Radisson.
And we found them that night.
A deer broke from the woods edging the sand where we camped and had
almost bounded across our fire when an Indian darted out a hundred
yards behind. Mistaking us for his own people, he whistled the
hunter's signal to head the game back. Then he saw that we were
strangers. Pulling up of a sudden, he threw back his arms, uttered a
cry of surprise, and ran to the hiding of the bush.
M. Radisson was the first to pursue; but where the sand joined the
thicket he paused and began tracing the point of his rapier round the
outlines of a mark.
"What do you make of it, Godefroy?" he demanded of the trader.
The trader looked quizzically at Sieur de Radisson.
"The toes of that man's moccasin turn out," says Godefroy significantly.
"Then that man is no Indian," retorted M. Radisson, "and hang me, if
the size is not that of a woman or a boy!"
And he led back to the beach.
"Yon ship was a pirate," began Godefroy, "and if buccaneers be
about----"
"Hold your clack, fool," interrupted M. Radisson, as if the fellow's
prattle had cut into his mental plannings; and he bade us heap such a
fire as could be seen by Indians for a hundred miles. "If once I can
find the Indians," meditated he moodily, "I'll drive out a whole
regiment of scoundrels with one snap o' my thumb!"
Black clouds rolled in from the distant bay, boding a stormy night; and
Godefroy began to complain that black deeds were done in the dark, and
we were forty leagues away from the protection of our ships.
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