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William MacLeod Raine
or twice he thought he made out the vague outline of a flying
figure, but in the night shadows it was lost again almost at once.
They breasted the long slope of a low hill and took the decline beyond.
The young plainsman had the legs and the wind of a Marathon runner.
His was the perfect physical fitness of one who lives a clean, hard life
in the dry air of the high lands. The swiftness and the endurance of the
fugitive told him that he was in the wake of youth trained to a fine
edge.
Unexpectedly, in the deeper darkness of a small ravine below the hill
spur, the hunted turned upon the hunter. Morse caught the gleam of a
knife thrust as he plunged. It was too late to check his dive. A flame of
fire scorched through his forearm. The two went down together, rolling
over and over as they struggled.
Startled, Morse loosened his grip. He had discovered by the feel of the
flesh he was handling so roughly that it was a woman with whom he
was fighting.
She took advantage of his hesitation to shake free and roll away.

They faced each other on their feet. The man was amazed at the young
Amazon's fury. Her eyes were like live coals, flashing at him hatred
and defiance. Beneath the skin smock she wore, her breath came
raggedly and deeply. Neither of them spoke, but her gaze did not yield
a thousandth part of an inch to his.
The girl darted for the knife she had dropped. Morse was upon her
instantly. She tried to trip him, but when they struck the ground she
was underneath.
He struggled to pin down her arms, but she fought with a barbaric fury.
Her hard little fist beat upon his face a dozen times before he pegged it
down.
Lithe as a panther, her body twisted beneath his. Too late the flash of
white teeth warned him. She bit into his arm with the abandon of a
savage.
"You little devil!" he cried between set teeth.
He flung away any scruples he might have had and pinned fast her
flying arms. The slim, muscular body still writhed in vain contortions
till he clamped it fast between knees from which not even an untamed
cayuse could free itself.
She gave up struggling. They glared at each other, panting from their
exertions. Her eyes still flamed defiance, but back of it he read fear, a
horrified and paralyzing terror. To the white traders along the border a
half-breed girl was a squaw, and a squaw was property just as a horse
or a dog was.
For the first time she spoke, and in English. Her voice came bell-clear
and not in the guttural of the tribes.
"Let me up!" It was an imperative, urgent, threatening.
He still held her in the vice, his face close to her flaming eyes. "You
little devil," he said again.

"Let me up!" she repeated wildly. "Let me up, I tell you."
"Like blazes I will. You're through biting and knifing me for one
night." He had tasted no liquor all day, but there was the note of
drunkenness in his voice.
The terror in her grew. "If you don't let me up--"
"You'll do what?" he jeered.
Her furious upheaval took him by surprise. She had unseated him and
was scrambling to her feet before he had her by the shoulders.
The girl ducked her head in an effort to wrench free. She could as
easily have escaped from steel cuffs as from the grip of his brown
fingers.
"You'd better let me go!" she cried. "You don't know who I am."
"Nor care," he flung back. "You're a nitchie, and you smashed our kegs.
That's enough for me."
"I'm no such thing a nitchie[1]," she denied indignantly.
[Footnote 1: In the vernacular of the Northwest Indians were "nitchies."
(W.M.R.)]
The instinct of self-preservation was moving in her. She had played
into the hands of this man and his companions. The traders made their
own laws and set their own standards. The value of a squaw of the
Blackfeet was no more than that of the liquor she had destroyed. It
would be in character for them to keep her as a chattel captured in war.
"The daughter of a squaw-man then," he said, and there was in his
voice the contempt of the white man for the half-breed.
"I'm Jessie McRae," she said proudly.
Among the Indians she went by her tribal name of Sleeping Dawn, but

always with the whites she used the one her adopted father had given
her. It increased their respect for her. Just now she was in desperate
need of every ounce that would weigh in the scales.
"Daughter
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