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King, Charles, 1844-1933

"A Daughter of the Sioux A Tale of the Indian frontier"

"Give this to the captain," was the word sent back
by Schreiber, and "this" was a mitten of Indian tanned buckskin, soft
and warm if unsightly, a mitten too small for a warrior's hand, if ever
warrior deigned to wear one,--a mitten the captain examined curiously,
as he ploughed ahead of his main body, and then returned to his
subaltern with a grin on his face:
"Beauty draws us with a single hair," said he, "and can't shake us even
when she gives us the mitten. Ross," he added, after a moment's thought,
"remember this. With this gang there are two or three sub-chiefs that we
should get, alive or dead, but the chief end of man, so far as 'K'
Troop's concerned, is to capture that girl, unharmed."
And just at dawn, so gray and wan and pallid it could hardly be told
from the pale moonlight of the earlier hours, the dark, snake-like
column was halted again, nine miles further in among the wooded heights.
With Bear Cliff still out of range and sight, something had stopped the
scouts, and Blake was needed at the front. He found Schreiber crouching
at the foot of a tree, gazing warily forward along a southward-sloping
face of the mountain that was sparsely covered with tall, straight
pines, and that faded into mist a few hundred yards away.


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Rodzic Po Ludzku Mimo Wszystko Nasze Dzieci Krwinka Kidprotect