Page:Barbour--Metipoms Hostage.djvu/220

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
206
METIPOM’S HOSTAGE
206

grumbling wrathfully, the Indian wove three red feathers into his hair, and, picking up the bow that Sequanawah had fashioned, put it in his hand.

“Now!” he announced. “Go and see yourself in the water of the spring, my brother, and be vain.”

“More like ashamed,” David grumbled. “Whither do we go, and when?”

“I know not whither, but when the women are ready for the journey we start.”

David pushed aside the skin that hid the entrance and gazed forth in astonishment. The Indian village was gone save for the palisade and, here and there, a bark wigwam. Otherwise the lodges were down and the skins and mats that had formed them were rolled and tied with thongs and lay ready for transportation on the backs of the squaws. Fires still smouldered and a few families were yet partaking of food. Dogs barked excitedly and the younger children called shrilly. Everywhere was confusion and bustle.

As David watched the unusual scene, the sun, hotly red, crept over the rim of the world and in the valley eastward the blue-gray mist wavered above the parched earth.