
- 213 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
Nat, The Trapper and Indian-Fighter
About this book
Toward noon of a pleasant June day, 18—, a man, mounted on a powerful animal of the mustang breed, was riding slowly over the plain, some distance south-east of the great South Pass. His appearance was striking. In hight he was rather more than six feet, his legs and arms being long and lank in the extreme. His eyes were small, gray and piercing, and remarkably deep-set; his face rather thin and cadaverous, the lower part being covered with a scanty growth of grizzled beard. Add to these not very handsome features a wide, though good-natured looking mouth, and a nose of extraordinary length, and he presented a startling, not to say ludicrous, appearance. He was dressed in a suit of dun-colored deer-skin; and a close-fitting coon-skin cap, from which dangled the tail, covered his head. A long rifle, which evidently had seen considerable service, rested across the saddle-bow, and a large buckhorn-handled knife peeped from the folds of his hunting-shirt. A powder-horn slung at one side, and a small tomahawk stuck in his belt, completed his outfit. Such was the appearance of Nathan Rogers, well known throughout that region as Wild Nat, trapper and Indian-fighter. As he rode slowly along, his eyes bent on the ground, a superficial observer would have pronounced him in a deep reverie; but, from the suspicious glance which he frequently threw about him, it was evident that he was on the look-out for any danger that might be near. "Gittin' purty near noon, " he said, at last, speaking aloud, as was his habit when alone—"purty near noon, an' I sw'ar I'm gittin' e'ena'most famished. I shall be a mere skileton, purty shortly, ef I don't git a leetle something in the provender line. Guess I'll make fur thet clump of timber, an' brile a slice of antelope." He raised himself in his stirrups, and swept the plain with swift, piercing glances. "Nothin' in sight, " he muttered, dropping to his seat. "Nary an Injun tew be seen. Gittin' mighty quiet, lately; hain't seen one of the pesky critters in a week. Git up, Rocky." He turned his horse toward a small clump of trees about half a mile distant, and rode rapidly forward. As he neared the grove, his former appearance of carelessness gave place to one of intense watchfulness. His keen gray eyes roved restlessly along the edge of the timber; his movements were slow and wary—every motion being instinct with a caution that long habit had made second nature. When at the edge of the grove, he stopped to listen, rising once more in his stirrups to look about him.
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Table of contents
- NAT, THE TRAPPER