The White Squaw - Part 50
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Part 50

Innocent as a child, he knew little of the heart of woman.

That look--that tremor of the voice--should have told him that she loved Wacora.

Yes; the end had come, and love had conquered.

The white maiden was in love with the young Indian chief!

Wacora and his captive--now more than ever his captive--were seated within the ruined fort near Sansuta's grave.

"You are pleased once more to be here?" he asked.

"I am. During my illness I promised myself if ever I recovered that my first visit should be to this spot."

"And yet it was in paying such a visit that you nearly lost your life."

"The life you saved."

"'Twas a happy chance. I cannot tell what led me to the forest on that occasion."

"What were you doing there?" she asked.

"Like the blind mortal that I am, I was blaming myself, and my fate, too, when I should have been blessing my fortune."

"For what?"

"For conducting me to the spot where I heard you cry."

"What fortune were you blaming?"

"That which made me unworthy."

"Unworthy of what?"

He did not immediately answer her, but the look he gave her caused her to turn her eyes to the ground.

"Do you really wish to know of what I think myself unworthy?"

She smiled as she replied, "If you betray no confidence in telling me."

"None; none but my own."

"Then, tell me if you like."

Was it the faint tremor in her voice that emboldened him to speak?

"Unworthy of _you_!" was his answer.

"Of me?" she said, her face averted from his.

"Of you, and you only. But why should I withhold further confidence?

You have given me courage to speak; have I also your leave?"

She made no answer to the last question, but her look was eloquent of a.s.sent.

"I thought on that day," he continued, "that I was accursed by man and heaven--that I, an Indian savage, was not accounted worthy to indulge in thoughts of love that had sprung up within my heart, like a pure flower, only to be blighted by the prejudices of race; that all my adoration for the fair and excellent, must be kept down by the accident of birth; and that whilst nurturing a holy pa.s.sion, I must crush it out and stifle it for ever."

"But now?" Her voice was low and tremulous.

"Now--all rests upon one word. Upon that word depends my happiness or misery now and for ever."

"And what is it?"

"Do not ask it from me. It must come from your eyes--from your lips-- from your heart!"

There was an eloquence that spoke the answer without a word being uttered.

It was the eloquence of love!

In another instant the lips of the white maiden touched those of her Indian lover.

From their rapturous embrace they were startled by a sound. It was a groan!

It came from the other side of Sansuta's grave, behind which there was a clump of bushes.

Wacora rushed towards the spot, while Alice kept her place, transfixed to it by a terrible presentiment.

The young chief uttered an exclamation of horror, as he looked in among the bushes.

His cousin was lying beneath them, stretched out--dead! a dagger, which his right hand still clutched, sheathed in his heart!

With his last groan, and his heart's blood, the generous youth had yielded up his love with his life.

L'ENVOI.

The Seminole war continued for eight years.

Eight years of bloodshed and horror, in which the white man and the Indian struggled for the supremacy.

The whites fought for conquest, the Indians to retain possession of their own.

On both sides were acts of cruelty--terrible episodes ill.u.s.trating the _lex talionis_.

As in all such contests, the pale-faces were the victors, and the red men were in time subdued.

Such of the Seminoles as survived the war were allotted lands beyond the Mississippi; and, far distant from their native home, were commanded to be content and happy.