[Two Boys in Wyoming by Edward S. Ellis]@TWC D-Link book
Two Boys in Wyoming

CHAPTER IV
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CHAPTER IV.
VISITORS OF THE NIGHT.
It takes a good deal to startle an American Indian, but if there ever was a frightened red man it was the one who heard himself thus addressed, and, glancing like a flash to his right, saw Jack Dudley step forward, with a Winchester rifle leveled at him.
In the language of the West, the youth "had the drop" on the intruder, and he knew it.

Had he attempted to raise his own weapon, or to draw his knife and assail the youth, that instant the trigger of the rifle would have been pressed and the career of the buck would have ended then and there, and he knew that, too; but the fact that the gun was not fired, and that a direct question was addressed to him, told the Indian that his master was less merciless than he would have been had their situations been reversed.
The camp-fire was still burning brightly, and the reflection showed on the painted visage.

Jack, having stepped forward into the circle of light, was also plainly discerned by the Indian, who, turning his black, serpent-like eyes upon him, said, without a tremor in his voice: "Me good Injin; me friend of white man; me no hurt him." "It doesn't look as if you would; but what is your business?
Why do you steal into our camp like a thief of the night ?" "Me hungry--want somethin' eat." This was too transparent a subterfuge to deceive one even so unaccustomed to life in these solitudes as Jack Dudley.

An Indian wandering through a country so well stocked with game as this portion of the new State of Wyoming never suffers for food; and, were such a thing possible, the present means was the last that he would adopt to procure it.
"If you want something to eat, why did you not come forward openly and ask for it ?" The fellow did not seem fully to grasp the question, but he repeated: "Me hungry." Jack recalled that there was not a mouthful of food in camp.

Had there been, he probably would have invited the visitor to walk to the fire and partake.


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