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w's slim elasticity, and sat in a shapeless huddle. I laughed with relief. "Where is Singing Arrow now?" I twitted the priest. "Is this she?" The old priest peered. "No," he meditated. "No, this is not Singing Arrow." He wheeled on me with one of his flashes of temper. "I cannot recognize this girl. Let her take off her blanket." I motioned my men to take stations in the canoes. "Father Carheil, I beg you to let me go at once," I implored. "You see you were wrong. As to this Indian, you never saw her; she is a stranger here." But the father was not pacified. "Let her take off her blanket," he repeated, with all the aimless persistency of age. Did I say that the man had grown close to my heart? Why, I could have shaken him. But the Englishman cut the knot. He turned with a hunch of the shoulder, and peered at us over the corner of his blanket. Gesture, and roll of the head, he was an Indian. I was so pleased at the mimicry, that I gave way to witless laughter. "Now!" I cried triumphantly. "Now, are you satisfied?" But the priest did not reply. He stared, and his eyes grew ferret-sharp. Then he shifted his position, and stared again. It beat into my brain that he had lived thirty years among the Indians, and that his eyes were trained. He could see meanings, where I saw a blank wall. "This is no Indian woman," he said slowly, with a wagging forefinger that beat off his words like the minute hand of Fate. "This is--this is--why, this is the English prisoner!" He brought out the last words in a crescendo, and again my hand clapped tight against his mouth. "Be still! Be still!" I spluttered wildly, and I threw a disordered glance at the horizon, and at my astonished crew. I had not meant that the men, except Pierre, should be taken into the secret until we were well afloat. Here was another contretemps. "Are you mad, Father Carheil!" I began, with a sorry show of dignity, while my palm stuck like a leech against his lips. "This is not"---- "Not any one but the prisoner himself," interrupted the Englishman's voice. He dropped his blanket, and sprang to the sand. "Do not lie for me, monsieur," he went on in his indolent, drawling French that already had come to have a pleasant quaintness in my ears. "Monsieur, let me speak to the father." If Nature had given me a third hand, I should have used it to throttle the Englishman. "Get back in the canoe!" I stormed. He motion
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