Prev | Current Page 317 | Next

King, Charles, 1844-1933

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

Knew Nanette's father and mother. But Black Bill
interposed. No need to go into these particulars, as substantiating Mrs.
Hay and himself, said he. "The lady knows perfectly well that I know all
about her girlhood," so Pete returned to modern history. Eagle Wing, it
seems, came riding often in from Stabber's camp to see Nanette by night,
and "he was in heap trouble, always heap trouble, always want money,"
and one night she told Pete he must come with her, must never tell of
it. She had money, she said, her own, in the trader's safe, but the door
was too heavy, she couldn't open it, even though she had the key. She
had opened the store by the back door, then came to him to help her with
the rest. He pulled the safe door open, he said, and then she hunted and
found two big letters, and took them to the house, and next night she
opened the store again, and he pulled open the safe, and she put back
the letters and sent him to Mr. Field's back door with note, and then
over to saddle Harney and Dan, and "bring 'em out back way from stable."
Then later she told him Captain Blake had Eagle Wing's buckskin pouch
and letters, and they must get them or somebody would hang Eagle Wing,
and she kept them going, "all time going," meeting messengers from the
Sioux camps, or carrying letters.


Pages:
305 306 307 308 309 310 311 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 319 320 321 322 323 324 325 326 327 328 329
Pajacyk Fundacja Hobbit Fundacja Iskierka Podaruj Zycie Mam Marzenie