whiskey-traders, and not my poor people who destroy each other, are the real murderers."

  Her logic was feminine and personal, from his viewpoint wh
olly unfair.

  Moreover, one of her charges did not happen to be literally true.

  "We never sold whiskey to your brother—not our outfit. It was Jackson's, maybe. Anyhow, nobody made him buy it. He was free to take it or leave it."

  "A wolf doesn't have to eat the poisoned meat in a trap, but it eats and dies," she retorted swiftly and bitterly.

  Adroitly she had put him on the defensive. Her words had the sting of barbed darts.

  "We're not talking of wolves."

  "No, but of Blackfeet and Bloods and Sarcees," she burst out, again with that flare of feminine ferocity so out of character in an Indian woman or the daughter of one. "D'you think I don't know how you Americans talk? A good Indian is a dead Indian. No wonder we hate you all. No wonder the tribes fight you to the death."

  He had no answer for this. It was true. He had been brought up in a land of Indian wars and he had accepted without question the common view that the Sioux, the Crows, and the Cheyennes, with all their blood brothers, were menaces to civilization. The case for the natives he had never studied. How great a part broken pledges and callous injustice had done to drive the tribes to the war-path he did not know. Few of the actual frontiersmen were aware of the wrongs of the red men.

 

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