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قراءة كتاب A Virginia Scout

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A Virginia Scout

A Virginia Scout

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دار النشر: Project Gutenberg
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“You were never meant for the frontier.”


A Virginia Scout

By

HUGH PENDEXTER

Author of

Kings of the Missouri, Etc.

Frontispiece by

D. C. Hutchison


INDIANAPOLIS

THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY

PUBLISHERS


Copyright 1920

The Ridgway Company

Copyright 1922

The Bobbs-Merrill Company

Printed in the United States of America

PRESS OF

BRAUNWORTH & CO.

BOOK MANUFACTURERS

BROOKLYN, N. Y.


To

Faunce Pendexter

My Son and Best of Seven-Year-Old Scouts

This Story Is Lovingly Dedicated


CONTENTS

CHAPTER PAGE
I. Three Travelers   1
II Indian-Haters   23
III Over the Mountains   55
IV I Report to My Superiors   81
V Love Comes a Cropper   106
VI The Pack-Horse-Man’s Medicine   133
VII Lost Sister   167
VIII In Abb’s Valley   193
IX Dale Escapes   229
X Our Medicine Grows Stronger   265
XI Back to the Blue Wall   289
XII The Shadows Vanish   311
XIII Peace Comes to the Clearing   352

A Virginia Scout


CHAPTER I

THREE TRAVELERS

It was good to rest in the seclusion of my hollow sycamore. It was pleasant to know that in the early morning my horse would soon cover the four miles separating me from the soil of Virginia. As a surveyor, and now as a messenger between Fort Pitt and His Lordship, the Earl of Dunmore, our royal governor, I had utilized this unique shelter more than once when breaking my journey at the junction of the Monongahela and the Cheat.

I had come to look upon it with something of affection. It was one of my wilderness homes. It was roughly circular and a good eight feet in diameter, and never yet had I been disturbed while occupying it.

During the night I heard the diabolic screech of a loon somewhere down the river, while closer by rose the pathetic song of the whippoorwill. Strange contrasts and each very welcome in my ears. I was awake with the first rays of the sun mottling the bark and mold before the low entrance to my retreat. The rippling melody of a mocking-bird deluged the thicket. Honey-bees hovered and buzzed about my tree, perhaps investigating it with the idea of moving in and using it for a storehouse. The Indians called them the “white man’s flies,” and believed they heralded the coming of permanent settlements. I hoped the augury was a true one, but there were times when I doubted.

Making sure that the priming of my long Deckhard rifle was dry, I crawled out into the thicket and stood

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