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call cannot hear. They are too far off; though nearer, it would be all the same; for both are at the moment hooded like hawks. The serapes thrown over their heads are still on them, corded around their necks, so closely as to hinder hearing, almost stifle their breathing. Since their seizure nearly an hour has elapsed, and they are scarce yet recovered from the first shock of surprise, so terrible as to have stupified them. No wonder! What they saw before being blinded, with the rough treatment received, were enough to deprive them of their senses. From the chaos of thought, as from a dread dream, both are now gradually recovering. But, alas! only to reflect on new fears--on the dark future before them. Captive to such captors--red ruthless savages, whose naked arms, already around, have held them in brawny embrace--carried away from home, from all they hold dear, into a captivity seeming hopeless as horrid--to the western woman especially repulsive, by songs sung over her cradle, and tales told throughout her years of childhood--tales of Indian atrocity. The memory of these now recurring, with the reality itself, not strange that for a time their thoughts, as their senses, are almost paralysed. Slowly they awake to a consciousness of their situation. They remember what occurred at the moment of their being made captive; how in the clear moonlight they stood face to face with Fernand, listened to his impertinent speeches, saw the savages surrounding them; then, suddenly blinded and seeing no more, felt themselves seized, lifted from their feet, carried off, hoisted a little higher, set upon the backs of horses, and there tied, each to a man already mounted. All these incidents they remember, as one recalls the fleeting phantasmagoria of a dream. But that they were real, and not fanciful, they now too surely know; for the hoods are over their heads, the horses underneath; and the savages to whom they were strapped still there, their bodies in repulsive contact with their own! That there are only two men, and as many horses, can be told by the hoof-strokes rebounding from the turf; the same sounds proclaiming it a forest path through thick timber, at intervals emerging into open ground, and again entering among trees. For over an hour this continues; during all the while not a word being exchanged between the two horsemen, or if so, not heard by their captives. Possibly they may communicate with o
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