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    Chapter 15 - Page 2

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    strange wigwam."

    "I understand you, Tuscarora. The woman fell into the hands of
    the Mingos, and you kept upon their trail."

    "Pathfinder can see a reason as easily as he can see the moss on
    the trees. It is so."

    "And how long have you got the woman back, and in what manner has
    it been done?"

    "Two suns. The Dew-of-June was not long in coming when her husband
    whispered to her the path."

    "Well, well, all this seems natural, and according to matrimony.
    But, Tuscarora, how did you get that canoe, and why are you paddling
    towards the St. Lawrence instead of the garrison?"

    "Arrowhead can tell his own from that of another. This canoe is
    mine; I found it on the shore near the fort."

    "That sounds reasonable, too, for the canoe does belong to the man,
    and an Indian would make few words about taking it. Still, it is
    extraordinary that we saw nothing of the fellow and his wife, for
    the canoe must have left the river before we did ourselves."

    This idea, which passed rapidly through the mind of the guide, was
    now put to the Indian in the shape of a question.

    "Pathfinder knows that a warrior can have shame. The father would
    have asked me for his daughter, and I could not give her to him. I
    sent the Dew-of-June for the canoe, and no one spoke to the woman.
    A Tuscarora woman would not be free in speaking to strange men."

    All this, too, was plausible, and in conformity with Indian
    character and customs. As was usual, Arrowhead had received one
    half of his compensation previously to quitting the Mohawk; and his
    refraining to demand the residue was a proof of that conscientious
    consideration of mutual rights that quite as often distinguishes
    the morality of a savage as that of a Christian. To one as upright
    as Pathfinder, Arrowhead had conducted himself with delicacy and
    propriety, though it would have been more in accordance with his
    own frank nature to have met the father, and abided by the simple
    truth. Still, accustomed to the ways of Indians, he saw nothing
    out of the ordinary track of things in the course the other had
    taken.

    "This runs like water flowing down hill, Arrowhead," he answered,

    after a little reflection, "and truth obliges me to own it. It was
    the gift of a red-skin to act in this way, though I do not think
    it was the gift of a pale-face. You would not look upon the grief
    of the girl's father?"

    Arrowhead made a quiet inclination of the body as if to assent.

    "One thing more my brother will tell me," continued Pathfinder, "and
    there will be no cloud between his wigwam and the strong-house of
    the Yengeese. If he can
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