Harper's Young People, October 26, 1880 - novelonlinefull.com
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A BEAUTIFUL THEORY RUINED.
When Benny Mallow went to bed at night, after the great exhibition, he suddenly remembered that he had forgotten to ask what the grand total of the receipts for the Beanta.s.sel family had been. Under ordinary circ.u.mstances he would have got out of bed, dressed himself, and scoured the town for full information before he slept. On this particular night, however, he did not give the subject more than a moment of thought, for his mind was full of greater things. Paul Grayson an Indian? Why, of course: how had he been so stupid as not to think of it before? Paul was only dark, while Indians were red, but then it was easy enough for him to have been a half-breed; Paul was very straight, as Indians always were in books; Paul was a splendid shot with a rifle, as all Indians are; Paul had no parents--well, the tableau made by Paul's own friend Mr. Morton, who knew all about him, explained plainly enough how Indian boys came to be without fathers and mothers.
Even going to sleep did not rid Benny of these thoughts. He saw Paul in all sorts of places all through the night, and always as an Indian. At one time he was on a wild horse, galloping madly at a wilder buffalo; then he was practicing with bow and arrow at a genuine archery target; then he stood in the opening of a tent made of skins; then he lay in the tall gra.s.s, rifle in hand, awaiting some deer that were slowly moving toward him. He even saw Paul tomahawk and scalp a white boy of his own size, and although the face of the victim was that of Joe Appleby, the hair somehow was long enough to tie around the belt which Paul, like all Indians in picture-books, wore for the express purpose of providing properly for the scalps he took.
So fully did Benny's dreams take possession of him, that although he had been awake for two hours the next morning before he met Paul, he was rather startled and considerably disappointed to find his friend in ordinary dress, without a sign of belt, scalp, or tomahawk about him.
Still, of course Paul was an Indian, and Benny promptly determined that no one should beat him in getting information about the young man's earlier life; so Benny opened conversation abruptly by asking, "Where do you begin to cut when you want to take a man's scalp off?"
"Why, who are you going to scalp, little fellow?" asked Paul.
"Oh, n.o.body," said Benny, in confusion. "I'd like to know, that's all."
"I'm afraid you'll have to ask some one else, then," said Paul, with a laugh. "Try me on something easier."
"Then how do you ride a wild horse without saddle or bridle?" asked Benny.
"Worse and worse," said Paul. "See here, Benny, have you been reading dime novels, and made up your mind to go West?"
"Not exactly," said Benny; "but," he continued, "I wouldn't mind going West if I had some good safe fellow to go with--some one who has been there and knows all about it."
"Well, I know enough about it to tell you to stay at home," said Paul.
This was proof enough, thought Benny; so although he was aching to ask Paul many other questions about Indian life, he hurried off to a.s.sure the other boys that it was all right--that Paul was an Indian, and no mistake. The consequence was that when Paul approached the school-house half of the boys advanced slowly to meet him, and then they cl.u.s.tered about him, and he became conscious of being looked at even more intently than on the day of his first appearance. He did not seem at all pleased by the attention; he looked rather angry, and then turned pale; finally he hurried up stairs into the school-room and whispered something to the teacher, at which Mr. Morton shook his head and patted Paul on the shoulder, after which the boy regained his ease and took his seat.
But at recess he again found himself the centre of a crowd, no member of which seemed to care to begin any sort of game. Paul stopped short, looked around him, frowned, and asked, "Boys, what is the matter with me?"
"Nothing," replied Will Palmer.
"Then what are you all crowding around me for?"
No one answered for a moment, but finally Sam Wardwell said, "We want you to tell us stories."
"Stories about Indians," explained Ned Johnston.
Paul laughed. "You're welcome to all I know," said he; "but I don't think they're very interesting. Really, I can't remember a single one that's worth telling."
This was very discouraging; but Canning Forbes, who was so smart that, although he was only fourteen years of age, he was studying mental philosophy, whispered to Will Palmer that people never saw anything interesting about their own daily lives.
"You can tell us something about birch canoes, can't you?" asked Ned Johnston, by way of encouragement.
"Oh yes," Paul replied; "they're made out of bark, with hoops and strips of wood inside, to give them shape and make them strong."
"How do they fasten up the ends?" asked Ned.
"They first sew or tie them together with strings, and then they put pitch over the seams to make them water-tight."
"Did you ever see the Indians race in birch canoes?" asked Sam.
"Oh yes, often," Paul replied; "and they make fast time too, I can tell you."
"Did you ever race yourself?" asked Benny.
"No," said Paul, "but I learned to paddle a canoe pretty well. I'd rather have a good row-boat, though, than any birch I ever saw. If you run one of them on a sharp stone, it may be cut open, unless it's pretty new."
"How do the Indians kill buffaloes?" asked Will Palmer.
"Why, just as white men do--they shoot them with rifles. Nearly all the Indians have rifles nowadays."
This was very unromantic, most of the boys thought, for an Indian without bows and arrows could not be very different from a white man.
Still, something wonderful would undoubtedly come before Paul was done talking.
"Are buffaloes really so terrible-looking as the story-papers say?"
asked Bert Sharp.
"Well, they don't look exactly like pets," said Paul. "A bull buffalo, in the winter season, when he has a full coat of hair, looks fiercer than a lion."
"Do the Indians really kill or torture all the white people they catch?"
asked Canning Forbes.
"I don't know; I suppose so, but perhaps they're not all as bad as some white people say."
[Ill.u.s.tration: "YOU'RE A CHIEF'S SON, AREN'T YOU?"]
Canning shook his head encouragingly at Will Palmer: evidently this young Indian had a manly spirit, and was not going to have his people abused. There was a moment or two of silence, each boy wondering what next to ask. Finally, Napoleon Nott said,
"You're a chief's son, aren't you?"
"What?" exclaimed Paul, so sharply that Notty dodged behind Will Palmer, and put his hand to his head as if to protect his scalp.
"I meant," said Notty, tremblingly-- "I meant to ask what tribe you belonged to."
"I? What tribe? Notty, what are you talking about?"
Notty did not answer, so Paul looked around at the other boys, but they also were silent.
"Notty," said Paul, "what on earth are you thinking about? Do you imagine I'm an Indian?"
"I thought you were," said Notty, very meekly; "and," he continued, "so did all the other boys."
"Well, that's good," said Paul, laughing heartily. "What made you think so, fellows?"
"Benny told us," explained Ned.
"Benny?" exclaimed Paul. "What put that fancy into your head?"
"I--I dreamed it," said Benny, almost ready to cry for shame and disappointment.
"And you told all the other boys?"