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Title: An Apache Princess
A Tale of the Indian Frontier
Author: Charles King
Illustrator: Frederic Remington and Edwin Willard Deming
Release Date: September 19, 2006 [EBook #19330]
Language: English
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK AN APACHE PRINCESS ***
Produced by Suzanne Shell, Sankar Viswanathan, and the
Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
AN APACHE
PRINCESS A Tale of the Indian Frontier
BY GENERAL CHARLES KING AUTHOR OF "A DAUGHTER OF THE SIOUX," "THE COLONEL'S
DAUGHTER," "FORT FRAYNE," "AN ARMY WIFE,"
ETC., ETC.
ILLUSTRATIONS BY FREDERIC REMINGTON and EDWIN WILLARD DEMING
NEW YORK THE HOBART COMPANY 1903
Copyright, 1903, BY THE HOBART COMPANY.
CONTENTS CHAPTER I The Meeting by the Waters, 9 CHAPTER II Scot Versus Saxon, 21 CHAPTER III Moccasin Tracks, 33 CHAPTER IV A Stricken Sentry, 42 CHAPTER V The Captain's Defiance, 51 CHAPTER VI A Find in the Sands, 61 CHAPTER VII "Woman-Walk-in-the-Night," 70 CHAPTER VIII "Apache Knives Dig Deep," 88 CHAPTER IX A Carpet Knight, Indeed, 97 CHAPTER X "Woman-Walk-in-the Night" Again, 105 CHAPTER XI A Stop—by Wire, 119 CHAPTER XII Fire! 130 CHAPTER XIII Whose Letters? 141 CHAPTER XIV Aunt Janet Braved, 152 CHAPTER XV A Call for Help, 166 CHAPTER XVI A Return to Command, 177 CHAPTER XVII A Strange Coming, 188 CHAPTER XVIII A Stranger Going, 199 CHAPTER XIX Besieged, 213 CHAPTER XX Where is Angela? 226 CHAPTER XXI Our Vanished Princess, 238 CHAPTER XXII Suspense, 249 CHAPTER XXIII An Apache Queen, 259 CHAPTER XXIV The Meeting at Sandy, 271 CHAPTER XXV Rescue Requited, 282 CHAPTER XXVI "Woman-Walk-No-More," 293 CHAPTER XXVII The Parting by the Waters, 306 L'ENVOI ILLUSTRATIONS Page Frontispiece "Now Halting, Dropping on One Knee to Fire," 90 "Blakely Led 'Em across No. 4's Post," 134 The Fight in the Cañon, 220 "Indian Signals beyond Possibility of a Doubt," 242 "Then slowly, They Saw Her Raise Her Right Hand, Still Cautiously Holding the Little Mirror," 263 "They Hustled Her Pony into a Ravine," 270 "Natzie Wrenched Her Hand from that of Blakely, and with the Spring of a Tigress Bounded away," 324 AN APACHE PRINCESS CHAPTER I THE MEETING BY THE WATERSnder the willows at the edge of the pool a young girl sat daydreaming, though the day was nearly done. All in the valley was wrapped in shadow, though the cliffs and turrets across the stream were resplendent in a radiance of slanting sunshine. Not a cloud tempered the fierce glare of the arching heavens or softened the sharp outline of neighboring peak or distant mountain chain. Not a whisper of breeze stirred the drooping foliage along the sandy shores or ruffled the liquid mirror surface. Not a sound, save drowsy hum of beetle or soft murmur of rippling waters, among the pebbly shallows below, broke the vast silence of the scene. The snow cap, gleaming at the northern horizon, lay one hundred miles away and looked but an easy one-day march. The black upheavals of the Matitzal, barring the southward valley, stood sullen and frowning along the Verde, jealous of the westward range that threw their rugged gorges into early shade. Above and below the still and placid pool and but a few miles distant, the pine-fringed, rocky hillsides came shouldering close to the stream, but fell away, forming a deep, semicircular basin toward the west, at the hub of which stood bolt-upright a tall, snowy flagstaff, its shred of bunting hanging limp and lifeless from the peak, and in the dull, dirt-colored buildings of adobe, ranged in rigid lines about the dull brown, flat-topped mesa, a thousand yards up stream above the pool, drowsed a little band of martial exiles, stationed here to keep the peace 'twixt scattered settlers and swarthy, swarming Apaches. The fort was their soldier home; the solitary girl a soldier's daughter.
She could hardly have been eighteen. Her long, slim figure, in its clinging riding habit, betrayed, despite roundness and supple grace, a certain immaturity. Her hands and feet were long and slender. Her sun-tanned cheek and neck were soft and rounded. Her mouth was delicately chiseled and the lips were pink as the heart of a Bridesmaid rose, but, being firmly closed, told no tale of the teeth within, without a peep at which one knew not whether the beauty of the sweet young face was really made or marred. Eyes, eyebrows, lashes, and a wealth of tumbling tresses of rich golden brown were all superb, but who could tell what might be the picture when she opened those pretty, curving lips to speak or smile? Speak she did not, even to the greyhounds stretched sprawling in the warm sands at her feet. Smile she could not, for the young heart was sore troubled.
Back in the thick of the willows she had left her pony, blinking lazily and switching his long tail to rid his flanks of humming insects, but never mustering energy enough to stamp a hoof or strain a thread of his horsehair riata. Both the long, lean, sprawling hounds lolled their red, dripping tongues and panted in the sullen heat. Even the girl herself, nervous at first and switching with her dainty whip at the crumbling sands and pacing restlessly to and fro, had yielded gradually to the drooping influences of the hour and, seated on a rock, had buried her chin in the palm of her hand, and, with eyes no longer vagrant and searching, had drifted away into maiden dreamland. Full thirty minutes had she been there waiting for something, or somebody, and it, or he, had not appeared.
Yet somebody else was there and close at hand. The shadow of the westward heights had gradually risen to the crest of the rocky cliffs across the stream. A soft, prolonged call of distant trumpet summoned homeward, for the coming night, the scattered herds and herd guards of the post, and, rising with a sigh of disappointment, the girl turned toward her now impatient pony when her ear caught the sound of a smothered hand-clap, and, whirling about in swift hope and surprise, her face once more darkened at sight of an Indian girl, Apache unquestionably, crouching in the leafy covert of the opposite willows and pointing silently down stream. For a moment, without love or fear in the eyes of either, the white girl and the brown gazed at each other across the intervening water mirror and spoke no word. Then, slowly, the former approached the brink, looked in the direction indicated by the little dingy index and saw nothing to warrant the recall. Moreover, she was annoyed to think that all this time, perhaps, the Indian girl had been lurking in that sheltering grove and stealthily watching her. Once more she turned away, this time with a toss of her head that sent the russet-brown tresses tumbling about her slim back and shoulders, and at once the hand-clap was repeated, low, but imperative, and Tonto, the biggest of the two big hounds, uplifted one ear and growled a challenge.
"What do you want?" questioned the white girl, across the estranging waters.
For answer the brown girl placed her left forefinger on her lips, and again distinctly pointed to a little clump of willows a dozen rods below, but on the westward side.
"Do you mean—someone's coming?" queried the first.
"Sh-sh-sh!" answered the second softly, then pointed again, and pointed eagerly.
The soldier's daughter glanced about her, uncertainly, a moment, then slowly, cautiously made her way along the sandy brink in the direction indicated, gathering the folds of her long skirt in her gauntleted hand and stepping lightly in her slender moccasins. A moment or two, and she had reached the edge of a dense little copse and peered cautiously within. The Indian girl was right. Somebody lay there, apparently asleep, and the fair young intruder recoiled in obvious confusion, if not dismay. For a moment she stood with fluttering heart and parting lips that now permitted reassuring glimpse of pearly white teeth. For a moment she seemed on the verge of panicky retreat, but little by little regained courage and self-poise. What was there to fear in a sleeping soldier anyhow? She knew who it was at a glance. She could, if she would, whisper his name. Indeed, she had been whispering it many a time, day and night, these last two weeks until—until certain things about him had come to her ears that made her shrink in spite of herself from this handsome, petted young soldier, this Adonis of her father's troop, Neil Blakely, lieutenant of cavalry.
"The Bugologist," they called him in cardroom circles at the "store," where men were fiercely intolerant of other pursuits than poker, for which pastime Mr. Blakely had no use whatever—no more use than had its votaries for him. He was a dreamy sort of fellow, with big blue eyes and a fair skin that were in themselves sufficient to stir the rancor of born frontiersmen, and they of Arizona in the days of old were an exaggeration of the type in general circulation on the Plains. He was something
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