[The Dog Crusoe and His Master by Robert Michael Ballantyne]@TWC D-Link book
The Dog Crusoe and His Master

CHAPTER XX
20/24

The other end of this line was given to Crusoe, who at the word of command marched him off, while Dick mounted Charlie and brought up the rear.
Great was the laughter and merriment when this apparition met the eyes of the trappers; but when they heard that he had attempted to shoot Dick their ire was raised, and a court-martial was held on the spot.
"Hang the reptile!" cried one.
"Burn him!" shouted another.
"No, no," said a third; "don't imitate them villains: don't be cruel.
Let's shoot him." "Shoot 'im," cried Pierre.

"Oui, dat is de ting; it too goot pour lui, mais it shall be dooed." "Don't ye think, lads, it would be better to let the poor wretch off ?" said Dick Varley; "he'd p'r'aps give a good account o' us to his people." There was a universal shout of contempt at this mild proposal.
Unfortunately, few of the men sent on this exploring expedition were imbued with the peace-making spirit of their chief, and most of them seemed glad to have a chance of venting their hatred of the poor Indians on this unhappy wretch, who, although calm, looked sharply from one speaker to another, to gather hope, if possible, from the tones of their voices.
Dick was resolved, at the risk of a quarrel with Pierre, to save the poor man's life, and had made up his mind to insist on having him conducted to the camp to be tried by Cameron, when one of the men suggested that they should take the savage to the top of a hill about three miles farther on, and there hang him up on a tree as a warning to all his tribe.
"Agreed, agreed!" cried the men; "come on." Dick, too, seemed to agree to this proposal, and hastily ordered Crusoe to run on ahead with the savage; an order which the dog obeyed so vigorously that, before the men had done laughing at him, he was a couple of hundred yards ahead of them.
"Take care that he don't get off!" cried Dick, springing on Charlie and stretching out at a gallop.
In a moment he was beside the Indian.

Scraping together the little of the Indian language he knew, he stooped down, and, cutting the thongs that bound him, said,-- "Go! white men love the Indians." The man cast on his deliverer one glance of surprise, and the next moment bounded aside into the bushes and was gone.
A loud shout from the party behind showed that this act had been observed; and Crusoe stood with the end of the line in his mouth, and an expression on his face that said, "You're absolutely incomprehensible, Dick! It's all right, I _know_, but to my feeble capacity it _seems_ wrong." "Fat for you do dat ?" shouted Pierre in a rage, as he came up with a menacing look.
Dick confronted him.

"The prisoner was mine.

I had a right to do with him as it liked me." "True, true," cried several of the men who had begun to repent of their resolution, and were glad the savage was off.


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