John Ermine of the Yellowstone (17 page)

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Authors: Frederic Remington

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The John Ermine of the mountain den was a June-bug beside this butterfly, but no assortment of color can compete with a scarlet blanket when the clear western sun strikes on it; so in
consequence Ermine was subdued by Wolf-Voice, who stood beside him thus arrayed.

As the people gathered their bags and parcels, they came ashore in small groups, the women and children giving the wild Indians the heed which their picturesque appearance called for, much of
this being in the form of little shivers up and down the spine. A true old wolf-headed buffalo Indian would make a Japanese dragon look like a plate of ice cream, and the Old Boy himself would have
to wave his tail, prick up his sharp ears, and display the best of his Satanic learning to stand the comparison.

Major Searles passed on with the rest, beaming like a June morning, his arms full of woman’s equipment—Mrs. Searles on one side and his daughter on the other.

“Hello, Ermine.”

“How do, Major?” spoke the scout as he cast his whittling from him.

“This is John Ermine, who saved my life last winter, my dear. This is Mrs. Searles, John.”

She bowed, but the scout shook hands with her. Miss Searles, upon presentation, gave Ermine a most chilling bow, if raising the chin and dropping the upper eyelids can be so described; and the
man who pushed his pony fearlessly among the whirling savages recoiled before her batteries and stood irresolute.

Wolf-Voice, who had not been indicated by the Major, now approached, his weird features lighted up with what was intended as pleasantry, but which instead was rather alarming.

“How! How me heap glad to see you.” And to Miss Searles, “How! How you heap look good.” After which they passed on.

“My, my, papa, did you ever see such beautiful hair as that man Ermine has?” said Katherine Searles. “It was a perfect dream.”

“Yes, good crop that—’nough to stuff a mattress with; looks better today than when it’s full of alkali dust,” replied the Major.

“If the young man lost his hat, it would not be a calamity,” observed the wife.

“And, papa, who was that dreadful Indian in the red blanket?”

“Oh, an old scoundrel named Wolf-Voice, but useful in his place. You must never feed him, Sarah, or he will descend on us like the plague of locusts. If he ever gets his teeth into one of
our biscuits, I’ll have to call out the squad to separate him from our mess-chest.”

A strange thought flashed through John Ermine’s head—something more like the stroke of an axe than a thought, and it had deprived him of the power of speech. Standing motionless and
inert, he watched the girl until she was out of sight. Then he walked away from the turmoil, up along the riverbank.

Having gained a sufficient distance, he undid the front of his shirt and took out a buckskin bag, which hung depended from his neck. It contained his dried horse’s hoof and the photograph
of a girl, the one he had picked up in the moonlight on the trail used by the soldiers from Fort Ellis.

He gazed at it for a time, and said softly, “They are the same, that girl and this shadow.” And he stood scrutinizing it, the eyes looking straight into his as they had done so often
before, until he was intimate with the image by a thousand vain imaginings. He put it back in his bag, buttoned his shirt, and stood in a brown study, with his hands behind his back, idly stirring
the dust with the point of one moccasin.

“It must have been—it must have been Sak-a-war-te who guided me in the moonlight to that little shadow paper there in the road—to that little spot in all this big country; in
the nighttime and just where we cut that long road; it means something—it must be.” And he could get no farther with his thoughts as he walked to his quarters.

Along the front of the officers’ row he saw the bustle, and handshaking, laughter, and quick conversation. Captain Lewis came by with a tall young man in citizen’s clothes, about
whom there was a blacked, brushed, shaved appearance quite new on the Tongue.

“I say, and who is that stunning chap?” said this one to Lewis, in Ermine’s hearing.

“One of my men. Oh, come here, Ermine. This is Mr. Sterling Harding, an Englishman come out to see this country and hunt. You may be able to tell him some things he wants to
know.”

The two young men shook hands and stood irresolutely regarding each other. Which had the stranger thoughts concerning the other or the more curiosity cannot be stated, but they both felt the
desire for better acquaintance. Two strangers on meeting always feel this—or indifference, and sometimes repulsion. The relations are established in a glance.

“Oh, I suppose, Mr. Ermine, you have shot in this country.”

“Yes, sir,” Ermine had extended the “sir” beyond shoulder-straps to include clean shirts—“I have shot most every kind of thing we have in this country except
a woman.”

“Oh! Ha! Ha ha!” And Harding produced a cigar-case. “

A woman? I suppose there hasn’t been any to shoot until this boat came. Do you intend to try your hand on one? Will you have a cigar?”

“No, sir; I only meant to say I had shot things. I suppose you mean have I hunted.”

“Yes, yes—exactly; hunted is what I mean.”

“Well then, Mr. Sterling Harding, I have never done anything else.”

“Mr. Harding, I will leave you with Ermine; I have some details to look after. You will come to our mess for luncheon at noon?” interjected Captain Lewis.

“Yes, with pleasure, Captain.” Whereat the chief of scouts took himself off.

“I suppose, Mr. Ermine, that the war is quite over, and that one may feel free to go about here without being potted by the aborigines,” said Harding.

“The what? Never heard of them. I can go where I like without being killed, but I have to keep my eyes skinned.”

“Would you be willing to take me out? I should expect to incur the incidental risks of the enterprise,” asked the Englishman, who had taken the incidental risks of tigers in India
and sought “big heads” in many countries irrespective of dangers.

“Why, yes; I guess Wolf-Voice and I could take you hunting easily enough if the Captain will let us go. We never know here what Bear-Coat is going to do next; it may be ‘boots and
saddles’ any minute,” replied the scout.

“Oh, I imagine, since Madam has appeared, he may remain quiet and I really understand the Indians have quite fled the country,” responded Harding.

“Mabeso; you don’t know about Indians, Mr. Harding. Indians are uncertain; they may come back again when their ponies fill up on the green grass.”

“Where would you propose to go, may I ask?”

Ermine thought for a time, and asked, “Would you mind staying out all one moon, Mr. Harding?”

“One moon? You mean thirty days. Yes, three moons, if necessary. My time is not precious. Where would you go?”

“Back in the mountains—back on the Stinking Water; a long way from here, but a good place for the animals. It is where I come from, and I haven’t been home in nearly a year. I
should like to see my people,” continued Ermine.

“Anywhere will do; we will go to the Stinking Water, which I hope belies its name. You have relatives living there, I take it.”

“Not relatives; I have no relations anywhere on the earth, but I have friends,” he replied.

“When shall we start?”

Ermine waved his hand a few times at the sky and said “So many,” but it failed to record on the Englishman’s mind. He was using the sign language. The scout noted this, and
added, “Ten suns from now I will go if I can.”

“Very well; we will purchase ponies and other necessaries meanwhile, and will you aid me in the preparations, Mr. Ermine? How many ponies shall we require?”

“Two apiece—one to ride and the other to pack,” came the answer to the question.

A great light dawned upon Harding’s mind. To live a month with what one Indian pony could carry for bedding, clothes, cartridges, and food. His new friend failed, in his mind, to
understand the requirements of an English gentleman on such quests.

“But, Mr. Ermine, how should I transport my heads back to this point with only one pack-animal?”

“Heads? Heads? Back here?” stumbled the light-horseman. “What heads?”

“Why, the heads of such game as I might be so fortunate as to kill.”

“What do you want of their heads? We never take the heads. We give them to our little friends, the coyotes,” queried Ermine.

“Yes, yes, but I must have the heads to take back to England with me. I am afraid, Mr. Ermine, we shall have to be more liberal with our pack-train. However, we will go into the matter at
greater length later.”

Sterling Harding wanted to refer to the Captain for further understanding of his new guide. He felt that Lewis could make the matter plain to Ermine by more direct methods than he knew how to
employ. As the result of worldwide wanderings, he knew that the Captain would have to explain to Ermine that he was a crazy Englishman who was all right, but who must be humored. To Harding this
idea was not new; he had played his blood-letting ardor against all the forms of outlandish ignorance. The savages of many lands had eaten the bodies of which the erratic Englishman wanted only the
heads.

So to Lewis went Harding. “I say, Captain, your Ermine there is an artless fellow. He is proposing to Indianize me, to take me out for a whole moon, as he calls it, with only one pack-pony
to carry my belongings. Also he fails, I think, to comprehend that I want to bring back the heads of my game.”

“Ha! I will make that plain to him. You see, Mr. Harding, you are the first Englishman he ever encountered; fact is he is range bred, unbranded and wild. I have ridden him, but I use
considerable discretion when I do it, or he would go up in the air on me,” explained Lewis. “He is simple, but he is honest, faithful, and one of the very few white men who know this
Indian country. Long ago there were a great many hunters and trappers in these parts; men who worked for the fur companies, but they have all been driven out of the country of late years by the
Indians, and you will be lucky to get Ermine. There are plenty of the half-breeds left, but you cannot trust them. They might steal from you, they might abandon you, or they might kill you. Ermine
will probably take you into the Crow country, for he is solid with those people. Why, half the time when I order Crow scouts to do something they must first go and make a talk with Ermine. He has
some sort of a pull with them—God knows what. You may find it convenient to agree with him at times when you naturally would not; these fellows are independent and follow their fancies pretty
much. They don’t talk, and when they get an idea that they want to do anything, they proceed immediately to do it. Ermine has been with me nearly a year now, but I never know what minute I am
to hear he has pulled out.”

Seeing Ermine some little distance away, the Captain sent an orderly after him. He came and leant with one hand on the tent pole of the fly.

“Ermine, I think you had better take one or two white packers and at least eight or ten animals with you when you go with Mr. Harding.”

“All right, sir, we can take as many packers as he likes, but no wagons.”

Having relieved the scout of his apprehensions concerning wagons, the bond was sealed with a cigar, and he departed, thinking of old Crooked-Bear’s prediction that the white men would take
him to their hearts. Underneath the happy stir of his faculties on this stimulating day there played a new emotion, indefinite, undefinable, a drifting, fluttering butterfly of a thought which
never alighted anywhere. All day long it flitted, hovered, and made errant flights across his golden fancies—a glittering, variegated little puff of color.

 

CHAPTER THIRTEEN

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