The Indian's Hand1892
       THE INDIAN'S HAND     

       By Lorimer Stoddard     

  

       Copyright, 1892, by J. B. Lippincott & Co.     

   

       The men had driven away. Their carts and horses disappeared behind the roll of the low hills. They appeared now and then, like boats on the crest of a wave, further each time. And their laughter and singing and shouts grew fainter as the bushes hid them from sight.     

       The women and children remained, with two old men to protect them. They might have gone too, the hunters said. "What harm could come in the broad daylight?—the bears and panthers were far away. They'd be back by night, with only two carts to fill."     

       Then Jim, the crack shot of the settlement, said, "We'll drive home the bears in the carts."     

       The children shouted and danced as they thought of the sport to come, of the hunters' return with their game, of the bonfires they always built.     

       One pale woman clung to her husband's arm. "But the Indians!" she said.     

       That made the men all laugh. "Indians!" they cried; "why, there've been none here for twenty years! We drove them away, down there"—pointing across the plain—"to a hotter place than this, where the sand burns their feet and they ride for days for water."     

       The pale woman murmured, "Ah, but they returned."     

       "Yes," cried her big husband, whose brown beard covered his chest, "and burned two cabins. Small harm they did, the curs!"     

       "Hush," said the pale woman, pressing her husband's arm; and the men around were quiet, pretending to fix their saddles, as they glanced at another woman, dressed in black, who turned and went into her house.     

       "I 
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