[In the Pecos Country by Edward Sylvester Ellis]@TWC D-Link bookIn the Pecos Country CHAPTER VIII 1/6
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THE SWOOP OF THE APACHE. The afternoon dragged slowly by with Fred crouching, as he was, in the top of the tree and waiting for the time to come when he might descend and make the attempt to rejoin his friends, who could not but be greatly concerned over his absence.
At rare intervals, the spiteful crack of a rifle reached his ear as before, and he knew that the white and red men were watching each other, both ready to seize the first opportunity that might offer for obtaining the slightest advantage.
The occasional clamping of the hoofs of a galloping horse showed, too, that his dreaded foes were close at hand. Finally, the sun disappeared, and darkness slowly settled over wood, forest, and prairie.
There was the moon, shining as bright and unclouded as on the night before; but the shadow was so dense among the trees that this was of no particular importance, and so soon as night was fairly come the impatient lad was resolved upon making the attempt to reach his friends. No Apaches had been seen beneath the tree since the departure of the first stealthy visitor, and the hope was quite strong within the lad that in the hurry and swirl of the fight the red-skins had failed to note him in his hiding-place.
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